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| DVD - Wide Screen | $19.99 |
Deleted scenes with optional commentary by director Steve "Spaz" Williams and producer Clint Goldman; "Eddie Izzard Unleashed" - bloopers and blunders; "Real Wild Child" music video by Everlife; "Meet Colin: The Rock Hyrax"; Movie Showcase: instant access to select movie scenes that showcase the ultimate in high definition picture and sound; Seamless menus
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Wild
1. The Story
2. Zoo's Closed
3. Turtle Curling
4. The Gazelles
5. Losing Ryan
6. The Pigeons
7. New York
8. The Sewers
9. Sunrise
10. Benny Returns
11. The Wild
12. The Truth
13. The Wildebeests
14. The Omen
15. Ryan's Capture
16. A Real Lion
17. The Ritual
18. Ryan's Roar
19. Going Home
20. Credits
How do you get to The Wild? Go straight to Finding Nemo and turn left at Madagascar. This computer-animated Disney feature covers similar terrain to those recent hits, which invited comparisons that didn’t help it at the box office. The lead character here is a lion named Samson (a game Kiefer Sutherland), who may not be king of the jungle, but he is the star attraction at the New York Zoo, where he regales his young son, Ryan, with stories of his heroics on the veldt. Too bad they are just stories. Ryan has not yet found his roar, and he is tired of living in his father's immense shadow. When he finds himself on a cargo ship bound for Africa, it is up to the domesticated Samson to rescue him. Along for the wild ride are a menagerie of comic-relief characters including Bridget (Janeane Garofalo), a smart and sexy giraffe; Benny the squirrel (Jim Belushi), who's nuts about Bridget; Larry (Richard Kind), an addled anaconda; and Nigel, a sardonic koala (Eddie Izzard, who takes scene-stealing honors with Robin Williams-like virtuosity). In Africa, Samson meets his redemptive match in Kazar (William Shatner), a wildebeest (and amateur choreographer) who wants to elevate his species' place in the food chain. The Wild is an incessantly hyperverbal, fitfully funny comedy with age-inappropriate jokes that strain to cast a net beyond the core child audience. But the animation is stunningly textured and, during one of Samson's yarns, refreshingly expressionistic. One memorable sequence finds the escaped animals gazing with wonder at a neon-lit nocturnal New York, accompanied by Coldplay's "Speed of Sound." Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble
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