The 4K Remaster of “Panic Room” Will Be Released in UHD Blu-ray

The claustrophobic thriller from director David Fincher finally debuts on 4K ULTRA HD

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
December 11, 2024

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment has officially announced the long-awaited UHD HDR release of Panic Room, featuring the new remaster in 4K supervised by David Fincher.

It will be available as a limited edition Steelbook on February 18, 2025.

Trapped in their New York brownstone’s panic room, a hidden chamber built as a sanctuary in the event of break-ins, newly divorced Meg Altman (Jodie Foster) and her daughter, Sarah (Kristen Stewart), play a deadly game of cat-and-mouse with three intruders—Burnham (Forest Whitaker), Raoul (Dwight Yoakam) and Junior (Jared Leto)—during a brutal home invasion. But the room itself is the focal point because what the intruders really want is inside it.

Directed by: David Fincher
Produced by: Ceán Chaffin, Gavin Polone, Judy Hofflund, David Koepp
Written by: David Koepp

Basics

Video: 4K UHD (2160p). 2.39:1 (OAR). HEVC/H.265 Codec
HDR: Dolby Vision, HDR 10.
Audio: Dolby Atmos / Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit), DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 16-bit)
Languages: English
Subtitles: English
Discs: 3-Disc Set

Run Time: 112 minutes
Rating: R for violence and language

4K ULTRA HD Disc

  • Feature presented in 4K resolution with Dolby Vision
  • English Dolby Atmos + English 5.1
  • Optional English subtitles

Blu-Ray Disc

  • Feature presented in HD resolution, sourced from the 4K remaster
  • English 5.1
  • Optional English subtitles for the main feature
  • Commentary 1 by David Fincher
  • Commentary 2 by Jodie Foster, Forest Whitaker, and Dwight Yoakam
  • Commentary 3 by writer David Koepp and special guest

Blu-Ray Disc with Special Features

All previously available Special Features produced by David Prior.

  • Pre-Production:

– Six featurettes on the prep phase, from pre-visualization through testing.
– Interactive previsualization: Compare the pre-visualization, storyboards, dailies and final film in a multi-angle, multi-audio feature with optional commentary.

  • Production:

Shooting Panic Room: An hour-long documentary on the principal photography phase.
– Makeup effects featurette with Alec Gillis and Tom Woodruff Jr.
– Sequence breakdowns: An interactive look at the creation of four separate scenes in the film

  • Post-Production:

– 21 documentaries and featurettes on the visual effects.
On Sound Design with Ren Klyce.
Digital Intermediate and other featurettes dealing with the post-production phase.
– A multi-angle look at the scoring session conducted by Howard Shore.

This edition will include the fantastic Teaser Trailer narrated by Linda Hunt, edited by Angus Wall, and with Sound Design by Ren Klyce, previously only available in the “SuperBit” Edition and worldwide standard edition DVDs:

SE7EN Celebrates its 30th Anniversary with a 4K Remaster and a Re-release in IMAX

Warner Bros.
November 19, 2024

FROM ACCLAIMED DIRECTOR DAVID FINCHER, THE PSYCHOLOGICAL THRILLER WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR THE FIRST TIME IN 4K RESOLUTION WITH HIGH DYNAMIC RANGE (HDR).

AVAILABLE ON DIGITAL AND 4K UHD DISC ON JANUARY 7, 2025.

EXPERIENCE THE FILM IN IMAX® FOR THE FIRST TIME, STARTING JANUARY 3, 2025 FOR A LIMITED ENGAGEMENT.

The film stars Academy Award Winners Brad Pitt, Morgan Freeman, and Gwyneth Paltrow.

Burbank, Calif., November 19, 2024 – Celebrating the 30th anniversary of the psychological thriller SE7EN from New Line Cinema and acclaimed director David Fincher, the 1995 film will be available for purchase Digitally in 4K Ultra HD and on 4K UHD Blu-ray Disc on January 7, 2025.

SE7EN will be available to purchase on Ultra HD Blu-ray Disc online and in-store at major retailers and available for purchase Digitally from Amazon Prime Video, AppleTV, Google Play, Fandango at Home and more.

Additionally, to celebrate the film’s 30th anniversary, the newly re-mastered version of SE7EN will be offered theatrically worldwide with exclusive IMAX engagements in the U.S. and Canada beginning on January 3, and international theatrical engagements on select dates. To purchase tickets, or for further information, please visit www.imax.com/seven.

