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Centuries of Torment
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List Price: $29.98
Our Price: $19.57
You Save: $10.41 (35%)
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Product Details
- Starring: Cannibal Corpse
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- Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
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- Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
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- Audio Format: Unknown, Unknown
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- Binding: DVD
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- EAN: 0039843405499
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- Format: Best of, Box set, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
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- Label: Metal Blade
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- Language: English
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- Manufacturer: Metal Blade
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- Number of Discs: 3
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- Number of Items: 3
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- Product Group: DVD
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- Publisher: Metal Blade
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- Release Date: 2008-07-08
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- Studio: Metal Blade
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- Theatrical Release Date: 2008-07-08
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- Title: Centuries of Torment
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- UPC: 039843405499
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: Three DVD set by Cannibal Corpse with Centuries of Torment through the Metal Blade Label covering the first 20 years of Cannibal Corpse, an US Death Metal band founded in 1988. The band has released ten studio albums, one boxed set, and one live album. Although Cannibal Corpse has had virtually no radio or television exposure, a cult following began to build behind the group with albums like 1991's Butchered at Birth and 1992's Tomb of the Mutilated. Cannibal Corpse reached over 1 million in record sales worldwide in 2003 including over 500,000 in the US making them one of the biggest selling death metal bands of all time.
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Customer Reviews
Worth every penny
This DVD set is worth every penny. Footage from the early days, more recent footage as well. You get up close and personal with the band members. What's even better is that Chris Barnes, who I respect but do not fancy, is here to bring his testimonial.
To be mentioned : great editing work. The story flows very professionally. It's something I can't say about Lamb of God's "Walk with me in Hell" DVD.
Go buy it, you won't regret it.
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One of the most thorough band DVDs I've seen
As soon as I saw the contents of the DVD a few months before the release, it was clear that this could be one of the best band-related DVDs there is. For me, the best is definitely Evergrey's A Night to Remember, with the hours upon hours of studio work, backstage footage and interviews, all wrapped up with a very good live show.
Centuries of Torment comes very close to that level, but unfortunately it is the live show part that falls ever so slightly short. Personally I've never been a fan of compilation live footage, with material from several different shows with constantly changing audio/video quality. If you prefer it like that, this is a nice DVD. It has clips from many different years and places with few tracks appearing twice. I was horrified when the main girth of the live shows, the Toronto 2006 show, started off in extremely poor sound quality. Luckily the sound picked up after a few songs. Maybe they had technical problems at the mixing/recording desk?
But the interviews and history told by the band themselves, and pretty much anyone who ever had something to do with the band, really makes up for the slight live show troubles. This is definitely one of the most thorough band DVDs I've seen, including the Evergrey one. Nothing is left untouched, and the Bonus Chunks part really goes out there with the bizarre tidbits - delicious!
Overall for the price (especially ordering from Finland, with the Euro being very strong vs. the US Dollar), this is simply an awesome package. The packaging artwork and holographic coating is also very cool, wrapping up this piece into one great release!
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Centuries of Torment review
The documentary on the life of the band was totally awesome. That was worth the purchase of the dvd alone. However, the live videos were crap. When I bought this I was, I was primarily buying this for the live stuff. I didn't expect all the live vids to be top quality (like the one's from the 90's), but I expected the one's from '00 an on to at least be digital, which they were not. The sound quality of all the live songs and video quality of most live songs looked and sounded like they were taken from a video camera. Needless to say I was let down on that part.
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A look into death metal history
It may be weird reviewing a music DVD without having seen the music parts yet, but the three-hour band history documentary and the extras on the third disc are all certainy entertaining and informative just as they are.
This historical Cannibal Corpse-document comes in a beautiful digipak case with Vincent Locke's illustration in emboss and a "rainbow effect" (don't ask me what the exact word is, but lenticular doesn't quite seem right). The only downside is that the rainbow effect is used all over, so it's harder to make out the actual image.
The first disc covers the entire history of the band, starting from before they ever played music up until the release of Kill and ends pretty much on the fans and their own words. It goes from having a sort of reminiscant tone "way back when we did crazy stuff", to words from more current bands involved and such. It has a lot of insight and some funny moments as well, but since there's twenty years in three hours, it often feels pretty cramped and "rushed", so don't expect a runthrough of individual songs or studio footage (except as background-clips). You do get a strong sense of who they are and where they came from though, and the hardships and good times of staying true to their music for all this time.
On the second disc there's plenty of live stuff from different eras, which is probably all killer. The music videos (all they've done) are included and look fine (quality-wise). If they look a little "cheesy" (and are pretty much all in black and white), that's more likely because it was intentional. There's also one live performance I watched: "Stripped, Raped and Strangled" with Trevor from The Black Dahlia Murder. It sounds like a big deal, but it's really not. Trevor jumps around a bit, and sings along, but is barely heard at all because Corpsegrinder does the song normal, drowning him out completely. Bummer, could've been more interesting.
The third disc was really a great addition, worthy in itself. It's shorter little features (varying in length from very brief to in-depth) about Vincent Locke's art (great artist, but he needs to speak up!), the bans and controversy, the fan tattoos (all brief, some fantastic), the merch and shirts, touring (or rather crazy stuff on tours - very funny segment), lyrics and songwriting (informative - funny rejected titles), George being in Metalocalypse (wish we'd seen him in the studio), sideprojects, who the people in the band really are (one of the longest and best additions of them all - very surprising and entertaining!) and finally a little claymation segment inspired by Vince's art (pointless but pretty cool).
I feel like this is the ultimate Cannibal Corpse DVD experience, but it might be a lot to take in if you're just a casual fan. If you've found yourself "hooked" at some point or are interested in them overall (as I am), this is the only DVD you'll ever need. And if you're a die-hard fan, you already have this.
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The might Gore band cannibal corspe!!!!!
If, You are a true fan of death metal know one should go without buying dvd it's a great look at the history of what would become one of best gore bands in the world selling one million cd's and are still playing brutal metal
a must buy!!!
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