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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $11.04 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled | $18.39 |
Closed Caption; Commentaries by director Breck Eisner and actor/executive producer Matthew McConaughey; 3 featurettes: Across the Sands of Sahara/Visualizing Sahara/Cast and crew wrap film; Deleted scenes (with optional audio commentary); Widescreen version enhanced for 16:9 TV's; Dolby Digital: English 5.1 and 2.0 surround/French 2.0 surround; English subtitles; Spanish subtitles
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Sahara [WS]
1. The Last Ironclad [7:26]
2. Outbreak [:23]
3. Underworld Contact [4:13]
4. Boat Trip [7:56]
5. Ship of Death [7:53]
6. Panama [7:45]
7. The Well [:23]
8. General Kazim Questions Frank [6:40]
9. Tuareg Country [3:19]
10. It's Not a Plague [4:22]
11. Decision-Making Paradigm [2:10]
12. Source [5:56]
13. We're Home Free Now [:21]
14. Another Idea [5:56]
15. Cover [2:07]
16. Cut The Head Off The Snake [3:51]
17. The Fearless Crew [:07]
Every bit as rousing and rambunctious as you expect high-adventure yarns to be, this generously appointed adaptation of Clive Cussler's bestseller boasts elaborate action set pieces and exotic locations. It takes place largely in West Africa, where treasure hunter Dirk Pitt (Matthew McConaughey) and his pal Al Giordino (Steve Zahn) search for a Civil War battleship rumored to have been stranded somewhere along the River Niger with a fortune in gold intended for use by the Confederacy. While there, they rescue humanitarian relief doctor Eva Rojas (Penelope Cruz), who’s been targeted for elimination by a ruthless warlord (Lennie James) and a French industrialist (Lambert Wilson) after threatening to expose their cover-up of a plague spread by contaminated water. First-time director Breck Eisner handles the disparate elements of this yarn with surprising sure-footedness; the story unfolds smoothly and in a relatively convincing fashion. Big action sequences are extravagantly staged on land, on water, and in the air, with McConaughey registering strongly as an athletic, self-assured hero. He doesn’t seem to have great onscreen chemistry with Cruz -- notwithstanding the fact that they became an offscreen couple after the film’s making. Not that it matters much; Sahara isn’t a movie you want to see for romance. This is full-bore, high-octane adventure that barrels along like a freight train, and however improbable the film might occasionally seem, it’s guaranteed to entertain. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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