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| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Dubbed | $27.19 |
| UMD for Sony PSP - Subtitled | $9.99 |
Closed Caption; Deleted scenes with optional commentary; Extended scenes with optional commentary; Taking Hostage Behind the Scenes; Audio commentary by director
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Opening Credits [3:20]
2. No One Dies Today [7:25]
3. Low Crime Monday [7:56]
4. Intruders [3:54]
5. Officer Flores [4:16]
6. I'm in Charge [3:10]
7. Mars [5:44]
8. Tommy Escapes [3:44]
9. Drive [7:10]
10. I Am the Guy [4:50]
11. Talley Takes Command [10:20]
12. Best Day of Your Life [2:14]
13. Agent Zero [2:34]
14. Broken Deal [4:54]
15. Mars Takes Over [8:22]
16. Burn [7:40]
17. The Accountant [9:54]
18. End Credits [10:03]
In the original Die Hard, erstwhile TV star Bruce Willis made the transition to big-screen action hero by convincingly portraying an average man who races against time to overcome almost insurmountable obstacles by virtue of his courage, determination, and resourcefulness. Audiences love him in that kind of role, which is why Hostage works so well. Bruce plays Jeff Talley, a former Los Angles Police Department hostage negotiator turned small-town police sheriff. He's called upon to find and apprehend three teens who, following their robbery of a convenience store, have taken refuge in a private home that's a veritable fortress. These kids don't realize what they've stumbled into: The owner (Kevin Pollak) is connected to New York mobsters who are out to recover the large sum of money he's stolen from them. Adapted from a complex novel by Robert Crais, Hostage is no less intricate than its source, and newly minted director Florent Emilio Siri -- previously the designer of edgy video games -- rates kudos for juggling several subplots while maintaining nail-biting suspense throughout. Talley is no superman, and his already difficult job is further complicated when masked interlopers capture his wife (Serena Scott Thomas) and daughter (Rumer Willis, one of the star's real-life offspring). At the same time, the most sociopathic of the three teens (Ben Foster in a blood-chilling performance) plots to murder his two buddies and escape with the homeowner's daughter ({|Michelle Horn|}). Siri shifts focus from one subplot to another with admirable dexterity, all the while keeping audience attention riveted on the time element. Once the major plotlines are established, we are made keenly aware that, at a certain point, they will converge with deadly results. The violence is genuinely shocking, and there's an air of sexual menace in Foster's attitude toward Horn that lends even more urgency to Willis's predicament. Lurking in the background is Talley's fear that, having failed miserably in a career-altering L.A. incident, he won't be up to the challenge. Hostage is well written, vividly acted, ingenious, and intense. But more than that, it's a triumphant return to form for Bruce Willis, whose post-Die Hard roles haven't always capitalized on his ability to convey strength and vulnerability at the same time. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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