DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 Learn more
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| DVD - Wide Screen / Repackaged / Subtitled / Pan & Scan | $14.99 |
| DVD - Special Edition / Wide Screen | $26.99 |
Soundtrack remastered in Dolby Digital 5.1; Interactive menus; Scene access; Subtitles: English & Français
Full Product DetailsScene Selections
0. Scene Selections
1. American nightmare (Credits). [2:47]
2. Boston: the Shorty treatment (Roll 'Em Pete). [4:22]
3. Early years. [2:54]
4. Dancing delirium (Flying Home). [3:25]
5. Laura and Sophia (Stardust, My Prayer) [4:43]
6. Cops and robbers; Earl's death. [1:22]
7. Sophia's story (Stairway to the Stars). [1:56]
8. "Save it for Mr. Right;" parceled out. [4:31]
9. Riding the rails (Drop Me Off in Harlem); Joe Louis' victory. [3:40]
10. West Indian Archie (Hamp's Boogie Woogie, Undecided Blues). [5:25]
11. New clothes, new lifestyle (Don't Cry Baby, Big Stuff). [4:33]
12. Familiar face, unfamiliar numbers (The Jitters, Feedin' the Blues). [5:43]
13. Under the gun (I Cover the Waterfront). [2:27]
14. "I'm a man." [1:57]
15. "I was an animal;" head man in charge (Undecided, Chew Chew Chew). [6:01]
16. The jig is up (Beans and Cornbread). [4:32]
17. Little's number. [4:37]
18. Malcolm meets Baines. [3:12]
19. Black and white. [6:05]
20. Behind the words. [3:24]
21. Vision of Elijah Muhammad. [5:36]
22. Color of Jesus. [2:05]
23. Malcolm meets Elijah. [1:54]
24. The preacher. [3:26]
25. Reunions with Shorty and Archie. [5:06]
26. Our women. [4:21]
27. One woman: Betty. [3:00]
28. Turnout for Brother Johnson. [5:31]
29. Potential young warrior. [2:28]
30. Pure vessed. [2:27]
31. "You're with me, even when you're away." [2:55]
32. Black intelligence. [5:51]
33. Media glare. [4:08]
34. Harvard; coming explosion. [6:30]
35. Possibility of betrayal. [7:30]
36. Baines' warning. [2:16]
37. Shattered faith (That Lucky Old Sun Just Rolls Around Heaven). [2:34]
38. JFK killed. [3:47]
39. Marked for death. [2:59]
40. Pilgrimage to Mecca. [3:32]
41. Among the pyradmids; letter home (Arabesque Cookie). [6:28]
42. Return home. [3:18]
43. Death threats; firebombing. [4:14]
44. Assassins. [:43]
45. "Peace be unto you." [1:25]
46. Death watch (Shotgun). [4:30]
47. February 21, 1965 (A Change Is Gonna Come). [3:08]
48. Audubon Ballroom backstage. [3:50]
49. Assassinated. [4:00]
50. Ossie Davis' eulogy. [3:21]
51. "I am Malcolm X;" Nelson Mandela. [1:21]
52. End Credits (Someday We'll All Be Free, Revolution). [9:19]
Spike Lee asserted his preeminence among black filmmakers by virtually insisting that he direct Malcolm X, a Warner Bros. project that Lee wrested away from white director Norman Jewison. Based on Malcolm X's autobiography (as told to Alex Haley), Malcolm X stars Denzel Washington as the eponymous freedom fighter, and through an exceedingly deft use of flashbacks, it tells the whole story of the man's life. We see his salad days as a street hustler, his imprisonment for burglary, his conversion to Islam, his work as a disciple of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad (Al Freeman Jr.), and finally his assassination in 1965. Washington is extraordinary in the lead, effortlessly reproducing the charisma that served Malcolm X so well, whether in the service of crime or politics. A superb supporting cast includes Angela Bassett as Malcolm X's wife, Betty Shabazz, and Lee himself as one of Malcolm X's early partners in crime. Beautifully photographed by Lee's longtime cinematographer Ernest Dickerson, Malcolm X has an evocative period ambience and an epic sweep. Lee pulls precious few punches here, bringing the great man's frequently confrontational politics directly to the screen. The result is a film that angered many, touched many more, and is perhaps the most important film ever made about the black experience in America. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble
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