«Suddenly the «fun run'turns into...
a more theatrical version of what we shot already.»
Not exact matches
Bonus: • Both
Theatrical and Unrated
Versions of the Film • Video Commentary with Director Todd Phillips and Actors Bradley Cooper, Zach Galifianakis and Ed Helms • «Map of Destruction» • «The Dan Band» • «The Madness of Ken Jeong» Featurette • Gag Reel • «Action Mashup» • «Three Best Friends Song» •
More Pictures from the Missing Camera • Previews • Digital Copy
(Running three minutes
more than the
theatrical version, this DC draws out Ethan Hawke's bump - and - grind with Angelina Jolie to an absurdly comical length and lingers on the aftermath of a decapitation.)
Even if, as is usually the case, the leaner
theatrical cut is better than the extended one, the Theatrical & Unrated Edition carries both versions plus more bonus features and Amazon is actually selling it for $ 3 less than the DVD with l
theatrical cut is better than the extended one, the
Theatrical & Unrated Edition carries both versions plus more bonus features and Amazon is actually selling it for $ 3 less than the DVD with l
Theatrical & Unrated Edition carries both
versions plus
more bonus features and Amazon is actually selling it for $ 3 less than the DVD with less on it.
Well, let's be
more specific about the original
theatrical versions on Blu ray meaning, if they are remastered with the same care as the current Blu ray
versions.
Helgeland's
version does also work very well, and it is a good film, but the
theatrical cut also has its strengths as well, playing up
more laughs and adding an interesting pathos to the mix.
Parent should note the Extended Cut includes
more content concerns that the
Theatrical Version does.
Both
versions of the Extended Edition include
more than nine hours of new bonus features that will enrich the experience of the Trilogy as fans gear up for the December 12
theatrical release of the third and final film, The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies.
The SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER Blu - ray includes both the Director's Cut and
theatrical version of the film, commentary by director John Badham, a five - part look at the film entitled «Catching the Fever,» behind - the - scenes featurettes, and
more.
This may be the
more honest ending, but I personally like the
theatrical version.
In the
theatrical version, the song that Meurice plays on the jukebox in an early scene is the Four Tops» «It's the Same Old Song,» which recurs twice
more in the film («but with a different meaning...»).
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:
DVD Extras Audio commentary (filmmakers and actors);
Theatrical and extended
version; Digital copy; Video diaries; Cast interviews; Footage from the Dracula Puppet Musical; «Line - O-Rama» (alternate lines); «Sex - O-Rama» (
more of the sex montage) DVD Extras Rating: 8/10
more to the point, BR
version is
more like Alien than the
Theatrical version gets any credit for..
They are, the Rated
Version (a.k.a. — the
theatrical release), or the Unrated
Version (a directors cut providing
more chills).
Transferred at 1.82:1 and enhanced for 16x9 displays, the
theatrical version looks sensational, although it wants for
more detailed shadows; perhaps blacks were crushed on purpose, as the image in and of itself has enough surface clarity to betray substantial — if unobjectionable — grain.
Bonus features include new HD masters derived from the 2K digital intermediate for both the
theatrical and unrated
versions, interviews with the cast and crew, new interviews with write... [Read
More]
The Directors Cut
version of The New Guy only runs about 4 minutes longer than the PG - 13 rated
theatrical cut (which was on the previous DVD release) and it offers some new jokes and a newly cut opening which reveals
more of Dizzys back - story.
Instead of opening it up for the screen, however, she has deliberately made it even
more claustrophobic than a
theatrical version could be.
Special features are as follows: Ghostbusters: Answer the Call (4K UHD / Blu - ray 3D Combo Pack, Blu - ray & Digital)-
Theatrical Version (117 minutes)- Extended Edition (133 minutes)- 2 Hysterically Haunting Gag Reels - 4 Unearthed deleted scenes - 11 Totally Possessed Alternate Scenes and
more than 60 minutes of additional extended and alternate scenes with Ultraviolet download - 6 Jokes - A-Plenty alternate take reels - 5 Supernatural Featurettes: Chris Hemsworth is Kevin, The Ghosts of Ghostbusters, Meet the Team, Visual Effects: 30 Years Later and Slime Time.
This four - disc set contains the 127 - minute U.S.
theatrical cut, which is Romero's preferred cut; the extended
version (138 minutes), which premiered at the Cannes Film festival; and the 118 - minute European
version, which was prepared by Dario Argento and contains a
more complete Goblin score.
This cut uses its additional two - and - a-half hours of running time to dig into the story's satire at a
more leisurely pace, resulting in a fuller study of the characters and historical context compared to the
theatrical version's
more impressionistic feeling of madness.
THE BLU - RAY DISC Taken arrives on Blu - ray from Fox in a «2 - Disc Extended Cut» that gives you the option, via seamless branching, of watching the
theatrical or unrated
version of the film — the most obvious variation between the two a couple of extended shots in which Bryan fires a few
more bullets at some assholes in tuxedos in what can only be described as a miniature tantrum.
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.
More recently, he produced the musical and
theatrical installation Song of Roland: The Arabic
Version (2017), for which the titular French verse epic is translated into classical Arabic and sung in the style of the 800 - year - old fidjeri tradition of the pearl divers of the Persian Gulf.