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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen / Special Packaging | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - DTS | $23.99 |
Widescreen version enhanced for 16x9 televisions; Dolby Digital: English 5.1 Surround; English Dolby Surround; French Dolby Surround; English subtitles; Interactive menus; Scene selection; 2 theatrical trailers; Exclusive cast and crew interviews; Exclusive "Behind the Legend" featurette; Commentary with director Tim Burton; Selected cast biographies; Photo gallery
Full Product DetailsSide#1--
0. Scene Selections
1. The Fate of Peter Van Garrett. [3:48]
2. Constable Crane. [3:30]
3. Sleepy Hollow. [4:14]
4. The Headless Horseman. [2:04]
5. Masbath's Terrible Death. [5:37]
6. Five Victims, Four Graves. [7:49]
7. A Wakeful Night. [:22]
8. Magistrate Philipse. [2:17]
9. The Western Woods. [2:59]
10. Tree of the Dead. [3:53]
11. The Killian Family. [2:41]
12. "You have bewitched me." [2:52]
13. The Secret Conspiracy. [4:35]
14. An Angry Wound. [5:34]
15. Murder Begets Murder. [5:47]
16. Evil Eyes. [:26]
17. The Archer. [4:43]
18. A Head For A Head. [6:47]
19. A New Century. [4:37]
The latest masterwork to spring from the fertile and twisted imagination of Tim Burton turns Washington Irving's quaint tale of Upstate New York peculiarities into a grisly, nightmarish detective story. Johnny Depp (an actor born to wear period garb) is as grave and handsome as a young Buster Keaton in the role of Ichabod Crane, a fastidious New York City constable assigned to investigate a decapitation in the rustic hamlet of Sleepy Hollow. His inquiries are stymied by the natives' superstitious belief in the Headless Horseman, a demonic assassin whose future victims might include fair maiden Christina Ricci (looking especially attractive with long blonde hair and daring décolletage). But it's the Horseman himself -- played by Christopher Walken -- who steals the show with his gory escapades, which are captured with startling realism thanks to computer-enhanced imaging. Burton's adaptation plays fast and loose with Irving's story, sliding at times into a cartoonishness that detracts from the film. But his stylized depiction of the gloomy, fog-shrouded village is stunningly beautiful, evoking an atmosphere of the dread that hangs over the scene, palpable as the chilly mist. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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