DVD - 2 Disc Set - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 / Thx Learn more
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Audio commentary with score by composer James Newton Howard; deleted scenes; behind-the-scenes footage; interview with M. Night Shyamalan; three featurettes; a storyboard comparison; photo gallery; trailers; trivia booklet
Full Product DetailsSide #1 -- Unbreakable
0. Chapter Selection
1. Opening Titles/Train to Philadelphia [:25]
2. Eastrail #177 [2:31]
3. The Only Survivor [2:31]
4. Memorial Service [2:31]
5. How Many Sick Days? [:03]
6. West Philadelphia, 1974 [5:43]
7. Elijah's Gallery [5:43]
8. Newspaper Clippings [5:43]
9. A Second Chance [1:07]
10. Instinct for Protection [5:04]
11. A Silver Gun With a Black Grip [1:35]
12. How Much Can You Lift? [4:26]
13. An Unbelievable Possibility [4:07]
14. Intuition [7:20]
15. The Hero's Code [2:11]
16. Fantasy or Reality? [1:51]
17. Love -- That's Forever [4:27]
18. Comic Book Store [2:26]
19. First Date [6:36]
20. Message From Elijah [1:16]
21. Revisiting the Wreckage [3:37]
22. Go to Where People Are [2:04]
23. Overcoming His Weakness [3:01]
24. I Had a Bad Dream [2:48]
25. A Hero [1:45]
26. Kind of a Miracle [1:21]
27. It Has Begun [1:40]
28. End Credits [4:39]
M. Night Shyamalan's follow-up to The Sixth Sense is, like its predecessor, an intelligent, eerie thriller that raises as many questions as it does goosebumps. Unbreakable reteams Shyamalan with Bruce Willis, here playing stadium security guard David Dunn-the lone survivor of a catastrophic train wreck-whose lifelong imperviousness to injury and illness intrigues accident-prone comic-book collector Elijah Price (Samuel L. Jackson). Elijah postulates that David's seeming invulnerability is the sign of an honest-to-goodness superhero. Shyamalan's exploration of this concept is conducted in a deadly earnest manner; there's nothing puerile or campy about it. Willis, whose character is a melancholy soul tormented by the failure of his marriage and the alienation of his son, plays Dunn with subtlety and restraint, and Jackson makes Elijah a pitiable but convincing eccentric whose persuasiveness eventually sways the security guard. Shyamalan sustains a gloomy atmosphere throughout, and a lengthy third-act set piece-in which David tests Elijah's theory amidst horrifying circumstances-is guaranteed to leave your teeth chattering and your knees knocking. Unbreakable is a tribute to the ingenuity of its talented writer-director, who takes an inherently ridiculous notion and makes it plausible by virtue of his masterful storytelling gifts. Shyamlan provides a commentary for the DVD, as does composer John Newton Howard; additionally, there are three featurettes covering aspects of the film's production, and storyboard-to-film comparisons. Barnes & Noble
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