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Best of Blu-Ray, Vol. 1 [Blu-ray] DVD Movie

Best of Blu-Ray, Vol. 1 [Blu-ray] DVD


2.40:1: 2.40:1
1.85:1: Theatre Wide-Screen

PN: 085391172215     Release: 09/18/2007
Starring: Mel Gibson, Mel Gibson, John Travolta, Denzel Washington
Director(s): Antoine Fuqua
Price:$56.99 

55 In Stock!


Lethal Weapon
LA cop Martin Riggs (Mel Gibson), whose wife has recently died, is a loose cannon with a seeming death wish. This makes him indispensable in collaring dangerous criminals, but a liability to any potential partners. Roger Murtaugh (Danny Glover), a conservative family man who wants to stay alive for his upcoming 50th birthday, is partnered with Riggs. As Riggs gets to know Murtaugh and his family, he begins to mellow, though his insistence on using guerilla tactics to catch criminals is still (put mildly) above and beyond the call of duty. The main villain is The General (Mitchell Ryan), a drug dealer responsible for the death of the daughter of one of Murtaugh's oldest friends. The General is also in charge of a deadly, militia-like gang of smugglers. Adding fuel to the fire is The General's chief henchman, played with all stops out by Gary Busey. Moviegoers familiar only with the relatively tongue-in-cheek Lethal Weapon sequels may be amazed to find out how dangerous and unpredictable Riggs is in the first Lethal Weapon -- and how likely it seems that Murtaugh might not survive until fade-out time. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