Directed by three-time Academy Award nominee David Fincher (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Social Network, Mank) from a screenplay by Andrew Kevin Walker, the film stars Academy Award winner Brad Pitt (Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood), Academy Award winner Morgan Freeman (Million Dollar Baby), Academy Award winner Gwyneth Paltrow (Shakespeare in Love), along with John C. McGinley (Platoon), Golden Globe nominee R. Lee Ermey (Full Metal Jacket), and Academy Award winner Kevin Spacey (The Usual Suspects, American Beauty) as John Doe. The film is produced by Arnold Kopelson and Phyllis Carlyle.

SE7EN received an Academy Award nomination for Best Film Editing (Richard Francis-Bruce) at the 68th Academy Awards. The film was also nominated for Best Original Screenplay (Andrew Kevin Walker) at the 49th British Academy Film Awards.

The 4K restoration of Se7en was completed at Warner Bros. Discovery’s Motion Picture Imaging (MPI) and was sourced from the original camera negative. The restoration was overseen by director David Fincher.

About the Film

Two cops (Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman) track a brilliant and elusive killer who orchestrates a string of horrific murders, each kill targeting a practitioner of one of the Seven Deadly Sins. Gwyneth Paltrow also stars in this acclaimed thriller set in a dour, drizzly city sick with pain and blight. David Fincher (Fight Club, Zodiac, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button) guides the action – physical, mental, and spiritual – with a sure understanding of what terrifies us, right up to a stunning denouement that will rip the scar tissue off the most hardened soul.

SE7EN 4K UHD Blu-ray. DigiPack Case

SE7EN 4K UHD Blu-ray. SteelBook Case (Limited Edition)

Basics

Video: 4K UHD (2160p). 2.39:1 (OAR). HEVC/H.265 Codec. HDR 10.
Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
Languages: English, Spanish, Parisian French
Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish, Parisian French

Run Time: 127 minutes
Rating: R for grisly afterviews of horrific and bizarre killings, and for strong language

Special Features

SE7EN Digital release and Ultra HD Blu-ray disc contain the following previously released special features:

  • Commentaries:

– The Stars: David Fincher, Brad Pitt, Morgan Freeman
– The Story: Richard Dyer, Andrew Kevin Walker, Richard Francis-Bruce, Michael De Luca, David Fincher
– The Picture: Darius Khondji, Arthur Max, Richard Francis-Bruce, Richard Dyer, David Fincher
– The Sound: Ren Klyce, Howard Shore, Richard Dyer, David Fincher

  • Deleted Scenes:

– Car Ride in from Gluttony
– My Future
– Raid on Victor’s
– Spare Some Change?
– Tracy Wakes from Light Sleep
– Pride

  • Alternate endings:

– Animated storyboards of un-shot ending
– Original “Test” ending

  • Still Photographs (featurettes):

– John Doe’s Photographs
– Victor’s Decomposition
– Police Crime Scene Photographs
– Production Photographs
– The Notebooks

  • Production Design (featurette)
  • Mastering for the Home Theater (featurette)
  • Exploration of the Opening Title Sequence: Early Storyboards (featurette)
  • Exploration of the Opening Title Sequence: Rough Version (featurette)
  • Exploration of the Opening Title Sequence: Final Edit (featurette)
  • Exploration of the Opening Title Sequence: Stereo Audio Commentary One – The Concept – Designer Kyle Cooper (featurette)
  • Exploration of the Opening Title Sequence: Stereo Audio Commentary Two – The Sound – Brant Biles & Robert Margouleff (featurette)
  • Theatrical EPK

‘Fight Club’ Sound Designer Ren Klyce Revisits A Classic

Jack Giroux
October 29, 2024
Immersive Media

Fight Club is a cinematic time machine. The film captured the essence of 1999, and, 25 years later, filmmaker David Fincher‘s vision for Chuck Palahniuk‘s novel continues to resonate, cranking up its unsettling relevance in a commercialized and violent world.

The movie hits just as hard today as it did back then.

Fight Club remains as overwhelming as the narrator’s life. The sound is relentless; the world almost never quiets down. It’s a controlled yet unrelenting experience for the eyes and ears. Much of the credit goes to sound designer Ren Klyce, who is once again working on the film, remastering it with Fincher & Co. Before attending MPSE PresentsFight Club 25th Anniversary Screening, Klyce spoke with Immersive Media about his past and present experiences with Fight Club.

