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| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $23.19 |
| UMD for Sony PSP - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
Feature commentary by director Len Wiseman and filmmaking crew; six featurettes, including "Bloodlines - From Script to Screen," "The Hybrid Theory," "Making Monsters Roar," "The War Rages On," "Building a Saga," and "Music and Mayhem"; "Her Portrait in Black" music video by Atreyu.
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Underworld: Evolution
1. Start
2. The Last Hope
3. Respect the Elders
4. No Going Back
5. Carving a New Course
6. Can't Bear the Hunger
7. Road Rage Reunion
8. A Burning Need
9. Leaving No Trace
10. Relic of Memory
11. The Exile's Snare
12. Time for Answers
13. Truth and Legend
14. Impailing Interrogation
15. Father of the War
16. Bleeding the Map
17. Pain of Helplessness
18. Divine Aspiration
19. The Future Begins
20. The Past Fades Away
21. A Forgotton Chamber
22. A Submerged Entry
23. Brothers Reunited
24. "We're Too Late."
25. Explosive Encounter
26. Outnumbered
27. A Monstrous Duel
28. Light of New Hope
Picking up where the first Underworld left off, this similarly action-packed sequel continues to chronicle the centuries-old war between the Death Dealers (vampires) and Lycans (werewolves). Selene (Kate Beckinsale), the sexiest vampire ever to fill out a black latex bodysuit, joins forces with Lycan hybrid Michael (Scott Speedman). Their assignment: to foil Marcus (Tony Curran) before he can free his Lycan brother, William (Brian Steele), from eternal imprisonment. Once again, returning writer-director Len Wiseman has the characters accomplish this task with much martial-arts mayhem and bloodletting; Evolution's budget must have allowed plenty of money for the gooey red stuff, because it's splattered around indiscriminately. The fight scenes -- all choreographed and edited to the nines -- clearly took precedence over such script considerations as logic, but filmmakers in the vamps-vs.-werewolves biz rarely favor substance over style. Character actors Derek Jacobi and Bill Nighy lend their formidable talents to the ensemble, and their presence is welcome. Like them, Beckinsale (whose steamy love scene with Speedman is the movie's one non-lethal highlight) emerges with her dignity intact and makes Evolution a worthy successor to the original. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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