The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou with Bill Murray: DVD Cover
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The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
a.k.a. The Life Aquatic Director: Wes Anderson Cast: Bill Murray, Owen Wilson, Cate Blanchett, Anjelica Huston

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  • DVD Release Date: 05/10/2005
  • Original Release: 2004
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 2,259

Viewer Rating: (24 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performances" See All

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DVD - Wide Screen / DTS$32.99

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Features

Closed Caption; New high-definition digital transfer, approved by director Wes Anderson and enhanced for widescreen televisions; Commentary by Wes Anderson and co-writer Noah Baumbach; Ten deleted scenes; "Starz on the Set": Behind-the-scenes featurette; Theatrical trailer; Reversible cover and menus featuring Eric Anderson's original illustrations

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. Adventure No. 12: "The Jaguar Shark" (Part 1) [5:11]
2. He's the Zissou [4:37]
3. "Life on Mars?" [3:42]
4. One Foot Off the Merry-Go-Round [1:35]
5. The Belafonte [1:39]
6. Explorers Club [2:46]
7. Zissou Compound [1:45]
8. Jane Winslett-Richardson [4:04]
9. Catch as Catch Can [2:08]
10. Fake, Phony, and a Bad Reporter [2:23]
11. Kingsley (Ned) Zissou [3:03]
12. Do the Interns Get Glocks? [1:39]
13. Oseary Drakoulias Productions [1:33]
14. "Gut Feeling" [2:05]
15. Season 3: Episode XIV "Trapped in the Ice!" [3:03]
16. Day 1: The Belafonte at Sea [4:05]
17. Dear Ned Plimpton... [1:41]
18. Day 5: Operation Hennessey Underwater Sea-Laboratory [3:05]
19. Daydream Johnny [3:40]
20. 6 AM: Investigating the Phantom Signal [3:11]
21. Day 9: In Unprotected Waters [9:37]
22. Day 14: Mutiny on the Belafonte [5:09]
23. Day 20: Towed Into Port-Au-Patois Harbor [1:58]
24. The Brains Behind Team Zissou [7:51]
25. Day 27: Rescuing the Bond Company Stooge [3:02]
26. Letter From Jane [10:04]
27. All Hands Bury the Dead [5:36]
28. I Wonder if He Remembers Me? [4:45]
29. This Is an Adventure [5:23]
30. "Queen Bitch" [1:17]
31. Color Bars [6:51]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

By his third film, The Royal Tennenbaums, Wes Anderson had developed a discernable, idiosyncratic filmmaking style, full of richly-drawn oddballs, fractured families, loose storytelling, '60s rock, and a visual attention to detail that borders on obsessive-compulsive. Using much of the same cast, The Life Aquatic could almost be The Tennenbaums at Sea, though the family this time is the crew of the oceanographic ship, The Belafonte, and the patriarch is Steve Zissou (Bill Murray, in fine, melancholic form), a Cousteau-inspired captain and maker of undersea documentaries. Unfortunately, Zissou's films have become increasingly less popular, and both The Belafonte and its captain are in disrepair. To try and drum up publicity for his latest quest -- finding and killing the "jaguar shark" that ate his best friend -- he's invited a journalist (Cate Blanchett), who intends to pen a hatchet job on him. Also along for the ride is Ned Plimpton (Owen Wilson) who claims to be Zissou's illegitimate son, which doesn't sit well with first mate Willem Dafoe. Complicating matters is Zissou's high-tech rival, Alistair Hennessey (Jeff Goldblum), who has never forgiven him for stealing his wife (Anjelica Houston). Zissou and crew will face pirates, love triangles, kidnappings, Bud Cort, and other diversions before finding the elusive jaguar shark. The Life Aquatic is the first film Anderson has made without co-writer Owen Wilson, working instead with Kicking and Screaming writer-director Noah Baumbach, and it's also his least focused effort so far. One senses that Anderson is more interested in costume design and such background details as the wallpaper, books on shelves, and knickknacks than he is in the plot. Still, these sundry diversions make the film worth watching, from the guitar-strumming crewmember performing David Bowie songs in Portugese, to the whimsical sea creatures crafted by animator Henry Selick. The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou is overloaded and meandering, yet this leaky vessel never sinks, thanks to Anderson's myriad talents as a filmmaker. Bill Pearis, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Possibly my favorite Wes Anderson film to dateby Jason_Y

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March 04, 2009: Ok, so this film got rather mixed critical reviews, and with good reason. The plot seems a bit half-hearted, possibly too contrived for even Wes Anderson. But here's why I love it: the plot that everyone harps on, doesn't matter. It seems relatively consistent to me that Anderson's movies are usually less about WHAT happens and more about HOW it goes down. Basically, if you liked The Darjeeling Limited but skipped this, I'd say go back and take a look. Bill Murray and Anjelica Houston are genius together, both have the right dry wit and deadpan delivery for Anderson's style (why did he keep them apart in The Royal Tennebaums?), and the visuals are incredible. Mise-en-scene is one of Anderson's finest qualities, and this film has it in spades. And, as one would expect, the soundtrack is kooky and fun and dead-on.

This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen / DTS edition.

I Also Recommend: The Darjeeling Limited, The Royal Tenenbaums.

Can you say SUBTLE!!!!by Anonymous

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March 28, 2008: This movie is so fantastic, and I laugh harder everytime I see it, it has a great sense of wonder and the jokes are so small and quick you can miss them with a blink. This movie has great fun and sillyness on top with a depth of human emotion underneath that gets me more each time I watch it. For those who gave this movie bad reviews they should stick to steven seigal movies.

This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen / DTS edition.


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