Read the full interview

“Fight Club” Celebrates its 25th Anniversary with a 4K Remaster and an Art Book

“WELL, MAYBE IT’S TIME TO TALK ABOUT… 👊”

Or so says the mysterious account that discreetly appeared on Instagram on October 15, the 25th Anniversary of Fight Club.

Now, New Regency and 20th Century Studios have officially announced that the subversive film, based on Chuck Palahniuk’s satirical novel, has been “meticulously remastered” in 4K under the supervision of David Fincher, “offering audiences the chance to experience the film with sharper detail than ever before.”

We will be able to experience the new remaster in 2025, in a theatrical re-release and 4K UHD HDR Streaming and Blu-ray releases.

Insight Editions, in partnership with New Regency, is releasing a companion art book (announced on THE FINCHER ANALYST last year), “a collector’s piece, that includes new interviews, unearthed visuals, original artwork, and rare behind-the-scenes material, offering fans the deepest look yet into the making of the film and its enduring legacy.”

Fight Club is an enduring symbol of cinematic innovation, with its exploration of identity, masculinity, and consumerism continuing to resonate with audiences.”

“Zodiac” 4K UHD Blu-ray 3-disc Set

Paramount is releasing the 4K UHD Blu-ray + Blu-Ray + Digital Copy of David Fincher‘s Zodiac (2007) on October 29.

Based on the true story of the notorious serial killer and the intense manhunt he inspired, Zodiac is a superbly crafted thriller from the director of Se7en, Fight Club, and The Social Network. Featuring an outstanding ensemble cast led by Jake Gyllenhaal, Robert Downey Jr., Mark Ruffalo, Chloë Sevigny, Anthony Edwards, and Brian Cox, Zodiac is a searing and singularly haunting examination of twin obsessions: one man’s desire to kill and another’s quest for the truth.

The 4K UHD Blu-ray + Blu-Ray + Digital Copy of Zodiac is available for preorder at Amazon.

It’s not yet confirmed if the Director’s Cut will be included in 4K UHD. The recent 4K UHD HDR release for streaming is the Theatrical Cut.

The Theatrical Cut of “Zodiac” is Now Available in 4K UHD HDR for Streaming

Bill Hunt
June 4, 2024
The Digital Bits

Paramount has just made David Fincher’s Zodiac (2007) available in 4K Digital on Apple TV, Vudu, Kaleidescape, and more. Given the amount of effort Fincher puts into his remasters, we believe it’s safe to assume that Zodiac will be coming to physical 4K Ultra HD from Paramount sooner than later as well.

Zodiac, it should be remembered, was shot mostly in 10-bit RAW in 1080p HD (4:4:4) using the Thomson Viper FilmStream camera, along with some footage in 35 mm photochemical film (Super 35 format). But anyone who doubts that it could look great upscaled and remastered in 4K would do well to take a look at HBO’s Game of Thrones: The Complete First Season in 4K UHD. The advantages of high data rate and low compression, combined with an HDR grade, really make a difference. Zodiac in particular was very well lit and photographed.

And it looks good! The color grade in particular is excellent. HDR is subtle, but it makes a difference. There’s obviously not as much detail as you’d see in native 4K, but the image is very dimensional. Color is really lovely. Should make a good UHD disc. Definitely an improvement over the Blu-ray. The best this film has ever looked.

Read the original article and Tweet

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For ‘Seven’ Restoration, David Fincher Went Back and ‘Kissed in Some of the City’

On the eve of its Chinese IMAX premiere, Fincher told IndieWire about excavating and remastering his breakout 1995 serial killer neo-noir.

Bill Desowitz
April 19, 2024
IndieWire

David Fincher is a philosopher as well as a perfectionist. When asked about the significance of his 8K remastering of Seven (premiering April 19 at the Chinese IMAX in 4K as part of the TCM Classic Film Festival), he told IndieWire, “If you think of it in string theory, it’s like a volumetric capture of where all these careers were at, and what these people wanted and needed and infused the thing with.”

Fincher was referring, of course, to Morgan Freeman, Brad Pitt, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kevin Spacey, and the rest of the cast and crew who made his breakout 1995 serial killer neo-noir. The film was a brilliant analog product of the era (with only seven weeks of prep) but also ahead of its time in conveying a dark, creepy, nihilistic police procedural that got under our skin like no other film (select release prints even underwent a bleach bypass, silver retention process that provided greater color density and black levels).

