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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $26.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $13.59 |
Soundtrack remastered in Dolby Digital 5.1; Interactive menus; Production notes; Theatrical trailer; Scene access; Subtitles: English, Français, Español
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0. Jump to a Scene
1. Let's Go Crazy; nightlife [8:15]
2. Jungle Love [2:46]
3. Crazy...at home [1:02]
4. The search for sexy-but-not-dirty [4:04]
5. Take Me With U [2:54]
6. The wrong lake [4:39]
7. The password [1:26]
8. Modernaire; "Still a group, right?" [3:24]
9. Morris on the make [3:49]
10. The Beautiful Ones [5:20]
11. "Who's the lucky girl?" (God Love Theme From Purple Rain)./ [6:27]
12. Gettin' off it [1:22]
13. "Don't you wanna be a star?" [1:39]
14. "The matter with this house..." [2:59]
15. ...Across the generations [2:40]
16. When Doves Cry [4:17]
17. Never get married [3:16]
18. Computer Blue [4:26]
19. Darling Nikki [2:38]
20. "Like father, like son" [1:56]
21. Sex Shooter [2:58]
22. Ride of rage [4:15]
23. Breaking point [4:15]
24. The day after; The Bird [6:24]
25. Purple Rain [8:52]
26. I Would Die 4 U [4:59]
27. Baby I'm A Star [4:21]
28. End Credits (Musical Sampler) [5:31]
When this dynamic musical drama hit movie screens in 1984, it raised Prince Rogers Nelson’s profile from critical favorite to legitimate phenomenon in a single two-hour stroke. And while the eccentric, flamboyant star’s career has had its ups and downs in the intervening years, Purple Rain remains every bit as compelling now as then. At that time Prince had already dazzled critics, audiences, and peers with his unique pop-music stylings, but the film's critical and commercial success surprised nearly everyone. At least partially autobiographical, Purple Rain stars Prince as a young musician in Minneapolis, struggling to win acceptance for his music while dealing with numerous crises in his personal life. Reluctant to indulge in relationships lest he lose his focus, he nonetheless falls for a sassy dancer (Apollonia Kotero, at the time Prince’s real-life girlfriend) with ambitions of her own. Morris Day and the Time appear as Prince’s chief competitors in a battle of the bands, and Clarence Williams III is remarkably effective as the young musician’s abusive father. But it's the kinetic concert sequences that made Purple Rain an instant classic: the opening party anthem, "Let's Go Crazy," the Time's "Jungle Love," and the soaring closer, "Purple Rain," are just a few of the film's many musical highlights. Very much a product of its time and place, Purple Rain clearly isn’t a musical in the tradition of Singin’ in the Rain or My Fair Lady, yet to many viewers this fun and fascinating cinematic memoir represents no less a pinnacle in musical moviemaking. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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