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| DVD - Wide Screen | $13.49 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $14.99 |
| UMD for Sony PSP | $14.99 |
Audio commentary with executive producer Robbie Stamp and Douglas Adams' colleague Sean Solle; Audio commentary with director Garth Jennings, producer Nich Goldsmith and actors Martin Freeman and Bill Nighy; Deleted scenes; Really deleted scenes; Additional Guide Entry: The Man and the Fish; Movie Showcase; Instant access to select movie scenes that showcase the ultimate in high definition picture and sound; Seamless menus
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
1. Opening Titles
2. The Bypass
3. The Confession
4. "People of Earth..."
5. The Guide Book
6. Vogon Poetry
7. The Heart of Gold
8. Zaphod Beeblebrox
9. A Message to the President
10. The Ultimate Answer
11. Infinite Improbability Drive
12. Humma Kavula
13. Saving the President
14. "Don't Think"
15. Trillian's Rescue
16. Love & Kisses Zaphod
17. Magrathea
18. A Sperm Whale
19. My Name Is Slartibartfast
20. The Ultimate Question
21. The POV Gun
22. "Welcome Home Arthur!"
23. "I Feel So Depressed"
24. End Titles
Douglas Adams's The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy began in 1978 as a BBC radio serial, which then spawned a bestselling book, a television series, more books, and even a text-based computer game. So it was inevitable that it would be made into a film: It just took a little longer than expected. The delay, in part, arose from the sizable problem of making a film that would appeal to both the book's devoted legions and newcomers to the Adams universe. Working from the last draft of the screenplay completed by Adams, who died in 2001, director Garth Jennings (one half of the music video team Hammer & Tongs) gives us a big-screen Guide that is about as good as you could expect from squashing a sprawling, meandering book into a 1-hour, 45-minute movie. The story remains the same: Arthur Dent (The Office's Martin Freeman) escapes from Earth mere seconds before it is demolished to make way for a hyperspace bypass. This is thanks to Arthur's best friend, Ford (Mos Def). Ford, it turns out, is actually an alien who had been on Earth researching the latest edition of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. From there, Arthur meets Zaphod Beeblebrox (Sam Rockwell), his girlfriend, Trillian (Zooey Deschanel), and depressed robot Marvin (voiced by Alan Rickman) -- and learns of his and Earth's role in discovering the ultimate answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything. The casting is spot on, especially Rickman, Stephen Fry (as the voice of the Guide), and an underused Bill Nighy as planetary designer Slartibartfast. Jennings attempts to retain Adams's spirit and humor, but some of the book's funniest sections were often lengthy asides, digressions, and footnotes; many of these have been excised to add such unnecessary elements as an Arthur-Trillian romance and a subplot involving John Malkovich as a cult leader. Yet when taken on its own terms -- which may be impossible for fans -- this Guide is still light-years smarter than your average interstellar screwball comedy. Bill Pearis, Barnes & Noble
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