Sentences with phrase «features audio commentaries as»

The home entertainment release of «Fear the Walking Dead» Season 3 features audio commentaries as well as deleted and extended scenes.

Not exact matches

Special features include audio commentary with director Michael Ritchie and actress Jean Louisa Kelly, as well as an isolated score track and original cut of the film in standard def.
As with all the best cult TV series, the «Adventure Time» home video releases are chock full of bonus material, with the Season One set featuring four audio commentaries, three featurettes, 49 minutes worth of animatics and a few more fun bits here and there.
The Blu - ray and DVD both includes special features such as an extensive featurette on the eerie true story behind «The Possession,» along with separate audio commentaries with Bornedal and the film's writers.
Scroll down to check out the bonus features, including a new 7.1 audio mix (as well as the original mono) and a new commentary tack by John Carpenter and Jamie Lee Curtis, and then let us know what you think of the announcement in the comments!
(The commentary is presented as an audio - only feature on the DVD.)
The generic extras start with two audio commentaries with one starring director Harlin and the other featuring the voices of Cena and writer Daniel Kunka; both are quite irritating as Harlin and Cena independently seem to be under the impression that they achieved something revolutionary with 12 Rounds.
Bonus features come by way of a feature - length audio commentary track with director Amiel, a special making - of documentary, and around 10 other separate featurettes which include a wide array of cast, crew and academic - leaning interviews, as well as a tour of Darwin's home, which has been turned into a museum.
The bonus features are anchored by an audio commentary track featuring Selick, Burton and Elfman, who offer insights as to the thematic development of the material and, of course, the nut - and - bolt mechanics of the filmmaking process, which is quite interesting.
Its chief supplemental features consist of a feature - length audio commentary track with director Gauger and a seven - minute behind - the - scenes featurette which includes brief interview snippets with cast and crew, as well as some audition tape footage.
For the Blu - ray debut of «Snatch,» Sony has brought over most of the bonus features from the two - disc special edition DVD — including an audio commentary with director Guy Ritchie and producer Matthew Vaughn, deleted scenes, and a making - of featurette — as well as some exclusive extras found only on BD - Live.
DVD Features: The single - disc release of «The Holiday» features a full - length audio commentary with writer / director Nancy Myers, as well as the making - of featurette «Foreign ExchangeFeatures: The single - disc release of «The Holiday» features a full - length audio commentary with writer / director Nancy Myers, as well as the making - of featurette «Foreign Exchangefeatures a full - length audio commentary with writer / director Nancy Myers, as well as the making - of featurette «Foreign Exchange.»
Apparently there are more additional features, as well as an audio commentary from Abrams and the cast.
(It goes without saying that it is best to check out the special features - including the various audio commentaries - only after you've watched all the episodes in the box set as they do contain spoilers.)
Masterfully restored, this set includes favorites such as The Hound of the Baskervilles, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, and others, complete with six audio commentaries and many other great features.
Extras begin with two audio commentaries, the first featuring Tarsem, who, as part of his introduction, promises to not stop talking for the duration.
Expectedly, the Blu - ray DVD's bonus features center on Elvis and include the same extras as the 2006 50th anniversary edition: «Elvis Hits Hollywood,» «The Colonel and the King,» and «Love Me Tender: Birth and Boom of the Elvis Hit» along with a very insightful audio commentary by Elvis» longtime friend and historian Jerry Schilling.
Besides the feature presentation, this version comes bulked up with deleted scenes and new audio commentaries by Sylvester Stallone, as well as boxing legends trainer Lou Duva and commentator Bert Sugar.
Both offer the feature presentation, an audio commentary with writers Ted Elliott & Terry Rossio, as well as the Bloopers Of The Caribbean.
The first features director Barry Sonnenfeld and Tommy Lee Jones and can be enjoyed either in the usual audio - only way or as a «telestrator» visual commentary.
There's also a really cool alternate opening that was probably cut to keep the Loom of Fate (and the bullet curving techinque) a secret, as well as a few BD - Live features that allow you to chat with friends or even record your very own audio commentary.
The special features including an audio commentary track from executive producers Barry Bernholtz and Jeffrey Schneck, as well as producers Peter Sullivan and director John Shepphird.
The DVD features audio commentary from Falco, Mendelsohn and the film's two producers; deleted scenes with Mendelsohn's commentary; and a wonderful short, filmed in the same locations, that Mendelsohn obviously used as a stylistic blueprint for «Judy Berlin.»
Featured on the first disc of the set are both versions of the film, the theatrical R - rated cut and the unrated version (which contains ten minutes of never - before - seen footage), as well as two full - length audio commentaries.
The special features includes an audio commentary with director Stephen Gaghan as well as a deleted scene, a featurette on the film's locations and a behind - the - scenes look at Matthew McConaughey's character.
These come as video interviews that cut to film clips with the audio running atop them, so it feels like an abbreviated substitute for a feature commentary.