“It is what it is, warts and all,” Fincher said. “And some of it is spectacular and some of it is stuff that I would change or fix today, but I didn’t want to mess with that. There’s a lot of imperfections, there’s a lot of things that you just don’t see on film. When people say they love the look of film, what they’re talking about is chaos, entropy, and softness. Now, of course, we live in an HDR world where you get those kinds of very deep, rich, velvety blacks for free.

Read the full profile

David Fincher to Premiere Restoration of ‘Se7en’ in Imax at TCM Classic Film Festival

Steven Spielberg will also introduce and discuss his director’s cut of ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind’

Kristen Lopez
March 21, 2024
The Wrap

Turner Classic Movies has revealed more guest presenters and films that will take place during their upcoming TCM Classic Film Festival (April 18-21, 2024), including the world premiere of David Fincher’s restored 1995 feature “Se7en” in Imax.

Fincher will be on-hand to introduce his thriller, which stars Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman as two detectives on the hunt for a serial killer who uses the seven deadly sins as inspiration for his crimes.

Read the full article

2023 Tribeca Festival Directors Series: David Fincher with Steven Soderbergh

A compilation of quotes and transcriptions from all available sources.

June 15, 2023

As part of the 2023 Tribeca Festival “Directors Series” live conversations, David Fincher discussed his career, filmmaking process, and philosophy with his fellow director and longtime friend Steven Soderbergh, before an audience in the Indeed Theater at Spring Studios in New York.

Fincher and Soderbergh first met 32 years ago, just after Fincher had been fired for the second time from the troubled production of his first film, Alien3 (he was later fired once more):

I came out of a truly fucked-up situation and kind of swore that I would never make the same mistake. I made a lot of brand-new ones, but I’d never start something that didn’t have a script that I didn’t believe in or that I didn’t understand or that I couldn’t articulate to people. And I’d also very much learned that I wanted to make all my own mistakes instead of inheriting them from other people.

The two explained that they have been talking about twice a week for the past 20 years, and that they regularly show each other rough cuts of their works in progress for feedback.

Soderbergh: I think the next time we saw each other, I was doing an episode of Fallen Angels [in 1994], the second season of a noir series that was on Showtime. You were going to do one. And I saw you in the office one day. And then you weren’t able to do one because you Seven got greenlit. And you went and did that thing.

Fincher: Yeah, it was one of those. It was a strangely rushed pre-production on that. Michael De Luca basically said, ‘if you can be up and making this movie in six weeks, we’ll greenlight it.’ So that was one of those, ‘okay, let me shut down the rest of my life.’

Fincher revealed how he approached shooting Music Videos as his film school:

I really went at it going, ‘I don’t want to spend my own money trying all this stuff out, so let’s see if Madonna will finance it.’

Soderbergh: You’re one of the few people who came out of the 80’s whose visual sense was matched by the importance of performance, and the understanding of a two-hour movie narrative… a lot different than a commercial or music video.

On The Social Network:

It was a pretty tight script. And part of getting it made was saying, ‘we’re gonna get this in under two hours, even if it’s 178 pages or whatever it is, we’re just gonna have everybody talk really fast.’

Fincher has learned over the years that it’s best to first discuss every aspect of film production with the cast and crew.

When I was younger, when an actor pushed back at me it felt like they were calling out the quality of my interpretation. I don’t feel that way anymore. It’s fun to get into that dialogue. It’s fun to find different avenues to explain how you see something evolving.

There’s no such thing as my editor, or my cameraman. It’s the people we’re lucky enough to get. And if you really do feel that you’re lucky enough to get the costume designer that you want, it’s incumbent upon you to squeeze them for everything that they have. It’s more on you to get their best. Because it is Darwinism. The best ideas not only will win out, they should win out, and everybody’s there to help you.

Soderbergh asked Fincher to break down a montage in Fight Club which, by Soderbergh’s estimate, involved 75 to 80 shots. Although the montage created the illusion that the Narrator played by Edward Norton was traveling across the country, everything was actually filmed within five or six blocks of LAX:

I really love a good montage. I love the montage because it’s pure cinema, it’s inference. It’s like, this goes against this, as quickly as we can possibly make a point and get the fuck out of Dodge. Then the question is where do people’s eyes need to be.

