HD-DVD Learn more
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $9.99 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $9.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $23.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Bonus DVD / Subtitled / Dubbed | $18.39 |
Closed Caption; Deleted scenes: The Rock's exclusive footage not shown in theaters; Rumble in the Jungle: Witness the choreographed magic behind the film's awesome stunts and fight scenes; Appetite for Destruction: a behind-the-scenes look at how the amazing explosions and special effects were created ; The Amazon, Hawaii-Style: Join the cast and filmmakers on location as they transform Hawaii into the Amazon; The Rundown Uncensored: Get the inside scoop on The Rock and his wild co-star, Camilla the Baboon; Feature commentaries
Full Product DetailsThis modest, entertaining film further solidifies the action-star standing of the wrestling superstar known as The Rock (a.k.a. Dwayne Johnson), building on his impressive turns in The Mummy Returns and The Scorpion King. The Rock, like other wrestlers who've dabbled in acting, realizes that his ring persona has created certain expectations in his fans, and he's smart enough to capitalize on those preconceived notions while at the same time poking fun at his carefully crafted image. In The Rundown, he plays Beck, a mob "retrieval specialist" sent to the Amazon wilderness to find and retrieve his employer's ne'er-do-well son (Seann William Scott). The young man, searching for a golden idol of reportedly immeasurable wealth, has run afoul of Hatcher (Christopher Walken), a local entrepreneur who runs a mining operation with an iron hand. Hatcher feels that the icon should be his and intends to hold onto the spoiled scion until it's located. This, of course, doesn't work for Beck. The Rock is nothing if not an adept comedian -- you have to be, if you're to succeed in pro wrestling these days -- and he tosses quips with the same aplomb he brings to his bone-crunching fight scenes. Scott, the perennial wiseacre, makes a pretty good foil for this hero, and Rosario Dawson is both tough and sexy as a local femme fatale whom neither man can altogether trust. Director Peter Berg takes a fairly lowbrow enterprise and gives it some wit with his clever handling of stereotypical situations and cardboard characters. Berg helps The Rock invest his character with humor and vulnerability, and he restrains the increasingly eccentric Walken just enough to keep his villain from becoming cartoonish. Nobody will ever mistake The Rundown for sophisticated comedy, but viewers looking for a lighthearted romp with plenty of action will definitely not be disappointed. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations