Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled Learn more
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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
| DVD - Full Frame | $14.99 |
1080p high definition; 16x9 widescreen version; 6.1 DTS-ES discrete audio; 5.1 Dlby Digital Surround EX audio; English and Spanish subtitles; Interactive menus powered my Metamenu Technology; Change audio mix, subtitle language of jump to any scene ant amy time - even during playback
Full Product DetailsQuite accurately described by studio publicists as "a provocative and unflinching look" at contemporary life in a post-9/11 Los Angeles suffused with racial tensions, Crash boasts an unusually complex script and wonderful performances. It also moralizes and traffics in outrageous coincidences. Nonetheless, this drama from Million Dollar Baby screenwriter Paul Haggis sports some truly unforgettable sequences and an ensemble cast that, individually and collectively, supplies perhaps the best acting in any movie released this year. No less than a half dozen plot threads are used to weave a multilayered story in which most of the characters interact with one another, in some cases without realizing it. Brendan Fraser and Sandra Bullock play a district attorney and his wife who find themselves carjacked on a busy L.A. street. Matt Dillon plays a racist cop who deliberately harasses an African-American TV director Terrence Howard and his beautiful wife (Thandie Newton) while his embarrassed partner (Ryan Phillippe) is obliged to look on. Don Cheadle and Jennifer Esposito play police detectives investigating what appears to be a racially motivated shooting with political implications for the police department. Other subplots involve a hardworking Latino locksmith (Michael Pena), a Persian shopkeeper (Shaun Toub) whose store is robbed, and a pair of young black men (Larenz Tate and the rapper Chris "Ludacris" Bridges) who spend the day trying to boost cars. There's no denying that the movie deals with important issues, and despite its earnest self-righteousness Crash contributes forcefully and memorably to a debate our society needs to have. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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