

Product Description Ethan Hawke and Uma Thurman star in this futuristic sci-fi thriller about a world where genetic engineering is used to perfect the human species. desertcart.com Confidently conceived and brilliantly executed, Gattaca had a somewhat low profile release in 1997, but audiences and critics hailed the film's originality. It's since been recognized as one of the most intelligent science fiction films of the 1990s. Writer-director Andrew Niccol, the talented New Zealander who also wrote the acclaimed Jim Carrey vehicle The Truman Show, depicts a near-future society in which one's personal and professional destiny is determined by one's genes. In this society, "Valids" (genetically engineered) qualify for positions at prestigious corporations, such as Gattaca, which grooms its most qualified employees for space exploration. "In-Valids" (naturally born), such as the film's protagonist, Vincent (Ethan Hawke), are deemed genetically flawed and subsequently fated to low-level occupations in a genetically caste society. With the help of a disabled "Valid" (Jude Law), Vincent subverts his society's social and biological barriers to pursue his dream of space travel; any random mistake--and an ongoing murder investigation at Gattaca--could reveal his plot. Part thriller, part futuristic drama and cautionary tale, Gattaca establishes its social structure so convincingly that the entire scenario is chillingly believable. With Uma Thurman as the woman who loves Vincent and identifies with his struggle, Gattaca is both stylish and smart, while Jude Law's performance lends the film a note of tragic and heartfelt humanity. --Jeff Shannon P.when('A').execute(function(A) { A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse', function(data) { window.scroll(0, data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100); }); }); Set Contains: In addition to a superb widescreen transfer, the DVD edition of Gattaca includes several deleted scenes (and one humorous outtake), which further establish the story's social context and provide additional insight into the scientific and ethical issues explored in this extraordinary film. --Jeff Shannon See more Review: Perhaps one of the ten best films with an ethical orientation - Ultimately, the core of this film is human striving, human imperfection, and personal meaning. No matter where one finds oneself on the bell curve, there is always someone further to the right. If not, every friend, lover, relative and person one will ever know lies somewhere to the left. Only acceptance of this fact, over all metrics, will allow true equity to exist for everyone on the spectrum. Gattaca is a 1997 film written and directed by Andrew M. Niccol. It was his first feature film -- although he was an accomplished director of commercials -- and was followed by The Truman Show and In Time, among others. It falls into the genre of science fiction, and is set in the near future. Genetic technology is ubiquitous, but was just becoming accepted at the time of the protagonist's birth. Vincent is conceived and carried to term without intervention via genetic technologies that select or modify zygotes prior to cell division. The original script called this a "faith birth," although the term "IN-VALID," pronounced like the word "invalid" in "an invalid driver's license," is used more prominently in the movie. Vincent has varying propensities for genetically-influenced issues such as aggression, obesity, and attention-deficit disorder, which remain untreatable in an age where the obvious solution is for them to be eradicated by genetically selecting them out of existence. He has a genetic heart condition which results in a 99% chance of a 30.5-year life expectancy. His parents' awareness of this causes them to treat him as an invalid his entire childhood and to stress his limitations instead of his potential. Vincent's younger brother, Anton, is genetically enhanced, and therefore VALID. The process of his genetic selection is described in more detail in an earlier script, including the fact that his parents had to save every dime for two years in order to afford the process, but were unable to afford enhancements such as the "innate" ability to play the piano or understand higher mathematics. Anton and Vincent are rivals -- most tellingly at open ocean swimming -- with Anton's enhanced physicality and Vincent's heart condition leading to predictable results, at least during childhood. Anton stands indifferently by as Vincent leaves home at sixteen, disappearing into the genetic underclass of day laborers, housecleaners and sanitation workers. Anton is a child of privilege and an adult who displays many of the markers of childhood, perhaps because he never had to face adversity in his own life. As lead investigator of a murder committed at the corporation where Vincent, and later Jerome, is employed, these qualities surface. Due