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Deleted scenes; Interactive menus; Cast/director career highlights; Scene access; Languages & subtitles: English & Français [dubbed in Quebec]
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
0. Side #1 --
0. Scene Selections
1. Mission personnel (Credits) [3:39]
2. Interesting questions [2:43]
3. Shower power [1:52]
4. AMEE and other ladies [2:27]
5. Party animals [4:09]
6. Gamma burst [3:43]
7. Launch and shutdown [4:29]
8. Crash landing [3:10]
9. Zero-gravity fire. [1:28]
10. Power up, man down. [3:28]
11. Staying behind. [3:59]
12. What happened to HAB? [4:33]
13. Over the edge [4:57]
14. Precious breath [4:47]
15. Billion-dollar campfire [2:22]
16. Military mode [3:44]
17. Daylight, green light [2:40]
18. Contact [4:17]
19. Moving ground [4:14]
20. Only two [1:46]
21. Ice Storm [2:46]
22. Watching one's back [2:07]
23. AMEE's target [2:27]
24. A nematode's life [3:38]
25. Sacrificial blowtorch [3:55]
26. Cosmos [3:51]
27. What Gallagher misses [2:37]
28. 'Bye, sweetie [4:46]
29. Rendezvous in space [5:54]
30. Memento of faith [1:32]
31. End credits [4:10]
Earth's first manned expedition to Mars faces threats both internal and external in Red Planet, a suspenseful sci-fi thriller reminiscent of the sci-fi classic 2001: A Space Odyssey. The story gets underway in the year 2050, as our planet is dying and the colonization of Mars seems to be humanity's only hope for survival. When specialists dispatched to the Red Planet become stranded, barely repressed tensions and underlying human weaknesses come to the surface, jeopardizing the mission's success and putting the entire crew at risk. Val Kilmer plays an insouciant technician whose differences with strait-laced commander Carrie-Anne Moss are set aside once danger threatens. Benjamin Bratt, Tom Sizemore, and Terence Stamp deliver splendidly in supporting roles that are written a notch above the standard space fare. And first-time director Anthony Hoffman effectively employs, but is not subservient to, the film's impressive production design and convincing special effects. He's clearly more interested in the human element, and he establishes that the astronauts themselves might prove more menacing than malfunctioning robots or alien life forms. Hoffman's insight, some elaborate production mounting, and uniformly fine acting makes Red Planet an unusually gripping space opera. The DVD edition includes deleted scenes, cast and crew info, and the theatrical trailer. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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