DVD - 2 Disc Set - Wide Screen Learn more
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| DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 | $13.49 |
| DVD - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $14.99 |
| DVD - Full Frame | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $19.99 |
Commentary by Robert Zemeckis and crew; The Charlie Rose Show interview with Tom Hanks; Wilson: The Life and Death of a Hollywood Extra featurette; The Island featurette; Special effects vignettes; S.T.O.P.: Surviving As a Castaway survivalists documentary; HBO First Look documentary; Storyboard-to-film comparison; Concept art gallery; Theatrical trailers and tv spots
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Cast Away
1. Main Titles [1:52]
2. The FedEx Way [6:46]
3. A Message for Kelly [3:45]
4. Home for Christmas [5:17]
5. Presents & Promises [3:02]
6. Turbulence [1:56]
7. Mayday! [3:05]
8. The Crash [5:25]
9. Washed AShore [:25]
10. Totally Alone [4:01]
11. The Coconut Problem [:16]
12. The Island [:10]
13. Albert Miller [3:30]
14. A Light in the Distance [2:47]
15. The Storm [4:10]
16. Gifts From FedEx [5:14]
17. To Make Fire [4:39]
18. Wilson [:21]
19. His Own Dentist [4:43]
20. Four Years Later [2:19]
21. The Raft [:39]
22. 30 Feet of Rope [6:22]
23. Escape to the Sea [2:15]
24. Where's Wilson? [4:25]
25. Rescued [1:31]
26. Welcome Home [1:05]
27. Back to Life [:27]
28. The Night Visitor [5:55]
29. The Love of My Life [:38]
30. Adding It Up [6:28]
31. At the Crossroads [:14]
32. End Titles [6:36]
By updating Robinson Crusoe for contemporary audiences, director Robert Zemeckis (Forrest Gump) and megastar Tom Hanks created one of the more unusual and engrossing Hollywood movies to wash up on the big screen in quite a while. Hanks plays Chuck Noland, a workaholic Federal Express engineer whose plane goes down over the South Seas, leaving him stranded alone on the proverbial desert island for four years -- a cruelly ironic fate for a man obsessed with time to the point of compulsion. For the better part of Cast Away, we watch as Hanks figures out how to stay alive using the meager resources available to him -- including the contents of the FedEx packages that wash ashore from his wreck -- and his rudimentary progress makes for entertainment as involving as any effects-laden blockbuster. There is suspense in anticipating how he will solve the problems that confront him: opening a coconut, collecting drinking water, and most daunting of all, making fire. Cast Away, like its hero, only comes alive when stripped of the trappings of civilization. Everything leading up to and following Noland's stay on the island -- even the extended and terrifying plane crash -- feel beside the point. There is more genuine pathos in his final scene with the anthropomorphized volleyball that becomes his cherished companion than there is in any of the teary-eyed exchanges with girlfriend Helen Hunt. Although the movie is overly freighted with allegorical and spiritual significance, the scenes on the island work because they hark back to primal pleasures of earliest cinema, when audiences were spellbound simply by the sight of a human being on the screen going through the basic routines of existence. Kryssa Schemmerling, Barnes & Noble
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