DVD - Wide Screen Learn more
Enter a zip code
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Full Frame | $14.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
| DVD | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Stereo | $19.99 |
Closed Caption; Full-length audio commentary by Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn, and director/writer Rawson Marshall Thurber; Deleted/extended scenes and alternate ending with optional commentary by director/writer Rawson Marshall Thurber; DVD-ROM content: Dodgeball screenplay, bloopers/gag reel, featurettes, trailers, and much more
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Like Baldness or Necrophilia
2. Average Joe's (Main Titles)
3. Justin's Shame
4. Ms. for a Mr. - A Serious Situation
5. An Impromptu Car Wash
6. We Could Play Dodgeball!
7. Ipso Facto, He's Your Boss
8. You're in a Chinese Opium Den, Timmy
9. A Low-Grade Beaver Tranquilizer
10. Enter the Purple Cobras
11. Hump It Into Submission
12. Sweatin' to the Wrenches
13. White Goodman Comes a Courtin'
14. ESPN & "The Ocho"
15. Feathered & Lethal
16. The Luck of the Irish
17. ¿Dónde Está la Biblioteca, Pedro?
18. Peter, the Teenage Love Puppy and Steve the Pirate
19. Quittin' Time
20. Are You Ready for the Hurricane?
21. End Titles
22. A Little Somethin' Somethin'
One of 2004's real cinematic surprises, Dodgeball is an unabashedly lowbrow comedy, the type that gleans laughs by heaping indignities on its cast members. Most of the men sustain blows to their private parts (some repeatedly), and whenever the action flags director Rawson Marshall Thurber has somebody smacked in the head as well. In short, Dodgeball offers an endless procession of lowest-common-denominator sight gags and pratfalls. But it also manages to invest a hackneyed story with energy and infectious humor, of the "slobs vs. snobs" variety. Vince Vaughn -- who, alone among the male cast members, emerges with his dignity relatively intact -- plays the lackadaisical owner of a ramshackle gym about to be foreclosed on by successful health-club owner Ben Stiller. Having only a few days to come up with the 50 grand Stiller requires, Vaughn and his motley customers enter a champion dodgeball tournament in Las Vegas -- only to find that they'll be playing against Stiller's highly trained, hyper-competitive team. Christine Taylor (Stiller's real-life wife) portrays a sympathetic accountant who joins Vaughn's hapless band of geeks, and Rip Torn engages in some scenery chewing as a former dodgeball champ coaxed out of retirement to coach the team. (His coaching regimen mainly involves throwing wrenches at his players.) The tournament sequence is a hoot, with supporting players Gary Cole and Jason Bateman nearly stealing the show as overly enthusiastic ESPN commentators. Some clever verbal jokes are sprinkled throughout the script, and Vaughn tosses off some snappy one-liners with improvisational brio. For a film that happily traffics in bad-taste humor, Dodgeball is surprisingly entertaining, in a "guilty pleasure" sort of way. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations