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| DVD - Wide Screen / Colorized | $19.99 |
| DVD | $80.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $23.99 |
Closed Caption; Widescreen presentation (1.85:1) enhanced for 16x9 TVs; Audio commentary with director Michael Lehmann, producer Denise Di Novi and writer Daniel Waters; "Swatch Dogs and Diet Coke Heads": an all new 30-minute documentary featuring interviews with stars Winona Ryder, Christian Slater, Shannen Doherty, Lisanne Falk, director Michael Lehmann, writer Daniel Waters, producer Denise Di Novi, director of photography Francis Kenny and editor Norman Hollyn; Theatrical trailer; Screenplay excerpt: original ending; Talent bios
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Program Start - Main Titles
2. Queen and Her Court
3. Lunchtime Poll
4. Jason Dean
5. Killer Croquet
6. Frat Party Fiasco
7. Paid in Puke
8. A Little Hangover Cure
9. A Suicide Thing
10. Profound Sensitivity
11. Heather Chandler's Funeral
12. Double Date
13. Nasty Gossip
14. Hunting for Jocks
15. "I Love My Dead Gay Son"
16. Pauline's Love-In
17. Break-Up
18. New Queen on Campus
19. Parental Guidance
20. Poor Little Heather
21. Sign the Petition
22. Psycho
23. Funeral Nightmare
24. Veronica's Suicide
25. Demolition Day
26. "May I See Your Hall Pass?"
27. J.D.'s Last Rant
28. Ka-Boom!
29. End Credits
John Hughes minted the gold standard for '80s teen movies with such heartfelt profiles in angst as Sixteen Candles and The Breakfast Club. But when Heathers arrived in 1989, it heralded a new age. A black comedy with a brutally witty script (by Daniel Waters and director Michael Lehmann), Heathers mixed satire, nihilism, and madcap horror into a bubbling, critic-pleasing brew. It also helped propel Winona Ryder to prominence, portraying Veronica, the offbeat outsider who joins the sadistic, school-ruling clique known as the Heathers (Shannen Doherty, Lisanne Falk, and Kim Walker) only to grow intensely dissatisfied with their antics. Expelled from the group, she takes up with new kid, J. D. (Christian Slater, channeling Jack Nicholson), whose misanthropy trumps even her own repulsion at phony adolescent hierarchies. Soon, Heather bodies begin piling up, Veronica realizes that J. D. is a homicidal maniac, and it's clear that teen movies will never be the same. A colorful pop paean to teen alienation, Heathers attacks the status obsession of American teens with glee -- a strain that informs such '90s hits as Clueless and American Beauty, as well as the poignant 2001 entry Ghost World. The DVD editions -- either the Limited Edition tin or the more conventional Special Edition -- sport audio commentary and "Swatch Dogs and Diet Coke Heads," a featurette, bearing the Heathers working title, that reunites the cast and crew. Also unearthed and presented for the first time -- alas, only in script form -- is the original ending (with Veronica aiding rather than hindering J. D.'s final spree). Chas Turner, Barnes & Noble
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