to an errant eyelash, Vincent (the IN-VALID) becomes a suspect. Anton searches for him, or any genetic traces of him, without revealing that they are related, and without initially suspecting that Vincent is posing as VALID. Society is divided into IN-VALIDs and VALIDs. The law outlaws overt discrimination based on genetics, but the reality of society is one similar to the Reconstruction South and Jim Crow. Tacit acceptance of a genetic underclass -- with diminishing demographics (and political power) due to the rapid adoption of genetic intervention -- but with subtle and not so subtle social "selection processes" inevitably at work. For example, Vincent works hard to improve his skills and knowledge so that he can become a celestial navigator. His attempts at employment are consistently foiled based on drug testing which also reveals his genetic status. A more "qualified" applicant is chosen. His only recourse is manual unskilled labor, thus his short stint of employment as a janitor at the Gattaca Aerospace Corporation. Selection occurs not just in employment, but in mate selection as well. Today women will run a background check on potential mates to determine their (criminal?) past or economic prospects. In the film, they do the same for unseen genetic qualities -- thus Vincent's dates eventually migrate to Anton based upon their surreptitious collection and testing of genetic material. Why would these women ever accept the economic consequences of an IN-VALID's prospects? Why would they opt for a reduced quality of life based on their spouse's potential susceptibility to untreatable ailments or reduced life expectancy? They want a quality partner with a comparable chance for a lengthy high quality life together, similar or better offspring and mitigation of risk. Any reasonable person would desire the same, with the vast majority willing to fudge a little with respect to the "means" in order to maximize the "ends." Vincent is marginalized in both his professional and personal life -- reduced to the permanent underclass, his dreams of space travel unrealized or unrealizable, alone and without prospects -- yet remains resolved. He is not defeated. He works, saves his money and spends every moment of free time educating himself or working out. He constantly goes without and always pushes himself. He resorts to a "borrowed ladder" in the form of Jerome Eugene Morrow, a paraplegic willing to provide skin, hair, blood and urine samples to Vincent on an ongoing basis so that Vincent might represent himself as Jerome, a VALID with "Eugene's" genetics and Vincent's hard earned knowledge and skills. Vincent's resolve is further demonstrated by his having both shin bones surgically severed and reset with titanium rods, increasing his height 2" to match Eugene's genetic profile for height. The scars are explained as being exactly the height of the front fender of a '99 Chrysler LeBaron. Vincent's heartbeat during tests is a recording of Eugene's, resulting in the lab tech Lamar's comment "Six miles later it's still beating like a Goddamn metronome. I could play piano by that heartbeat of his." Meanwhile Vincent's actual heartbeat is over 220 as he masks extreme fatigue, lactic acid buildup and oxygen deprivation by sheer force of will, confident in public but collapsing in private once it is over. Only extremes of discipline and training allow him to pull off this ruse. However his prowess as a celestial navigator is not faked, as evidenced by this assessment: "I reviewed your flight plan. Not one error in a hundred thousand keystrokes. Phenomenal. (placing a hand on Jerome's shoulder) It's right that someone like you is taking us to Titan." Note the "...like you..." instead of "...someone with your skills..." or "...someone with your knowledge..." This distinction is the critical take away of this exchange. The script is full of undercurrents as subtle and deep as this minor inflection. However as much as the film is at its surface about big ideas -- about institutional and societal discrimination -- it ultimately reveals itself to be about the relationships between its characters. About Vincent/Anton, Vincent/Irene, Vincent/Lamar, and Vincent/Eugene... and how their relationships are framed by these larger issues. Review: A beautifully artistic, futuristic, sci-fi love story - The most striking thing about this film is its artistic quality and "Hitchcock-esque" feel. This film is full of symmetry which makes it visually pleasing while at the same time exposing the inequality in imbalance of human existence in a society where only perfect people matter, and where "We now have discrimination down to a science". The story follows the life of Vincent, a young boy who dreams of going into space. One day he finds himself assuming the identity of Jerome (played by Jude Law), a genetically engineered person who, because of a tragic accident, is now