Prisoner with Julian McMahon: DVD Cover

    Prisoner Director: David Alford, Robert Archer Lynn Cast: Julian McMahon, Elias Koteas, Dagmara Dominczyk, Tom Guiry

    DVD - Color / Wide Screen Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 11/17/2009
    • Original Release: 2007
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 26,517

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Features

    Trailer

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Prisoner
    1. Perfect [5:21]
    2. Front Entrance [6:52]
    3. Honey [6:34]
    4. Sick Joke [7:28]
    5. Approval [1:54]
    6. Scared Me [2:35]
    7. High School [3:46]
    8. Psycho [4:09]
    9. You and Me [5:27]
    10. To Live For [4:11]
    11. Let's See [3:22]
    12. Shower [2:32]
    13. Traitor [4:08]
    14. Kill Me [5:51]
    15. Convenience [4:05]
    16. Remember [6:45]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    A notorious Hollywood bad boy (Golden Globe winner Julian McMahon) is captured by a mysterious Jailer (Elias Koteas) while scouting a decrepit, abandoned prison for an upcoming film in co-directors David Alford and Robert Archer Lynn's unforgiving thriller. Derek Playto is a volatile visionary whose controversial reputation has earned him more than his fair share of enemies in the entertainment industry. In preparation for his upcoming feature film -- a violent prison drama -- Playto sets out to find the perfect surroundings in which to tell his brutal tale. Upon discovering a dilapidated prison that was once a notorious house of pain, it appears that Playto has found just such a location. But Playto isn't alone in this crumbling penitentiary, and upon being captured by the Jailer, the director's only hope for escape is to answer a series of increasingly intimate questions concerning his art and his life. With every unanswered question, Playto moves one step closer to the electric chair, yet as every answer reveals a telling piece of the filmmaker's deplorable past, the prospect of death becomes more of a welcome release than an unjustified punishment. Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

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