The Road Warrior
Director George Miller's follow-up to his own 1979 hit Mad Max is proof that not all sequels are inferior to their originals. If anything, this brutal sci-fi action film is even more intense and exciting than its predecessor, although the state of its post-apocalyptic world has only become worse. Several years after the deaths of his wife and child, Max (Mel Gibson) has become an alienated nomad, wandering an Australian outback that has fallen into tribal warfare conducted from scattered armed camps. After a road battle with psychotic villain Wez (Vernon Wells), Max meets up with the odd Gyro Captain (Bruce Spence), who takes him to the camp of a sympathetic group led by Pappagallo (Mike Preston). As Pappagallo's people are camped at a refinery, Max plans to take their oil -- more precious than gold in this world -- but eventually joins them to fight a band of marauders led by the evil Humungus (Kjell Nilsson). The stunning climax features a heart-pounding chase scene involving an oil tanker-truck and a frenzied rush for the coast, with Humungus and his forces in hot pursuit. Nilsson is a scary villain, with huge muscles and a sinister pre-Jason hockey mask, but the stunt work is the key here, and it is more flamboyantly dynamic than ever, edited at breakneck pace and staged with manic fury by Miller and stunt coordinator Max Aspin. Savage and kinetic, Mad Max 2 is a must-see for action buffs. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Swordfish
Director Dominic Sena follows up his stylish action film Gone in 60 Seconds (2000) with this high-tech thriller. John Travolta stars as Gabriel Shear, a charismatic spy who plots to steal a multi-billion-dollar fortune in illegal government funds. In order to make his scheme work, however, Gabriel needs some help from a computer hacker, which is where Stanley Jobson (Hugh Jackman) comes in. Stanley has been paroled from prison after serving a lengthy sentence for penetrating the FBI's cyber-surveillance operations. Issued a restraining order that keeps him away from computers and living penniless in a trailer park, Stanley wants only to be reunited with his daughter Holly, who's in the custody of his ex-wife, now remarried to a pornographer. Gabriel and his partner Ginger (Halle Berry) offer Stanley the chance to get his child back in exchange for his help, but the hacker soon realizes he's a pawn in a larger operation than the high-tech bank heist he thought he was perpetrating. In the meantime, a dedicated federal agent (Don Cheadle), the same man who once arrested Stanley, is trying to expose Gabriel's operation. Swordfish also stars Sam Shepard and Zach Grenier. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Training Day
The Fast and the Furious (2001) screenwriter David Ayer follows up that fast-paced action hit with this gritty cop drama from director Antoine Fuqua. Ethan Hawke stars as Jake Hoyt, a fresh-faced Los Angeles Police Department rookie anxious to join the elite narcotics squad headed up by 13-year veteran Detective Sergeant Alonzo Harris (Denzel Washington). Harris has agreed to give Hoyt a shot at joining his team with a one-day ride-along during which Hoyt must prove his mettle. As the day wears on, however, it becomes increasingly clear to the greenhorn that his experienced mentor has blurred the line between right and wrong to an alarming degree, enforcing his own morally compromised code of ethics and street justice. As he struggles with his conscience, an increasingly alarmed Hoyt begins to suspect that he's not really being given an audition at all; he's being set up as the fall guy in an elaborate scheme. Training Day co-stars Tom Berenger, Scott Glenn, and recording artists Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre, and Macy Gray. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Cast
Mel Gibson as Martin Riggs
Danny Glover as Roger Murtaugh
Gary Busey as Joshua
Mitchell Ryan as The General
Tom Atkins as Michael Hunsaker
Darlene Love as Trish Murtaugh
Traci Wolfe as Rianne Murtaugh
Jackie Swanson as Amanda Hunsaker
Damon Hines as Nick Murtaugh
Ebonie Smith as Carrie Murtaugh
Mel Gibson as Mad Max
Virginia Hey as Warrior Woman
Syd Heylen as Curmudgeon
Emil Minty as Feral Kid
Kjell Nilsson as Humungus
Max Phipps as Toadie
Vernon Wells as Wez
David Slingsby as Quiet Man
Steve J. Spears as Mechanic
Bruce Spence as Gyro Captain
John Travolta as Gabriel Shear
Hugh Jackman as Stanley Jobson
Halle Berry as Ginger
Don Cheadle as Agent Roberts
Vinnie Jones as Marco
Sam Shepard as Senator Reisman
Drea de Matteo as Melissa
Rudolph Martin as Axl Torvalds
Zach Grenier as Assistant Director Joy
Camryn Grimes as Holly
Angelo Pagán as Torres
Chic Daniel as Swat Leader
Kirk B.R. Woller as Lawyer
Carmen Argenziano as Agent
Tim DeKay as Agent
Laura Lane as Helga
Tait Ruppert as Ad Agency Executive
Craig Braun as Coroner
William Mapother as Gabriel's Crew
Ilia Volokh as Gabriel's Crew
Jonathan Fraser as Gabriel's Crew
Shawn Woods as Gabriel's Crew
Leo Lee as Gabriel's Crew
