World Trade Center with Nicolas Cage: DVD Cover

    World Trade Center
    a.k.a. September Director: Oliver Stone Cast: Nicolas Cage, Michael Peña, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Maria Bello

    DVD - Subtitled / Pan & Scan Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 12/12/2006
    • Rating: Rated PG13
    • Sales Rank: 35,978
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    Commentaries by director Oliver Stone, on-scene rescuers, and survivor Will Jimeno; Deleted scenes

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- World Trade Center
    1. Extended Locker Room [1:40]
    1. Extended Roll Call [2:05]
    1. Concerned Business Woman [:49]
    1. Fireman Johnny [:55]
    1. Original Hole 2 Through Allison Making Lunch [5:27]
    1. Judy Gets Word Jay Is OK [2:20]
    1. John's Ghost [1:31]
    1. Barbeque Flashback [1:02]
    1. Paramedic Tends to John [1:46]
    1. Morning Roll Call [7:11]
    2. Call to Duty [:20]
    3. Heading Downtown [3:17]
    4. Volunteers [2:57]
    5. Collapse [1:12]
    6. Damage Assesment [4:37]
    7. Waiting for Word [:51]
    8. What Pain Means [4:57]
    9. Under Attack [1:45]
    10. We Can Make It [7:17]
    11. The Best [2:15]
    12. God's Curtain [4:29]
    13. Family Men [1:15]
    14. Keeping Each Other Alive [3:04]
    15. Staying Strong [2:58]
    16. A Peaceful Vision [3:30]
    17. You Are Our Mission [3:34]
    18. Mistaken Information [2:28]
    19. Will's Rescue [1:08]
    20. Come Home [4:41]
    21. Common Sorrow [:31]
    22. In Remembrance [3:18]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    The impact of 9/11 has manifested itself in a variety of unexpected ways. For filmmaker Oliver Stone -- he of the grandiose conspiracy theories and often blunt directorial flourishes -- it released a stylistic clarity and emotional directness that fits this straightforward story of heroism and sacrifice. Based on the true story of Port Authority Police Department officers John McLoughlin and William J. Jimeno (played by Nicolas Cage and Michael Pena, respectively), this deeply moving film is a tribute to all those dedicated men and women who labored in the face of unspeakable tragedy to rescue survivors from the wreckage of the World Trade Center. Although Stone expertly blends staged re-creations with documentary footage, the collapse of the Twin Towers is not the plot’s focal story. Most of the film unfolds in the dank, dark pit where McLoughlin and Jimeno found themselves pinned after entering the tower’s ruins. Their reassuring talk of family and friends is set off by cutaways and flashbacks to their anxious spouses, played with subtle intensity by Maria Bello and Maggie Gyllenhaal. Stone directs in lean, muscular fashion, eschewing bombast in favor of restraint. The result is an unusually expressive film -- wistful, tragic, and yet ultimately uplifting -- that contributes to the slow healing process following a national tragedy. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    World Trade Centerby Anonymous

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    March 10, 2007: Oliver Stone has always been a director of grit, one who was unafraid to take on controversial subjects and create powerful films that opened the audience's eyes to the mire below the surface. In WORLD TRADE CENTER he seems to have taken the opposite stance: take an historic tragedy that affected the entire world and reduce it sown to the entrapment of two Port Authority Police Officers in the rubble of the midline of the two towers destruction in hopes that the event might become more intimate. He manages to just the opposite - he makes a huge horrific tragedy seem like a family crisis and despite casting some fine actors in the roles of actual people, the film falls short of communicating the bigger picture. The film starts well enough with two of the policemen rising early in the Am to go to routine duty, then the unrecognizable 'bump' sound occurs and quite to everyone's disbelief the events of that terrible day unfold in a manner that does indeed convey the complete surprise of a nation of people unfamiliar with terror happening on home ground. The Port Authority Police enter the impending collapse of the towers to save victims only to become quickly trapped in the rubble, reducing their ranks to two men who hold on for survival that finally comes. Nicholas Cage is the sergeant John McLoughlin who is trapped with Will Jimeno (Michael Peña) while John's wife Donna (Maria Bello) and Will's pregnant wife Allison (Maggie Gyllenhaal) cope with the news of the day and the discovery that their husbands are trapped in the rubble. The long movie is a back and forth interplay between the trapped men and the terror of the families. Where Stone drops his credibility is in focusing on a retired Marine Staff Sergeant Dave Karnes (Michael Shannon) who upon hearing of the disaster gets a marine haircut and travels to the spot looking for survivors at night, eventually discovering John and Will and getting help for them to be rescued. That is all well and good, but the film adds the tag line 'We'll avenge the terrorists who did this' that seems like a credo for the irresponsible governmental attack on Iraq. It just takes away the film's energy and makes it a political PR piece. And that is too bad: the other film UNITED 93 is a far superior work in depicting the personal aspect of a national tragedy. Grady Harp

    This review was written about the DVD Special Edition / 2-Disc Edition edition.

    World Trade Centerby Anonymous

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    February 08, 2007: The fact that Oliver Stone got away from the hollywood cliche and made this into the wonderful movie it is, makes him one of the greats! must see!!

    This review was written about the DVD Special Edition / 2-Disc Edition edition.


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