crippled. Throughout the film, Vincent must use Jerome's DNA to continually fool others into believing that he is actually Jerome, thereby enabling him to secure a job with Gattaca, a space agency much like our NASA. Along the way Vincent meets Irene (Uma Thurman) and falls in love. As things progress, and Vincent nears the date of his launch, a murder takes place at the agency, and a sweep for DNA clues leads authorities to investigate Vincent as a possible suspect. Though he and Jerome are able to thwart the authorities, they remain suspicious of him and, just days before Vincent's launch into space, an eventual meeting takes place between Vincent and one of the investigators, who just happens to be a person from his past. Vincent also finds himself torn between his dream of becoming a space man and his newfound love for Irene. In the final scenes, the pieces of Vincent's life come together, and like a beautiful sonata, bring the story to a beautiful and moving conclusion. This film is clearly a work of art, and filled with quotes which will forever cement it in our hearts and memories. My favorite of all, "They say every atom in our bodies was once part of a star...Maybe I'm not leaving...Maybe I'm going home". Though this film didn't do very well at the box office, it has since become quite a cult classic, and for very good reason. If you appreciate fine art, photography and filmmaking, then you will love this film. This is definitely one to add to the movie library, and should be required viewing for anyone with a pulse.
| ASIN | 0767805712 |
| Actors | Alan Arkin, Ethan Hawke, Jude Law, Loren Dean, Uma Thurman |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.33:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #18,225 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #307 in Science Fiction DVDs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (6,886) |
| Director | Andrew Niccol |
| Dubbed: | French, Spanish |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | MFR043396826496 |
| Language | English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround) |
| MPAA rating | PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned) |
| Media Format | Subtitled |
| Number of discs | 2 |
| Producers | Danny DeVito, Michael Shamberg, Stacey Sher |
| Product Dimensions | 7.5 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches; 4 ounces |
| Release date | June 30, 1998 |
| Run time | 2 hours and 11 minutes |
| Studio | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
| Subtitles: | English, French, Spanish |
H**R
Perhaps one of the ten best films with an ethical orientation
Ultimately, the core of this film is human striving, human imperfection, and personal meaning. No matter where one finds oneself on the bell curve, there is always someone further to the right. If not, every friend, lover, relative and person one will ever know lies somewhere to the left. Only acceptance of this fact, over all metrics, will allow true equity to exist for everyone on the spectrum. Gattaca is a 1997 film written and directed by Andrew M. Niccol. It was his first feature film -- although he was an accomplished director of commercials -- and was followed by The Truman Show and In Time, among others. It falls into the genre of science fiction, and is set in the near future. Genetic technology is ubiquitous, but was just becoming accepted at the time of the protagonist's birth. Vincent is conceived and carried to term without intervention via genetic technologies that select or modify zygotes prior to cell division. The original script called this a "faith birth," although the term "IN-VALID," pronounced like the word "invalid" in "an invalid driver's license," is used more prominently in the movie. Vincent has varying propensities for genetically-influenced issues such as aggression, obesity, and attention-deficit disorder, which remain untreatable in an age where the obvious solution is for them to be eradicated by genetically selecting them out of existence. He has a genetic heart condition which results in a 99% chance of a 30.5-year life expectancy. His parents' awareness of this causes them to treat him as an invalid his entire childhood and to stress his limitations instead of his potential. Vincent's younger brother, Anton, is genetically enhanced, and therefore VALID. The process of his genetic selection is described in more detail in an earlier script, including the fact that his parents had to save every dime for two years in order to afford the process, but were unable to afford enhancements such as the "innate" ability to play the piano or understand higher mathematics. Anton and Vincent are rivals -- most tellingly at open ocean swimming -- with Anton's enhanced physicality and Vincent's heart condition leading to predictable results, at least during childhood. Anton stands indifferently by as Vincent leaves home at sixteen, disappearing