Marina Black as Hostage
Kerry Kletter as Hostage
Ryan Wulff as Hostage
Ann Travolta as Hostage
Margaret Travolta as Hostage
Dana Hee as Hostage
Denney Pierce as Hostage
Jeff Ramsey as Hostage
Joey Box as Hostage
Debbie Evans as Hostage
Sam Travolta as Hostage
Tim Storms as Hostage
Jason Christopher as Club Kid
Jonathan Pessin as Club Kid
Scott Burkholder as FBI Geek
Mark Soper as FBI Geek
Craig Lally as Customs Agent
Rusty McClennon as Customs Agent
Mark Riccardi as Customs Agent
Debbie Entin as Helga's Friend
Natalia Sokolova as Helga's Friend
Anika Poitier as Helga's Friend
Nick Loren as Dark Suit
Tom Morris as Policeman
Richard Householder as Policeman
Michael Arias as Policeman
Brenda Eimers as Holly's Teacher
Tim Omundson as Agent Thomas
Astrid Veillon as Bank Executive
Dean Duval as Security Guard
Denzel Washington as Alonzo Harris
Ethan Hawke as Jake Hoyt
Scott Glenn as Roger
Tom Berenger as Stan Gursky
Harris Yulin as Doug Rosselli
Raymond J. Barry as Lou Jacobs
Cliff Curtis as Smiley
Dr. Dre as Paul
Snoop Dogg as Blue
Macy Gray as Sandman's Wife
Charlotte Ayanna as Lisa
Nick Chinlund as Tim
Jaime Gomez as Mark
Raymond Cruz as Sniper
Noel Guglielmi as Moreno
Eva Mendes as Sara Harris
Sarah Danielle Madison as Female Passenger
Crew
David S. Lazan - Art Director
Susan E. Novick - Associate Producer
Mary Vernieu - Casting
Scott Strauss - Co-producer
David Wisnievitz - Co-producer
David Ayer - Co-producer
Michele Michel - Costume Designer
Randy Fletcher - First Assistant Director
Antoine Fuqua - Director
Conrad Buff - Editor
Bruce Berman - Executive Producer
Davis Guggenheim - Executive Producer
Mark Mancina - Composer (Music Score)
John Houlihan - Musical Direction/Supervision
Naomi Shohan - Production Designer
Mauro Fiore - Cinematographer
Jeffrey Silver - Producer
Bobby Newmyer - Producer
Robert C. Goldstein - Set Designer
Sue Lomino - Set Designer
Russell Williams II - Sound/Sound Designer
Spiro Azatos - Stunts Coordinator
Ken Bates - Stunts Coordinator
Tierre Turner - Stunts Coordinator
David Ayer - Screenwriter
Chuck Cohen - Second Unit Director Of Photography
John C. Pattison - Properties
George Simpson - Supervising Sound Editor
Jan Pascale - Set Decorator
David S. Lazan - Art Director
Susan E. Novick - Associate Producer
Mary Vernieu - Casting
Scott Strauss - Co-producer
David Wisnievitz - Co-producer
David Ayer - Co-producer
Michele Michel - Costume Designer
Randy Fletcher - First Assistant Director
Antoine Fuqua - Director
Conrad Buff - Editor
Bruce Berman - Executive Producer
Davis Guggenheim - Executive Producer
Mark Mancina - Composer (Music Score)
John Houlihan - Musical Direction/Supervision
Naomi Shohan - Production Designer
Mauro Fiore - Cinematographer
Jeffrey Silver - Producer
Bobby Newmyer - Producer
Robert C. Goldstein - Set Designer
Sue Lomino - Set Designer
Russell Williams II - Sound/Sound Designer
Spiro Azatos - Stunts Coordinator
Ken Bates - Stunts Coordinator
Tierre Turner - Stunts Coordinator
David Ayer - Screenwriter
Chuck Cohen - Second Unit Director Of Photography
John C. Pattison - Properties
George Simpson - Supervising Sound Editor
Jan Pascale - Set Decorator
David S. Lazan - Art Director
Susan E. Novick - Associate Producer
Mary Vernieu - Casting
Scott Strauss - Co-producer
David Wisnievitz - Co-producer
David Ayer - Co-producer
Michele Michel - Costume Designer
Randy Fletcher - First Assistant Director
Antoine Fuqua - Director
Conrad Buff - Editor
Bruce Berman - Executive Producer
Davis Guggenheim - Executive Producer
Mark Mancina - Composer (Music Score)
John Houlihan - Musical Direction/Supervision
Naomi Shohan - Production Designer
Mauro Fiore - Cinematographer
Jeffrey Silver - Producer
Bobby Newmyer - Producer
Robert C. Goldstein - Set Designer
Sue Lomino - Set Designer
Russell Williams II - Sound/Sound Designer
Spiro Azatos - Stunts Coordinator
Ken Bates - Stunts Coordinator
Tierre Turner - Stunts Coordinator
David Ayer - Screenwriter
Chuck Cohen - Second Unit Director Of Photography
John C. Pattison - Properties
George Simpson - Supervising Sound Editor
Jan Pascale - Set Decorator
David S. Lazan - Art Director
Susan E. Novick - Associate Producer
Mary Vernieu - Casting
Scott Strauss - Co-producer
David Wisnievitz - Co-producer
David Ayer - Co-producer
Michele Michel - Costume Designer
Randy Fletcher - First Assistant Director
Antoine Fuqua - Director
Conrad Buff - Editor
Bruce Berman - Executive Producer
Davis Guggenheim - Executive Producer
Mark Mancina - Composer (Music Score)
John Houlihan - Musical Direction/Supervision
Naomi Shohan - Production Designer
Mauro Fiore - Cinematographer
Jeffrey Silver - Producer
Bobby Newmyer - Producer
Robert C. Goldstein - Set Designer
Sue Lomino - Set Designer
Russell Williams II - Sound/Sound Designer
Spiro Azatos - Stunts Coordinator
Ken Bates - Stunts Coordinator
Tierre Turner - Stunts Coordinator
David Ayer - Screenwriter
Chuck Cohen - Second Unit Director Of Photography
John C. Pattison - Properties
George Simpson - Supervising Sound Editor
Jan Pascale - Set Decorator

