Not exact matches
On the DVD
commentary, they are talking about an alternative ending that I always liked: When Morgan Freeman's character realizes that he can't keep Pitt from shooting John Doe, he pulls out his gun and does it himself, sparing the younger
cop decades in prison and sacrificing himself.
Opting for straight - line suspense, the filmmakers had to forgo subjective cutaways like the plainclothes
cop's reflections
on his tortuous relationship with a Third - World - infatuated feminist; again, Stone writes in a more bedrock
commentary on metropolitan backsliding by refusing to reveal which of the hostages is the
cop, so that the police monitoring the stolen train are led to wonder whether it's a man or a woman and chauvinistically calculate a woman's chances for taking effective action against the hijackers.
This three - disc set boxes up Shoot First, Die Later (1974), a ruthless crime drama starring Luc Merenda as a corrupt
cop on a mission of righteous vengeance (previously released as a stand - alone disc), with two disc debuts: Naked Violence (1969), a juvenile delinquent
cop drama by way of social
commentary, and Kidnap Syndicate (1975), a revenge thriller with Merenda, this time playing an innocent bystander roused to take justice into his own hands.
Also included
on the Region 2 Special Edition were a half - hour documentary, six featurettes, a half - hour of video blogs, a Plot Holes & Comparisons section, a poster and photo gallery, and director Edgar Wright's 40 - minute 1993
cop action student film Dead Right complete with
commentary and featurette.