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| DVD - Anniversary Edition / Wide Screen | $12.74 |
| DVD - Special Edition Wide Screen | $14.99 |
Pulp Factoids Viewer: insider information about Reservoir Dogs and its sources of inspiration; Playing It Fast and Loose - documentary: from the moment of its release in 1992, Reservoir Dogs has helped redefine modern cinema. An insightful study about the impact and ripple effect of this remarkable film; Profiling the Reservoir Dogs - featurette: a unique perspective into the criminal minds of the film's colorful characters
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Reservoir Dogs
1. World's Smallest Violin
2. Reservoir Dogs
3. Setup or What?
4. Rat
5. Mr. White
6. Mr. Blonde
7. Major Setback
8. "Bam Bam Bam Bam"
9. Alone at Last
10. Saved
11. Mr. Orange
12. Selling
13. Chalk Talk
14. Game Time
15. "Worse or Better?"
16. Hard Truth
Quentin Tarantino's directorial debut is an audacious, low-budget, neo-noir thriller that immediately established the former video-store clerk as the '90s filmmaker to watch. Armed with a terrific script that employs jarring, temporal shifts and mesmerizing, pop-culture-obsessed dialogue, the budding auteur assembled a letter-perfect cast of seasoned veterans and talented newcomers. Perennial screen heavy Lawrence Tierney plays the career criminal who recruits a team of supposedly top-notch triggermen -- Harvey Keitel, Michael Madsen, Tim Roth, Steve Buscemi, and Chris Penn -- to pull off a big diamond heist. The desperadoes bungle the job, however, instigating a massive shoot-out that sends them scrambling for the deserted warehouse they've chosen for a rendezvous. Tarantino makes his characters colorful, violent, desperate men who are generally garrulous and often comically profane. What's more, they don't flinch from the sight of blood, something in which Resevoir Dogs is awash. Violent and nihilistic, this stylish picture boosted Tarantino's stock and influenced a slew of Gen-X filmmakers to crank out similarly gritty but less effective imitations. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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