Lethal Weapon
If the 1980s and 1990s were the golden age of action movies (in sheer volume at least), Lethal Weapon, descended from the tougher, grittier cop movies of the Seventies (Dirty Harry and The French Connection), remains one of its most lasting products. Similar to the following year's Die Hard, the first Weapon balances a likable and believable sense of humanity with a good helping of freneticaction. Mel Gibson is the star here, and his menacing but exposed performance (as in Mad Max) gives the film much of its edge. Director Richard Donner manages the pace of the movie well, and he is careful to make his two stars (Gibson and Danny Glover) the center of our attention without sacrificing the action thriller conventions and construction. Since his major film debut, 1976's The Omen, Donner has proven himself to be one of the more entertaining directors working firmly inside of the Hollywood system. This was the movie that launched Glover into the public consciousness after some notable supporting roles in Witness, Places in the Heart, and Silverado. It also marked a successful comeback for Gibson after a two-year break from filmmaking. ~ Brendon Hanley, All Movie Guide
 

The Road Warrior
Mad Max 2 (The Road Warrior) is a pure expression of cinematic existentialism. The characters spend their time driving through a barren, post-apocalyptic world looking for gasoline so that they can continue to drive around the desert and find more gasoline. Of course, there's an exciting action movie thrown in as well. The loner protagonist at the center of our attention is again Max (Mel Gibson), who in the first Mad Max lost his wife and child to a murderous bunch of thugs. Max retreats from society, living the life of a scavenger in the "wasteland." It might be a sci-fi setting, but Max is a direct descendant of classic Western and film noir antiheroes. He looks out for himself and only himself, and there's only a very fine line between him and the bad guys. The setup of the "reluctant savior" rescuing the stranded "villagers" is about as traditional a storyline as you can get, and the movie precedents are no less obvious: it's Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven (minus the six other guys). Following the success of this movie, Gibson became an international star. Talented writer/director George Miller has gone on to mixed financial success as a producer and director, but has consistently produced interesting and original material. The infamous Kevin Costner vehicle Waterworld is basically a remake of Mad Max II in an aquatic setting. ~ Brendon Hanley, All Movie Guide
 

Swordfish
(not reviewed)
 

Training Day
In his most nefarious film role yet, Denzel Washington keeps the audience stumbling off balance, forcing them to ponder whether his unorthodox crime-fighting methods are justifiable radicalism or a deviant abuse of power. With bawdy humor and grudging praise providing counterpoint to his fierce stares and verbal intimidation, it's difficult to determine whether he's toughening a protégé through trial by fire, or laughing at a patsy he despises. Antoine Fuqua's Training Day is a violent, vigorous film sure to leave viewers uneasily processing their feelings about it. In that climate of renewed reverence for the police, the film's exaggerated portrayal of narcotics officers can't help but feel a bit uncharitable. Still, there's immediacy to the thesis that these undercover cops are so ornately jeweled, so hip to street culture, and so entrenched in their renegade philosophies that they become indistinguishable from the gangsters they're hunting. The film also understands how this world is governed by bravado, as Washington astutely and systematically manipulates Ethan Hawke's eagerness to prove he's man enough for the job. Washington alternates between visceral intensity and mere showiness in a role that's courageously unlikable, while Hawke makes the most of a soft, underwritten character. Even while including a handful of stylized camera tricks, Fuqua maintains a tense realism by filming in some of L.A.'s worst neighborhoods, using his own street credibility to convince real drug dealers and low-lifes to appear in the film. No less challenging for its flawed sensationalism, Training Day is bracing cinema. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 
Disc Title: Lethal Weapon - People Awards:
Bill Nelson: Academy, Best Sound (nominated)
Dick Alexander: Academy, Best Sound (nominated)
Les Fresholtz: Academy, Best Sound (nominated)
Verne Poore: Academy, Best Sound (nominated)

 
The Road Warrior - Film Awards:
L.A. Film Critics Association, Best Foreign Film (winner)

 
Disc Title: Training Day - People Awards:
Denzel Washington: Academy, Best Actor (winner)
Denzel Washington: American Film Institute, Best Actor (winner)
Denzel Washington: Golden Globe, Best Actor - Drama (nominated)
Denzel Washington: L.A. Film Critics Association, Best Actor (winner)
Denzel Washington: Screen Actors Guild, Best Actor (nominated)
Ethan Hawke: Academy, Best Supporting Actor (nominated)
Ethan Hawke: Screen Actors Guild, Best Supporting Actor (nominated)

 

General Specifications:

Language Options:English, French, Spanish
Subtitle Options:English, French, Spanish
Sound Processing:DD5.1: Dolby Digital w/ sub-woofer channel
DDS2.0: Dolby Digital w/ 4 channels of sound from a 2-channel stereo mix.
DD2: Dolby Digital Stereo
Additional Features:The Road Warrior: Exclusive-to-High-Def bonus: director/ cinematographer commentary! Swordfish: Alternate endings Director commentary Interviews Making-of featurettes and music video Training Day: Additional scenes and alternate ending Director commentary Making-of featurettes and 2 music videos Lethal Weapon: Additional scenes
DVD Aspect Ratio:2.40:1: 2.40:1
1.85:1: Theatre Wide-Screen
MPAA Rating:R
DVD Discs Included:4
DVD Sides:4
DVD DVD Region Code:
Content Length:426 min
 

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