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The Hurt Locker |  | Director: Kathryn Bigelow Actors: Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie, Brian Geraghty, Ralph Fiennes, Guy Pearce Studio: Summit Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: $26.99 Buy Used: $2.92 as of 2/7/2012 05:58 EST details You Save: $24.07 (89%)
New (63) Used (68) from $2.92
Seller: goHastings Sales Rank: 1,898
Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen Languages: English (Unknown), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language), Spanish (Dubbed) Rating: R (Restricted) Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Region: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Running Time: 131 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: SUMD66112279D UPC: 025192048555 EAN: 0025192048555 ASIN: B00275EGWY
Theatrical Release Date: June 26, 2009 Release Date: January 12, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: 100% GUARANTEED! Fast shipping on more than 1,000,000 Book, Video, Video Game & Music titles!
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| • | Condition: New | | • | Format: DVD | | • | AC-3; Color; Dolby; Dubbed; DVD; NTSC; Subtitled; Widescreen |
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Product Description Iraq. Forced to play a dangerous game of cat-and-mouse in the chaos of war an elite army bomb squad unit must come together in a city where everyone is a potential enemy and every object could be a deadly bomb. Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (summit) Release Date: 01/12/2010 Starring: Jeremy Renner Run time: 131 minutes Rating: R
Amazon.com The making of honest action movies has become so rare that Kathryn Bigelow's magnificent The Hurt Locker was shown mostly in art cinemas rather than multiplexes. That's fine; the picture is a work of art. But it also delivers more kinetic excitement, more breath-bating suspense, more putting-you-right-there in the danger zone than all the brain-dead, visually incoherent wrecking derbies hogging mall screens. Partly it's a matter of subject. The movie focuses on an Explosive Ordnance Disposal team, the guys whose more or less daily job is to disarm the homemade bombs that have accounted for most U.S. casualties in Iraq. But even more, the film's extraordinary tension derives from the precision and intelligence of Bigelow's direction. She gets every sweaty detail and tactical nuance in the close-up confrontation of man and bomb, while keeping us alert to the volatile wraparound reality of an ineluctably foreign environment--hot streets and blank-walled buildings full of onlookers, some merely curious and some hostile, perhaps thumbing a cellphone that could become a trigger. This is exemplary moviemaking. You don't need CGI, just a human eye, and the imagination to realize that, say, the sight of dust and scale popped off a derelict car by an explosion half a block away delivers more shock value than a pixelated fireball. The setting may be Iraq in 2004, but it could just as well be Thermopylae; The Hurt Locker is no "Iraq War movie." Bigelow and screenwriter Mark Boal--who did time as a journalist embed with an EOD unit--align themselves with neither supporters nor opponents of the U.S. involvement. There's no politics here. War is just the job the characters in the movie do. One in particular, the supremely resourceful staff sergeant played by Jeremy Renner, is addicted to the almost nonstop adrenaline rush and the opportunity to express his esoteric, life-on-the-edge genius. The hurt locker of the title is a box he keeps under his bunk, filled with bomb parts and other signatory memorabilia of "things that could have killed me." That none of it has killed him so far is no real consolation. In this movie, you never know who's going to go and when; even high-profile talent (we won't name names here) is no guarantee. But one thing can be guaranteed, and that is that almost every sequence in the movie becomes a riveting, often fiercely enigmatic set piece. This is Kathryn Bigelow's best film since 1987's Near Dark. It could also be the best film of 2009. --Richard T. Jameson
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