Soderbergh observed that Fincher seems happiest while imagining a project versus actually being in production, and felt that he’s seen the movies Fincher didn’t even make because of the way he has laid them out in his office. 

I have enough of a reputation as a misanthrope that I don’t need to feed into that.

Shooting for me is a lot of indigestion and reality. They just keep seeping into everything you’re trying to do. So that part of it is difficult. And I think the first couple of times I had stuff fall apart even for the right reasons.

Asked by Soderbergh what he considers the “fun part” of filmmaking:

I love rehearsal. I love talking to people about the intention. I love haggling over every single word, and what the script means, and listening to people read it, and hearing their ideas. I love casting, I love the casting process. I love designing the movie. I love sitting with the production designer, and the director of photography, and all the art directors. And talking about what do we want to say, and where do we want people’s attention, and what are the things that we have to underline.

By the time it gets to the shooting… I don’t enjoy shooting. I find it to be unnecessary. I would much rather love to just workshop it, and then have someone else take it over, after all those conversations, and bring it home. But you got to be there.

I remember debating Francis Coppola and the Silverfish. And the idea of working over with a microphone over a P.A. system ‘okay, pan A camera left.’ And I don’t think you can… I think movies require you to impress upon people the amount that you’re sweating it, the amount that you care. They have to see it in your face. They have to see it in your eyes.

There was a really interesting thing last year, shooting a movie [The Killer] with all of the COVID protocols, working through a mask and a visor. I had no idea how much I was imparting with making faces and sound effects. It was a completely different experience.

On the stress of directing:

Directing is storytelling through a medium that requires an awful lot of personnel to just support what you’re doing technically and what you’re doing just from a logistical standpoint. That can be extremely distracting, and it can create an enormous amount of stress and pressure. You feel it every day. You only have so much time to get this many shots. The sun is moving as it continues to do to this day. And you can’t negotiate with that.

After half an hour, the couple turned it over to the audience for questions. Asked by an audience member about whether he rewatches his old work:

I don’t. I’m not brave. I’m fundamentally like, look, no, I can’t. It’s like looking at middle school pictures. I don’t want to even acknowledge that. But I do find myself having to adjust, you know.

On remastering Seven in 4K HDR:

We’re doing Seven right now. And we’re going back and doing it in 4K from the original negative. And we overscan it, oversample it, doing all of the due diligence. And there’s a lot of shit that needs to be fixed because there’s a lot of stuff that we now can add because of high dynamic range. You know, streaming media is a very different thing than 35 mm motion picture negative in terms of what it can actually retain. So, there are, you know, a lot of blown-out windows that we have to kind of go back and ghost in a little bit of cityscape out there.

While many issues may not be noticeable, on a 100-inch screen, you’ll look at it and go, ‘What the fuck, they only had money for white cardboard out there?’ So that’s the kind of stuff on print stock, it just gets blown out of being there. And now you’re looking at it, going ‘I can see, you know, 500 nits of what the fuck.’

But I’m fundamentally against the idea of changing what it is. You can fix, you know, three percent, five percent. If something’s egregious, it needs to be addressed. But, you know, I’m not gonna take all the guns out of people’s hands and replace them with flashlights.

Soderbergh: David sees things that not a lot of people see. He once invited me to a session while he was working on a film. David’s got a laser pointer and it’s frozen on the shot and he’s like, ‘I want that part of the wall a quarter of a stock darker. I walked out and laid down on a couch in the lobby because of what torture it is to see that.

On film projects involving real people, including ones who are still alive, like the subjects of his Facebook origins film, The Social Network, and the inspirations behind his Mindhunter series:

There was so much flak after Zodiac came out about people saying, ‘Why didn’t you go down this rabbit hole? Why did you only go down the Graysmith rabbit hole?’ That’s the book that we bought. We didn’t buy everyone’s book about the Zodiac.

You have a responsibility to make sure that you are saying what you want to say because chances are they can deck you in an airport. So, you want to be conscious and be smart about it. Making movies about things that are ripped from headlines is a slippery slope. I think it’s important to be responsible, and by the same token, you also have to entertain an audience.

Asked about unfinished projects like the Millenium trilogy and Mindhunter, Fincher only replied about The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo:

I was offered Dragon Tattoo long before the first movie was made and was in the middle of something else. And I was like, “lesbian hacker on a motorcycle? I don’t think so.’  And then, the thing went on to be a huge deal, and it came back around.

