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| DVD - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $14.99 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $14.99 |
Alternate endings; Outtake with Billy Bob Thornton; Cracking the story; Beneath the harvest; Ice Cracking: Analysis of a Scene ; Audio commentary with director Harold Ramis
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- The Ice Harvest
1. The Perfect Crime (Main Titles) [4:53]
2. In Over Your Head [4:40]
3. Stick to the Plan [3:20]
4. It's Christmas [1:36]
5. Getting Paranoid [3:02]
6. Old Acquaintance [4:59]
7. No Regrets [6:42]
8. Here's to You [3:01]
9. Man Down [3:24]
10. Desires & Urges [4:16]
11. In a Jam [3:16]
12. Last Chance [2:50]
13. Trunk Space [6:24]
14. Having Doubts [:24]
15. Done Talking [2:36]
16. Big Trouble [7:18]
17. Top Dawg [4:32]
18. Last Man Standing [8:27]
19. Mr. Nice Guy [4:08]
20. End Titles [4:08]
Self-consciously mordant in the best neo-noir tradition, The Ice Harvest sports impeccable performances by its three stars and teems with the world-weary fatalism audiences expect from films of this type. On Christmas Eve in Wichita, Kansas, amiably crooked attorney Charlie Arglist (John Cusack) conspires with his low-life associate Vic Cavanaugh (Billy Bob Thornton) to cheat the local mob out of some ill-gained profits. Charlie’s hoping that a sudden cash infusion will make him more attractive to strip-club owner Renata (Connie Nielsen), with whom he’s been infatuated for some time. As might be expected, the supposedly airtight plan turns out to be riddled with holes -- and Charlie and Vic also begin thinking about double-crossing each other almost instantly. While the characters are types, writers Richard Russo and Robert Benton freshen them up with eccentricities and clever dialogue. Previously teamed in Pushing Tin, Cusack and Thornton work extraordinarily well together, and the customarily frosty Neilsen makes a perfect femme fatale. Veteran scene-stealer Oliver Platt gets some of the biggest laughs as Charlie's inebriated friend Pete. Although there’s never much doubt as to how things are going to end up, director Harold Ramis (Groundhog Day) does a fine job depicting the script's more novel situations. Why The Ice Harvest didn’t make more of an impact in theaters is a mystery, because it’s one of the most genuinely engaging black comedies in years. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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