Sentences with phrase «dvd version of the film»

A third platter brings DVD version of the film with one extra: the «Journey to Lincoln» featurette.
Their Happy Is Too Loud The Real Mee Photo Gallery Theatrical Trailer Sneak Peeks DVD version of the film Digital version of the film
(A fullscreen DVD version of the film is sold separately.)
There's no word on exact bonus features with the sets so far, but the box with the gift set looks pretty huge, and Fox Home Entertainment is assuring us it will come with the 3D Blu - Ray, a DVD version of the film, and an entire disc of extras.
The collection also includes a second disc, featuring the DVD version of the film on one side and a plethora of docs, features and behind - the - scenes goodies on the other.
It's so stupid, you might as well buy the DVD version of a film instead of the Bluray for a 1080p screen, because the clarity and sharpness is negligible.
This would explain the rumours that the Blu - ray and DVD version of the film might come with Whedon's original three and a half hour cut of the movie, which if true I'll be happy to watch.

Not exact matches

«Invincibles» will be aired for the first time on Sky Sports 1 & 5 after Wednesday's Champions League match with Monaco, with an extended version of the film available on iTunes and DVD from March 30.
That done, his team have quite literally reworked the entire movie - reframing some shots, recolouring most of them, and generally spending an enormous amount of time making sure that this is the definitive version of the film for home video, both on DVD and on future higher - definition formats.
IMDB Link: American Wedding DVD Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 DVD Extras: commentary, outtakes, deleted scenes, unrated version of the film, kooky «unrated» extras, and a bar of soap to wash that mouth out with.
How did the picture and sound of this Blu - ray compare to the film's DVD version?
The differences between the theatrical and unrated versions of the film (available on both the Blu - ray and DVD) are so minuscule that you may miss it if you blink.
The DVD and Blu - Ray release will not only include the theatrical version of the film, but also an extended cut!
Presented in widescreen and fullscreen on the same side of a dual - layer DVD, the film's image lacks depth here — there's a muted, Seventies quality to Barry Stone's cinematography that no doubt looked smashing on the big screen and probably would've been marginally improved at home by dispensing with the fullscreen version (thus lessening the compromise of compression), which lops a significant amount of visual information from the right side of the frame (while restoring a negligible amount to the bottom — in one shot literally a pinkie toe).
The PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 Blu - ray / DVD combo pack includes both the theatrical version of the film and the unrated version, as well as «The Recovered Files» with nearly 30 minutes of new found footage.
The DVD has a short feature on the making of the film, which was created with off - the - shelf software as a sort of low - rent counterpart to the computer animation applied in fellow nominees «Shrek» and «Monsters, Inc.» The disc also has two music videos, a dozen promotional TV spots, seven games playable on computer DVD - ROM drives and full - screen and widescreen versions of the film.
I've also heard a rumour that Tarantino's going to be putting out a director's cut on DVD, which will include not only the uncut Japanese versions of the films, but join the two together in one huge film.
A single - disc DVD containing the theatrical and unrated versions of the film will also be available on January 29th.
The 3 - disc DVD includes many specials, including the previous two film versions (1931, same title, and 1936, called Satan Met a Lady), new documentary, theatrical trailers of this film and Sergeant York, Oscar - nominated short, Gay Parisian, and others.
For this two - DVD set, one big attraction stems from the inclusion of two versions of the film.
The magic of translating Howl's Moving Castle into an English Language Version, provide much of the meat for the bonus features on the DVD release of this Japanese anime film.
Also new on DVD: M. Night Shyamalan's The Last Airbender (Paramount), an adaptation of the animated TV series and one of the most critically reviled films of the year, the feature film version of Beverly Cleary's Ramona And Beezus (Fox), Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore (Warner), Marina de Van's Don't Look Back (IFC) with Sophie Marceau and Monica Bellucci, The Lightkeepers (Image) with Richard Dreyfuss and Blythe Danner, Lau Kar - Leung's classic martial arts movie Shaolin Mantis (Vivendi) and the newly remastered The Endless Summer: Director's Special Edition (Monterey).
To boot, Left Behind wielded some genre thrills, a familiar brand (the Kirk Cameron version camped out on Amazon's best - selling DVD list for months) and an uncommonly seasoned cast and crew, including longtime stunt coordinator Vic Armstrong (Harrison Ford's stunt double in Blade Runner, Return of the Jedi, and the first three Indiana Jones films) at the helm.
«Fist Fight» will be available on Blu - ray Combo Pack for $ 35.99 on May 30, and includes the film in high definition on Blu - ray disc, a DVD and a digital version of the movie in Digital HD with UltraViolet *.
The DVD and Blu - ray editions both feature the standard and 3 - D versions of the film, but the vaunted 3 - D of the theatrical version is significantly diminished by the old red and green glasses for home video.
Automatically streaming random trailer content on startup, the Paramount disc comes packaged with DVD and Ultraviolet copies of the film's unrated version.
THE DVD Like Disney's other 2 - disc Studio Ghibli releases, Whisper of the Heart arrives on DVD in North America slipcovered in a swing - tray keepcase and equipped with paltry, Amero - centric extras and a second platter consisting solely of a storyboarded version of the film.
«CHIPS» will be available on Blu - ray Combo Pack for $ 35.99 on June 27, and includes the film in high definition on Blu - ray disc, a DVD and a digital version of the movie in Digital HD with UltraViolet *.
