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| DVD - Wide Screen / Repackaged / Subtitled / Dubbed | $11.69 |
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Closed Caption; "Casting Sessions -- Uncut" featurette; Gags and outtakes; "Jackie Leg's Dance Grooves" featurette; "Behind the Gas" featurette; "Marsupial Magic" featurette; Audio commentary by Kangaroo Jack ; Audio commentary by Jerry O'Connell, Anthony Anderson, Estella Warren, director David McNally, and Visual Effects Supervisor Hoyt Yeatman ; Interactive Menus ; Cast, director and writer film highlights ; Theatrical trailer ; Scene access; Language and subtitles: English, French and Spanish
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. When Charlie Met Louis
2. Totally Legit Favor
3. They Didn't Know!
4. Mission Down Under
5. In the Bathroom
6. Security Switch
7. Jackie Legs
8. Jumping Jacket Chase
9. Old Alice Inn
10. Honey of a Plan
11. Stages 1 to 4
12. Due East - Like Brooklyn
13. Desert Storms
14. The Real Mirage
15. Kangaroo Dreams
16. A Habit of Camels
17. Getting and Losing a Ride
18. Ants in His Pants
19. There Goes the Moment
20. Mr. Smith Catches Up
21. Turn 'Em Around
22. Hot Stuff
23. Mutually Agitated
24. Tight Fit
25. Frankie Goes Long
26. Intimate Moments
27. The Star
28. End Credits
Critics hopped all over this buddy comedy, but children, lured by the somewhat deceptive previews that played up the antics of the eponymous marsupial, made it a modest box office hit. The fish-out-of water story line finds lifelong Brooklyn buddies Charlie (Jerry O'Connell) and Louis (Anthony Anderson) on a forced errand for the Mob in Australia, where they wind up chasing a runaway kangaroo through the Outback. Charlie's mobster stepfather (the always welcome Christopher Walken) dispatches the pair to deliver $50,000 on a mission of absolution, but in one of those only-in-the-movies mishaps, the pair's 50K winds up in the possession of the titular critter, and the chase is on. The kangaroo has the uncanny ability to anticipate their every move (much like the mouse in Mouse Hunt), and he's a sequel-ready scene-stealer, whether delivering martial-arts kicks, sucking on an atomic fireball jawbreaker, or, in one dream sequence, breaking it down to "Rapper's Delight." A trio of flatulent camels provide the requisite scatological humor in a scene that makes the campfire scene in Blazing Saddles look like a model of decorum. But a comical, computer-generated kangaroo does not a family movie make. A subplot involving Mob goons sent to kill Charlie and Louis plays out with too much menace. And Charlie fondles a ravishing conservationist (Estella Warren), whom he mistakes for a mirage. By the time the camera ogles the former swimmer-turned-model during an impromptu bath in a waterfall, you're thinking "lovely," but a PG-13 rating would have been more appropriate. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble
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