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|---|---|
| DVD - Subtitled / Full Frame | $12.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled | $23.19 |
Closed Caption; "I am a bounty hunter: Domino Harvey's life"; "Bounty hunting on acid: Tony Scotts's visual style" featurette; Deleted scenes; And more!
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Domino
1. A Few Questions [6:54]
2. Main Titles [2:00]
3. Dmv [4:48]
4. England to L.A. [5:07]
5. The $99 Seminar [5:29]
6. First Raid [5:54]
7. Dysfunctional Family [7:05]
8. Reality TV [7:38]
9. Brian and Ian [3:40]
10. Lateesha [5:15]
11. 10 Million [6:02]
12. Bounty Squad [6:52]
13. Delivery to Needles [4:33]
14. Real and Fake [9:37]
15. Retrieval [1:46]
16. Desert Trip [4:58]
17. Wanderer [4:14]
18. Las Vegas [5:02]
19. The Stratosphere [7:14]
20. Heads or Tails [7:45]
21. End Titles [6:58]
Tony Scott's fanciful melodrama about bounty hunter Domino Harvey, the real-life daughter of British movie star Laurence Harvey, is shot in what the director and his associates have called "heightened reality." That's the term they've coined to define a mélange of photographic and editorial techniques that include time-lapse cinematography on high-contrast stock, tinkering with film processing, jagged editing, and various other tricks. Nobody has accused Domino of being a poster child for narrative clarity, and some detractors have argued that Scott's cinematic hocus-pocus merely dresses up with stylistic affectation what is at heart a routine potboiler. That's not altogether fair, and it unfairly diminishes the outstanding work of Keira Knightley, who contributes a gripping portrayal of a pampered Hollywood brat who once called herself a "natural ringleader and troublemaker" and, as a child, pulled the heads off dolls for amusement. Her willing descent into the seedy netherworld of crime and criminals is vividly depicted. Mickey Rourke supports her with customary flair, portraying the gruff, brutish bounty hunter Ed Moseby, who takes her under his wing. Domino isn't a particularly uplifting picture, but it deserves a modicum of respect for tackling a basically unpalatable subject with style and commitment. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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