DVD - 2 Disc Set - Wide Screen Learn more
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| DVD - Wide Screen | $19.99 |
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Audio commentary by director Ron Howard; 11 deleted scenes; three alternate endings; three Ron howard shorts; 11 behind-the-scenes featurettes; photo gallery; closed captioning; English, French subtitles.
Full Product DetailsSide #1 -- Widescreen
1. Start
2. Maggie the Healer
3. Samuel Jones, Gone Indian
4. Graceless Lady
5. Brake Baldwin
6. "Get the Hell Off My Ranch!"
7. Sole Survivor
8. It Takes One to Catch One
9. Pesh-Chidin
10. A Captured Picture-Taker
11. Lt. Jim Ducharme
12. A Bad Sign
13. Tricks of the Brujo Trade
14. The Canyon Flood
15. Seven's an Unlucky Number
16. Shaman's Orders
17. A Taste of Life
18. The Stakeout
19. Kayitah & Son
20. Chaa-Duu-Ba-Its-Iidan
21. The Brujo's Curse
22. "I Want to Buy Two Girls."
23. Sign of the Cross
24. Return of the Native
25. Dead Man's Trick
26. An Old Apache Story
27. Fire Fight
28. The Witch Is Dead
The movie western's regeneration continues apace with this Ron Howard-directed opus, a well-acted, suspenseful drama that bears an unmistakable resemblance to John Ford's The Searchers. Like Ford's film, The Missing is animated by the lengthy, dangerous pursuit of Native Americans who have kidnapped a white girl. And like The Searchers' Ethan Edwards (played so unforgettably by John Wayne), the chief pursuer is a taciturn loner with intimate knowledge of his quarry. He's Tommy Lee Jones, playing a half-wild "squaw man" who long ago deserted his family and slaked his wanderlust by traveling with peripatetic Indians. Now older and somewhat remorseful, he attempts reconciliation with his firstborn daughter (Cate Blanchett), a single mother raising her two girls and eking out a precarious living on the edge of the New Mexico desert. It takes the kidnapping of her eldest daughter to unite the bitter woman with her grizzled father, who offers to trail the abductors. Howard's direction is taut; his scenes all have bite, and he maintains a measured pace while slowly building to a crescendo of violence and retribution. A novel touch is the incorporation of Native American mysticism, which is presented as both real and horrifyingly effective. This element brings a bit of the supernatural into The Missing, creating an aura of mystery and uncertainty that may well unnerve attentive viewers. Jones and Blanchett are equally terrific in their portrayals; formidable talents both, each shines in scenes crafted to showcase them individually while working harmoniously in their scenes together. Howard also elicits solid performances from Evan Rachel Wood as the kidnapped daughter and Jenna Boyd as the younger, more resourceful daughter. Aaron Eckhart registers solidly in a sympathetic role as Blanchett's prospective suitor, and Val Kilmer has an eccentric cameo as an ineffectual cavalry officer. Howard borrows not only from The Searchers but from other classic westerns as well, and yet his film doesn’t play like a pastiche of reworked concepts and scenes. It is a cohesive work with a demonstrably individual perspective, and an absorbing contribution to the western’s ongoing renaissance. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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