And so, I thought, well, it would be interesting to see if you took this piece of material that has millions and millions of people excited, and you did it within an inch of its life, could it support the kind of money that it would take to do?

And we had pledged early on that we wanted to make a movie that was not embarrassing to its Swedish heritage. We didn’t want it to seem like we just came, you know… And when they said, ‘well, can you shoot in Atlanta?’, I said, ‘no! Atlanta for Sweden? I don’t know.’ And we didn’t want to transpose it. We wanted it to be true to its essence.

And so, you shoot in Sweden. You are shooting eight-hour days, nine-hour days if you’re lucky. And so, the movie took 140 days to shoot.

And I was proud of it. I thought we did what we set out to do. I mean, I have the same reservations about whether or not, a long dead Nazi story on a remote island in the north of Sweden, would really be a gripping, ripping yarn.

But we did it the way that we could. And then when people said it cost too much for what the return on the investment was, ‘okay, swing and miss.’

An aspiring filmmaker in the audience asked about compromise and weathering disappointment in an increasingly complicated landscape:

Stick to it. It’s easier to make something now, something that looks really good, for not a lot of money. But it’s harder to get it seen. It’s harder to get bought. When I started a long time ago, it was really hard to get the money to make something, even cheaply. Because film costs money. It was hard to make stuff cheap and look good. But if you did manage to do that you had a better shot at people actually seeing it or buying it.

Another one asked for advice on how to get an independent film out in the world. Fincher deferred to Soderbergh as better suited to answering the question:

I’m a slave. I’m essentially going to beg for an inordinately huge amount of money.

Soderbergh: You have to remember everybody that you’re trying to get to, that you’re coming up against this barrier of representation, at some point got there because they were probably really good in an independent film. All you do is to continue to make something that you care about and try and get other people involved and hope that some alchemy takes place that will vault you for a moment into the space that you want to be in. It’s better now than it was. It’s not good enough. Where the democratization of technology has resulted in the fact that it’s easier to make something now, something that looks really good for not a lot of money, but it’s harder to get it seen.

And what does David Fincher watch on TV?

In terms of interfacing with movies, I think I’m like probably everybody in here, I’m the guy going through all the landing pages at Max, or Apple +, going [mimes scrolling with the remote] ‘No’, ‘Did it’, ‘Saw it!’…

I was with a friend. We meet on the weekends. And there’s a theater that we have access to, massive, great screen. And we finish watching a movie, and lights came up, and he turned to two other friends, and he goes ‘I think we’ve come to the end of content.’

Sources:

David Fincher Talks ‘Alien 3’ Mistakes, Career Evolution with Steven Soderbergh
Martin Tsai. The Wrap

David Fincher on Remastering ‘Seven’, His Least Favorite Part of Moviemaking & Why He Loves the Montage
Jill Goldsmith. Deadline

David Fincher Is Remastering ‘Seven,’ but He’s ‘Against the Idea of Changing’ What the Movie Is
Ryan Lattanzio. IndieWire

David Fincher reflects on Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: ‘Swing and a miss’
Shania Russell. Entertainment Weekly

David Fincher Opens Up About Challenges Remastering ‘Seven’ in 4K
Hilary Lewis. The Hollywood Reporter

We Can Kinda Thank Madonna for The Social Network
Jennifer Zhan. Vulture

Tribeca (Twitter)

Luz (Twitter)

Alexandra Samton (Instagram)

Patrick Tomasso (Twitter)

George Michael – Freedom! ’90 (Official 4K Video)

Director: David Fincher
Director of Photography: Mike Southon, BSC
Editors: James Haygood and George Michael
Art Director: John Beard
Stylist: Camilla Nickerson
Hair Stylist: Guido Palau
Makeup Artist: Carol Brown
Production Company: Propaganda Films

Models: Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Linda Evangelista, Tatjana Patitz, Christy Turlington.

Male Models: Scott Benoit, Peter Formby, John Pearson, Todo Segalla, Mario Sorrenti.

Outtakes:

The Making of the Video:

The Story Behind Freedom ’90:

MTV Rewind: The Women of George Michael’s “Freedom! ‘90” Music Video (1990)

George Michael, Freedom Uncut. Official Trailer

George Michael, Freedom Uncut. Freedom! ’90 clip