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Closed Caption; Commentary by director Jon Amiel; "To the Core and Back - The Making of The Core" featurette; "Deconstruction of the Visual Effects" featurette; Ten deleted/extended scenes with director commentary
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Unexplained Deaths [7:11]
2. Frenzied Birds [3:55]
3. Endeavour Landing [:27]
4. Government Secrets [6:38]
5. Unobtainium [9:41]
6. Help From the Rat [4:56]
7. The Crew [3:04]
8. Preparing for the Mission [:16]
9. Superstorm [3:57]
10. Virgil Is Launched [3:23]
11. Giant Gem Bubble [3:50]
12. Serge [2:41]
13. Project Destiny [1:47]
14. EM Tear [9:23]
15. Plan D [7:48]
16. Worth Dying For [2:41]
17. Stones in the Pond [3:56]
18. Healing the Earth [6:38]
19. Saved by Whales [1:17]
20. Unsung Heroes [5:44]
Despite its impressive cast and state-of-the-art special effects, The Core is at heart a cheesy sci-fi thriller of the type produced in the '50s and '60s by George Pal -- but that's not a criticism, it's a recommendation. The screenplay of Jon Amiel's sturdily mounted film flagrantly disregards the laws of physics and fairly abounds in stock characters, familiar situations, and cornball dialogue. In this case, the corny lines are read by superb actors who give them the necessary gravitas to make them convincing...convincing enough for the duration of the movie, anyway. Aaron Eckhart portrays scientist Josh Keyes, who analyzes seemingly unnatural phenomena and discovers that the earth's core has stopped spinning, causing a disruption in the planet's electromagnetic shield that renders it vulnerable to solar microwaves. Stuffy, egotistical physicist Conrad Zimsky (Stanley Tucci), initially skeptical of Josh's findings, eventually concurs and helps convince the government to launch a top-secret project calculated to restart the stalled core with nuclear detonations. A cast-against-type Delroy Lindo is very effective as an eccentric scientist who builds a massive burrowing device equipped with laser guns powerful enough to bore through solid rock. No less daringly cast is Hilary Swank, all business as a space-shuttle pilot recruited to help operate the metal mole; her risk-averse commander is the always reliable Bruce Greenwood. Director Amiel must have known that he was working with hackneyed elements, but you can't guess that from the film, which takes itself seriously enough to obscure its scientific implausibility. The story unfolds at a breezy pace, gliding smoothly from one predictable situation to the next without pauses that might disrupt the suspension of disbelief. A thoroughly enjoyable "popcorn movie," The Core delivers everything sci-fi fans require and does so with considerable aplomb. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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