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Disc 1: ; New, restored high-definition digital transfer and Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack, supervised and approved by director Monte Hellman; Two audio commentaries: one by Hellman and filmmaker Allison Anders, and one by screenwriter Rudy Wurlitzer and author David Meyer; ; Disc 2: ; New interviews with Hellman, star James Taylor, musician Kris Kristofferson, producer Michael Laughlin, and production manager Walter Coblenz; Rare, never-before-seen screen test outtakes; Performance & Image: A look at the restoration of a '55 Chevy form the movie and the film's locations today; Color Me Gone: Photos and publicity from Two-Lane Blacktop; Original theatrical trailer
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Two-Lane Blacktop: Main Feature
1. Street Racers [4:03]
2. Driver & Mechanic [3:56]
3. The Girl [6:40]
4. Three Yards [8:43]
5. GTO [5:04]
6. For Pinks [10:27]
7. "Keep a Hunger On" [5:53]
8. Up, Down, or Sideways [10:34]
9. Boswell, OK [11:52]
10. No Dancing [4:29]
11. Too Much Speed [6:23]
12. Lakeland Raceway [11:31]
13. No Good [9:28]
14. Two-Lane Blacktop [3:21]
A hypnotic road trip and an ode to the lonesome highways of America, Two-Lane Blacktop follows two car-obsessed drifters who put up their customized 1955 Chevy in a cross-country race against a straight-from-the-factory 1970 Pontiac GTO. But this skeletal story quickly dissolves into a series of stops for hitchhikers, small town drag races, brushes with the law, and rest stops at an endless succession of small-town diners, motels, and gas stations. The only music is heard through car radios and cafe jukeboxes, and the sparse, nuts-and-bolts dialogue -- the two laconic drifters don't talk about much besides headers and sparkplugs -- ultimately yields to the ever-present rev of engines. No character names here, just "The Driver" (singer James Taylor) and "The Mechanic" (Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys) versus "G.T.O." (a magnificent Warren Oates), with a hitchhiker, "The Girl" (Laurie Bird), along for the ride -- the principals competing for her affection. Directed by the iconoclastic Monte Hellman, Two-Lane Blacktop is a haunting reminder of the often-brilliantly conveyed sense of disaffection and alienation that pervaded American films in the 1970s. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble
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