Not exact matches
Chapters: 16 Region: 2 Ratio: 2.35:1 (Anarmorphic) Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
Extra Features:
Scene selection, «Cutting Room Floor» outtakes, «Stunt Footage» featurette, two trailers, sleeve notes, multiple languages, subtitles, English for the hearing impaired.
Chapters: 20 Ratio: 1.78:1 Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
Extra Features:
Scene selection, deleted
scenes, director's commentary, selected soundbites, talent filmographies, unedited B - roll, trailer, TV spots.
Chapters: 24 Ratio: 2.35:1 Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
Extra Features:
Scene selection, «behind the
scenes» featurette, two trailers, four page booklet with production notes, multiple languages, subtitles, English for the hearing impaired.
Chapters: 13 Ratio: 2.35:1 (Anamorphic) Sound: Dolby Digital
Extra Features:
Scene selection, trailer, multiple language subtitles, English subtitles for the hearing impaired
DVD
Extras Anamorphic 1.85:1; incredibly atmospheric animated menus;
scene selection; choice of 2.0 / Dolby digital 5.1; full audio commentary by co - writer / director Shane Meadows, co - writer / star Paddy Considine, and producer Mark Herbert (all giggling), revealing that the decision to include Anthony in
scenes other than flashbacks was last - minute, that the script changed daily on - set, that the castle was a disused zoo, and that the original ending was too close to Get Carter; nine minutes of commentary out - takes (Easter egg); Optimum trailer reel; What U Sitting On?
Young @ Heart sings its way onto DVD with the following chorus of bonus
extras: a
selection of deleted
scenes (including Fred's Eulogy), the featurette Young @ Heart Goes to Hollywood, and three music videos (Road To Nowhere, Stayin» Alive, and I Will Survive).
The additional
extras include a robust thirty - one
scene selections; English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish spoken languages; French, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian, and Spanish subtitles; and English, German, and Italian captions for the hearing impaired.
The only downer is the lack of any
extras whatsoever, unless the
Scene Selection is your thing...
The only
extras are animated menus,
scene selection, the original trailer, and a stills gallery - but the film is presented in a restored and remastered widescreen print reviving its original Panavision 2.35:1 aspect ratio, and the DVD includes an excellent collectors booklet.
A
scene selections and
extras list occupy one side of the only in - case insert, which doubles as a Becoming Jane ad.
Rounding out the
extras is a
selection of SD deleted
scenes, nine in total, with optional commentary from Stewart and, I think, Gvozdas.
Inside the keepcase, there is a fold - out poster for My
Scene Goes Hollywood: The Movie, a two - sided insert with chapter
selections and
extras overview, and a coupon booklet which predictably promotes upcoming DTVs (Bambi II, Kronk's New Groove) and offers savings on obvious (Tarzan II DVD, the new Lilo & Stitch Island Favorites CD) and not - so - obvious (Land O'Frost lunchmeats and Dole fruit bowls) products.
DVD
Extras: Music videos for «Iron Man» by Nico Vega and «Fade» by Egyptian, the film's trailer, a
selection of deleted
scenes including an equally unsatisfying alternate ending and a mind numbing audio commentary with writer / director Matthew Leutwyler, director of photography David Jones and writer Gillian Vigman.
No trailers, no
extras, no
scene selection menu.
There's nothing special about the packaging; Valiant comes in a black keepcase (there's some logic behind the color, but finding it requires more thought than interest and space probably allow) with a form for a new 100 - Disney DVD sweepstakes, a booklet promoting Kronk's New Groove, Bambi II, and Lady and the Tramp, and a two - sided insert which nearly duplicates the cover art in addition to providing
scene selections and an overview of the
extras.
Apart from its aforementioned chapter
selection, the only supplemental bonus feature comes by way of eight minutes of additional excised material, including an
extra dance
scene and a mock condom commercial starring Kattan.
Given the film's reportedly chaotic development, there's probably five times as much fascinating footage as we get in a tantalizing
selection of «Deleted
Scenes» (12:22, SD), but we're given trims that compliment the finished product: CIA Director Ezra Kramer (Scott Glenn) testifying before Congress and firing Landy, a slaying on the streets of Spain, Ross getting a point in the right direction, Bourne attempting to squeeze information from a contact,
extra footage from the Waterloo Station sequence, two strategic pow - wows between Landy and Vosen, and Bourne seeing off Parsons.
DVD Review: The single - disc release of «Eagle vs. Shark» probably won't win over any new fans on DVD, but those that do intend on adding the indie comedy to their collections can expect a decent
selection of
extras including an audio commentary with writer / director Taika Waititi and star Loren Horsley (via phone), deleted
scenes and outtakes.
Aside from offering a choice between theatrical and extended versions of the film, with
extra deleted
scenes and improvisations on top of that, the DVD
extras boast a sizable
selection of making - of featurettes, the chronicles of Kate and John Cena's Pazuzu, a video of cast members reading the teenage diary of screenwriter Paula Pell, a VFX breakdown of the one spectacular shot in the film in which an outdoor pool sinks into the ground, and more.