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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Director's Cut / Wide Screen / Repackaged | $12.74 |
| DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $23.19 |
"Full Contact: The Making of Any Given Sunday"; LL Cool J "Shut 'Em Down" music video; Interactive menus; Notes on the stars and director; Theatrical trailer; Scene access; Subtitles: English & Français; Enhanced features for DVD-ROM PC:; Web events; Chat-room access and web-site links; Movie review "Scoreboard"; Original theatrical web site; Sampler trailers
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
0. Scene Selections
1. There goes history (Game 1). [4:25]
2. Two in a row. [1:17]
3. Mystery man. [4:22]
4. Hurting men. [1:48]
5. Half-time speech. [2:24]
6. Go to the Buik. [3:41]
7. Turning up the volume. [2:36]
8. Post-Game 1. [2:21]
9. Hospital visit. [2:13]
10. Bar talk. [4:21]
11. Matters of econmics. [6:43]
12. Off the playbook (Game 2). [4:47]
13. That is football (My Niggas)! [2:27]
14. Benefit party. [3:31]
15. Getting and going along (Cheek to Cheek). [3:03]
16. Lovers quarrel. [1:40]
17. Airplane to L.A. [1:51]
18. Game 3. [3:54]
19. Steamin' Beamen (Revolution). [3:50]
20. Post-Game 3. [3:23]
21. New blood (Como Ves, My Name Is Willie). [3:10]
22. One can, the other can't. [3:13]
23. Media star. [3:27]
24. Lunchtime argument. [5:33]
25. Sharks party. [1:56]
26. Stormy weather (Game 4). [6:13]
27. Back to basics. [1:00]
28. Dreams of warriors. [2:20]
29. Steamroom. [5:15]
30. Cap's decision. [1:56]
31. Willie finds Vanessa. [4:39]
32. Tony visits Margaret. [2:52]
33. Pantheon rings (I Can't Face the Music). [2:00]
34. Reluctant tasks. [3:48]
35. Inches speech. [3:04]
36. Cap's game (Blue on Blue). [4:32]
37. The commissioner. [4:12]
38. Half-time. [1:41]
39. Visual damage. [3:40]
40. Willie's game. [1:46]
41. 4th And 1. [2:43]
42. Christina and Margaret reconnect. [3:01]
43. Willie and the team. [2:38]
44. Final play. [2:51]
45. Together. [2:52]
46. Tony's plans. [3:00]
47. End Credits (Any Given Sunday, Bended Knee). [4:04]
Football, arguably the most spectacle-oriented of sports, is given the highly stylized, seedy-underside presidential treatment by Oliver Stone in Any Given Sunday, a lengthy, star-studded drama with the most graphic gridiron sequences ever lensed. This is the anti-Brian's Song -- as certain to make you cringe as James Caan and Billy Dee Williams make you cry. As depicted by Stone, the average football game becomes a clash of titans, an epic undertaking of Homeric scope. His players achieve almost mythic proportions, crunching bones and straining sinews in slow motion as an angry sky hurls lightning down at them. Off the field, they become mere mortals with very real faults and frailties. Not unexpectedly, top-billed Al Pacino dominates this three-hour spectacle with his portrayal of the weary, cynical coach of the fictitious Miami Sharks, desperate for one more championship. Very unexpectedly, though, Jamie Foxx, previously a minor sitcom star, is quite convincing (albeit undersized) as the Sharks' upstart quarterback who goes from third string to superstar in a matter of minutes. Those two receive admirable support from Cameron Diaz as the team's ruthless co-owner, Dennis Quaid as the aging, injury-prone quarterback, and especially James Woods as the unethical team doctor. This is another in the string of smarmy, detestable roles that Woods has perfected for Stone movies (including Salvador and Nixon). Despite frequent lapses into over-the-top melodrama, Any Given Sunday is an unusually brutal examination of pro football and its tawdry ties to the media and big business. And as such, it makes for a much more explosive outing than your typical Sunday afternoon at the stadium. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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