Since both films well pre-date the preservationist era of film - as - art - and - heritage — Greed was released in 1925, The Magnificent Ambersons in 1942 — they have suffered the further indignity of being unreconstructible; studios back in those days didn't hang on to excised footage for the sake of future director's cuts on DVD, so the reels upon reels of nitrate film trimmed from the original versions were — depending on which movie you're talking about and which story you believe — burned, thrown in the garbage, dumped into the Pacific, or simply left to decompose in the vaults.»
Yet filmmakers like Joe Dante, Martin Scorsese, and Quentin Tarantino have singled him out for praise, and recently Image Entertainment released «The Mario Bava Collection» on DVD, vanquishing the bastardized American versions of his films with digital transfers of the original European releases.
The Blu - ray set contains a 3D version of the film — playable only on a 3D television with the special glasses — as well as DVD and digital versions.
Warner's DVD version of McCabe & Mrs. Miller is unfortunately something of a disappointment in the technical department: the 2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen image is too black for a film that was pre-exposed in order to decrease contrast, while digital video noise reduction looks like it was rather severely applied to the intentionally gritty images, resulting in a general lack of detail.
Features commentary by film scholar Dana Polan, a new interview with Gloria Grahame biographer Vincent Curcio, a 20 - minute piece with filmmaker Curtis Hanson produced for the 2002 DVD release, a condensed version of the 1975 documentary I'm a Stranger Here Myself (this runs about 40 minutes), and the radio adaptation of the original novel produced for «Suspense» in 1948, plus a fold - out booklet with an essay by Imogen Sara Smith.
Gunman's Walk has never been released on DVD in the United States, and many of his early films circulate in cheap, unrestored versions that do little justice to the original film.
Both the Blu - ray Combo Pack and the single disc DVD include UltraViolet which allows consumers to download and instantly stream the standard definition theatrical version of the film to a wide range of devices including computers and compatible tablets, smartphones, game consoles, Internet - connected TVs and Blu - ray players.
I had accumulated the various European DVD releases of the film — all of which featured both versions — so I asked him which version he had transferred.
Now, movie fans can experience this riveting film with a Blu - ray + DVD Combo Pack which includes two versions of the film — the authentic language film with English subtitles on the Blu - ray and the English language version featured on the DVD disc.
The Complete Jacques Tati (Criterion, Blu - ray and DVD) collects all six features he directed (including alternate versions of three films) and seven shorts he wrote and / or directed, plus a wealth of other supplements.
By 2004, the film had grossed over $ 14 million in video sales and rentals — enough for Newmarket and writer / director Richard Kelly to release a new and expanded version of the film three years later - not on DVD but boldly back in the theatres.
Formats: DVD, Blu - ray Disc with new 4K digital restorations of the original theatrical version of the film and the 1989 director's cut, both supervised by director of photography Walter Lassally, with uncompressed monaural and stereo soundtracks on the Blu - ray.
Blu - ray and DVD, in Farsi with English subtitles, with a substantial collection of featurettes, including an onstage Q&A with director Ana Lily Amirpour conducted by Roger Corman and an interview with Amirpour and actress Sheila Vand, plus deleted scenes and a booklet with a graphic novel version of the film.
A curious product of the modern media age, the shortcomings of The Return of the King lead one inevitably to wonder if the impending extended version of the film on DVD won't, like it did for The Two Towers: EE, fashion a melancholy completeness from this mélange of sometimes intoxicating, occasionally exhilarating parts.
Blu - ray and DVD, with original Japanese language and English dub versions (Chloë Grace Moretz, James Caan, Mary Steenburgen, and Lucy Liu are among the voice performers of the English language cast) and the feature - length documentary Isao Takahata and His Tale of The Princess Kaguya, plus a news clip of the announcement of the completion of the film and Japanese and U.S. trailers.
Anchor Bay's Return to Oz DVD contained both fullscreen and widescreen versions of the film, remastered in 5.1, and with the added bonus of a new interview with star Fairuza Balk.
THE DVD by Bill Chambers Sort of inevitable that Warner / Morgan Creek's DVD release of Exorcist: The Beginning doesn't, despite rumours promising the contrary, contain the Paul Schrader incarnation of the film (which will premiere at the Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Film (click here for a link to the trailer)-RRB-, so perhaps the bigger letdown of this disc is the coyness of its supplementary material, which alludes to Schrader's version only in terms of the unusual duress that replacement director Renny Harlin was under in helming a prequel to one of the biggest breadwinners in the studio stable.
Crowe reunited Skye and Cusack for a commentary to go with a new version of the DVD, and the actors talk about the romance that might have happened were they not paired off with others during filming.
The Blu - ray Combo Pack features the theatrical version of the film in hi - definition and standard definition; the Blu - ray Combo Pack features the theatrical version of the film in hi - definition on Blu - ray; and the DVD features the theatrical version in standard definition.
Also on the DVD: an infomercial for Seduce & Destroy, the woman - conquering system that Cruise's character, Frank T.J. Mackey, advocates; an extended version of the «Seduce & Destroy» seminar in the film; and a music video of Aimee Mann's «Save Me.»
With more than 50 additional minutes of exclusive performance footage not seen in the theatrical version of the film, the Festival Express DVD set features the following «bonus» set list:
The Blu - ray also features bonus DVD and Ultraviolet Digital HD copies copy of the film (theatrical version only).
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