The special features include an audio commentary track with Writer - Director Osgood Perkins as well as a behind - the - scenes featurette «The Dead of Winter: Making The Blackcoat's Daughter».
Presented in a widescreen video transfer and Dolby Digital 5.1 audio soundtrack, the «Man on Fire» DVD includes two full - length audio commentary tracks (the first by director Tony Scott, and the other with producer Lucas Foster, screenwriter Brian Helgeland and star Dakota Fanning), as well as deleted scenes and an alternate ending (also featuring optional director commentary).
Both the Combo Pack and DVD extras include deleted and extended scenes with optional audio commentary with director Gavin Hood, as well as a feature - length audio commentary with producers Roberto Orci and Gigi Pritzker.
This new 3 - disc (2 Blu - ray, 1 DVD) release feature a a new cut of the film including an alternate ending with audio commentary available as well.
Bonus features include an active - screen main menu, an often unintentionally amusing audio commentary track with Polish - born director Rafal Zielinski, and a pair of interview featurettes — a 10 - minute chat with producer Maurice Smith, who comes across as less skeevy than some of his other credits (Flesh Gordon) might suggest, and a five - minute talk with production manager Ken Gord.
DVD special features are ample, anchored by a feature - length audio commentary track with director Alvart and producer Jeremy Bolt, in which the pair discuss Alvart's late - in - the - game, pre-production idea of depicting the effects of years of hyper - sleep via sloughing skin, as well as the special challenges involved for Foster in crafting a performance out of reacting to Quaid's disembodied voice, since more than half of his material was prerecorded, before the younger actor's scenes.
Regardless of arguable merit, it's a nice commercial jump - off for the series, as this DVD set's supplemental features include audio commentaries on select episodes by Ratner, creator Paul Scheuring and a wide assortment of other cast and crew.
Titanic (Fox, $ 19.98) offers a new audio commentary by Robert Wagner, Audrey Dalton and others on the 1953 Academy Award - winner for best writing, as well as a new documentary and other extra features.
Adequate audio and video presentation and inspired bonus features that even include a feature - length commentary track make this a thumbs - up effort on Disney's part and something fans will love and newcomers might want to consider as well.
Enter the room of The Disaster Artist with the release's extensive Special Features, including audio commentary with director James Franco, Dave Franco, Tommy Wiseau, Greg Sestero, and more; a gag reel; as well as three featurettes.
As has become Criterion's habit, included are a number of features geared toward the cinephiles who make up its fan base, things like film historian Bruce Eder's audio commentary, experts from Francois Truffaut's 1962 audio interview with Hitchcock, and a gallery of production stills.
An audio commentary track from Samm Deighan and Kate Ellinger and a scene - select commentary from Altman are also includes, as well as several extra features.
More extra features in this handsome package include a new feature - length audio commentary by film historian Stephen Prince, author of The Warrior's Camera: The Cinema of Akira Kurosawa and a documentary from 2003 on the making of the film, created as part of the Toho Masterworks series Akira Kurosawa: It Is Wonderful to Create.
Aftershock's bonus features begin with what is billed as an «international» audio commentary.
The package includes a Blu - ray Disc version of the film as well, which carries over all of the previous BD special features, including scene - specific audio commentary with director Rob Reiner, behind - the - scenes featurettes, and more.
EXTRAS: The Blu - ray release features three versions of the movie (the theatrical cut, the special edition and the sing - along), as well as an audio commentary by directors Kirk Wise and Gary Trousdale, producer Don Hahn and composer Alan Menken.
Featuring an always interesting audio commentary with director George A. Romero (as well as producer Peter Grunwald and editor Michael Daughtery), the special features are perhaps the best thing about this release.
Chicago first came out on DVD as a single - disc release in the summer of 2003, the only bonus features being the deleted song «Class», an audio commentary, and a rather flimsy behind - the - scenes featurette.
Special features include an audio commentary with the filmmaker as well as a making - of featurette entitled Lazer Beach.
Surprisingly ambient Dolby Digital 5.1 audio complements both versions, as does a feature - length talent commentary with «My name's Katie... Holmes,» Marc Blucas, and monomonikered Amerie.
Blockheads are in for a real treat with Sony's Blu - ray release of the film, which includes three different audio commentaries — all featuring writer / director Joe Cornish with 1) the junior cast, 2) the senior cast, and 3) executive producer Edgar Wright — as well an in - depth making - of featurette («Behind the Block») that runs just over an hour long.
This may not be as expansive as some of the studio's other sets, but it's a fine disc, providing a substantially improved feature presentation and first - rate extras, most notably a great audio commentary and vintage Kirk Douglas interview.
Gilliam provides optional audio commentary on each deleted sequence, which is actually more interesting than the feature commentary, as he explains what he likes about each scene and why it had to go.
DVD Features: The two - disc special edition DVD of «Memoirs of a Geisha» is a grand release that includes eleven production featurettes - including «Geisha Bootcamp,» «The Music of «Memoirs»,» and «The Way of the Sumo» - as well as two audio commentaries featuring director Rob Marshall and various crew members.
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