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| DVD - Wide Screen / Color / Unrated Directors' Cut | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Uncensored / Subtitled | $15.99 |
Closed Caption; U.S. Theatrical Version; Audio commentary with Director Rob Zombie; Actor audio commentary with Sid Haig, Bill Mosely and Sheri Moon Zombie; Blooper reel; The Morris Green Show-"Ruggsville's #1 talk show"; Mary the Monkey Girl commercial ; Spaulding Christmas Commercial; "Cheerleader Missing" The Otis Home Movie; "Satan's Got To Get Along Without Me" - Buck Owens Video; Deleted scenes; Make-up tests; Matthew McGory Tribute; Still gallery; Theatrical Trailer and TV Spots; 5.1 Dolby Digital Surround EX
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Devil's Rejects
1. Search And Destroy [5:03]
2. I Love You Mama [5:08]
3. Main Titles [2:46]
4. Captain Fucking Spaulding [4:28]
5. A New Angle [3:53]
6. Not Clown Material [4:51]
7. The Business At Hand [5:04]
8. Ultimatums [4:22]
9. One Busy Whore [4:22]
10. Relieving Tension [4:20]
11. I Am The Devil [2:26]
12. Mind Power [4:29]
13. Marty Walker [4:20]
14. A Family Affair [1:55]
15. Housekeeping [2:12]
16. Road Kill [4:20]
17. Walking The Line [5:34]
18. Brothel Party [4:20]
19. Chicken Fucker [5:59]
20. Crashing The Party [3:28]
21. Start The Killing [1:58]
22. Vigilante Justice [:30]
23. From Darkness to Light [4:39]
24. Open Highway End Credits [7:55]
The plot of this bloody slash-fest is fairly slim: Forced to flee when police invade their house of horrors, psychopathic family members Captain Spaulding (Sid Haig), Otis (Bill Moseley), and Baby Firefly (Sheri Moon) hole up with hostages in a shabby motel. Obsessed with capturing the killers, Sheriff Wydell (William Forsythe) pursues them relentlessly. Many people might find Rob Zombie's sequel to House of 1000 Corpses hard to stomach -- and there's no denying that it's among the most bloodcurdling works ever to secure an R-rating. But The Devil's Rejects positively tingles with raw energy and, in its own perverse way, is mesmerizing. Shot and edited with jagged, jarring cuts, the film makes viewers edgy at the outset and keeps them unsettled with brutally violent situations and grotesque images. It has an over-the-top, Grand Guignol feel, and Zombie's deliberately excessive directorial flourishes indicate that he doesn't expect anybody to take the thing seriously. The cast is studded with cult figures from '70s and '80s horror films, including Mary Woronov, Geoffrey Lewis, P. J. Soles, Michael Berryman, and even porn-star-cum-B-movie-starlet Ginger Lynn Allen. We'd give a special Cult Movies Hall of Fame award to 50-something Priscilla Barnes, former Three's Company costar and B-film regular, who allows herself to be stripped and brutalized in a particularly shocking sequence. (Talk about going above and beyond the call of duty!) This movie is catnip to horror fans of the splatterpunk generation, and other genre aficionados should give it a try. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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