into the genetic underclass of day laborers, housecleaners and sanitation workers. Anton is a child of privilege and an adult who displays many of the markers of childhood, perhaps because he never had to face adversity in his own life. As lead investigator of a murder committed at the corporation where Vincent, and later Jerome, is employed, these qualities surface. Due to an errant eyelash, Vincent (the IN-VALID) becomes a suspect. Anton searches for him, or any genetic traces of him, without revealing that they are related, and without initially suspecting that Vincent is posing as VALID. Society is divided into IN-VALIDs and VALIDs. The law outlaws overt discrimination based on genetics, but the reality of society is one similar to the Reconstruction South and Jim Crow. Tacit acceptance of a genetic underclass -- with diminishing demographics (and political power) due to the rapid adoption of genetic intervention -- but with subtle and not so subtle social "selection processes" inevitably at work. For example, Vincent works hard to improve his skills and knowledge so that he can become a celestial navigator. His attempts at employment are consistently foiled based on drug testing which also reveals his genetic status. A more "qualified" applicant is chosen. His only recourse is manual unskilled labor, thus his short stint of employment as a janitor at the Gattaca Aerospace Corporation. Selection occurs not just in employment, but in mate selection as well. Today women will run a background check on potential mates to determine their (criminal?) past or economic prospects. In the film, they do the same for unseen genetic qualities -- thus Vincent's dates eventually migrate to Anton based upon their surreptitious collection and testing of genetic material. Why would these women ever accept the economic consequences of an IN-VALID's prospects? Why would they opt for a reduced quality of life based on their spouse's potential susceptibility to untreatable ailments or reduced life expectancy? They want a quality partner with a comparable chance for a lengthy high quality life together, similar or better offspring and mitigation of risk. Any reasonable person would desire the same, with the vast majority willing to fudge a little with respect to the "means" in order to maximize the "ends." Vincent is marginalized in both his professional and personal life -- reduced to the permanent underclass, his dreams of space travel unrealized or unrealizable, alone and without prospects -- yet remains resolved. He is not defeated. He works, saves his money and spends every moment of free time educating himself or working out. He constantly goes without and always pushes himself. He resorts to a "borrowed ladder" in the form of Jerome Eugene Morrow, a paraplegic willing to provide skin, hair, blood and urine samples to Vincent on an ongoing basis so that Vincent might represent himself as Jerome, a VALID with "Eugene's" genetics and Vincent's hard earned knowledge and skills. Vincent's resolve is further demonstrated by his having both shin bones surgically severed and reset with titanium rods, increasing his height 2" to match Eugene's genetic profile for height. The scars are explained as being exactly the height of the front fender of a '99 Chrysler LeBaron. Vincent's heartbeat during tests is a recording of Eugene's, resulting in the lab tech Lamar's comment "Six miles later it's still beating like a Goddamn metronome. I could play piano by that heartbeat of his." Meanwhile Vincent's actual heartbeat is over 220 as he masks extreme fatigue, lactic acid buildup and oxygen deprivation by sheer force of will, confident in public but collapsing in private once it is over. Only extremes of discipline and training allow him to pull off this ruse. However his prowess as a celestial navigator is not faked, as evidenced by this assessment: "I reviewed your flight plan. Not one error in a hundred thousand keystrokes. Phenomenal. (placing a hand on Jerome's shoulder) It's right that someone like you is taking us to Titan." Note the "...like you..." instead of "...someone with your skills..." or "...someone with your knowledge..." This distinction is the critical take away of this exchange. The script is full of undercurrents as subtle and deep as this minor inflection. However as much as the film is at its surface about big ideas -- about institutional and societal discrimination -- it ultimately reveals itself to be about the relationships between its characters. About Vincent/Anton, Vincent/Irene, Vincent/Lamar, and Vincent/Eugene... and how their relationships are framed by these larger issues.
D**S
A beautifully artistic, futuristic, sci-fi love story
The most striking thing about this film is its artistic quality and "Hitchcock-esque" feel. This film is full of symmetry which makes it visually pleasing while at the same time exposing the inequality in imbalance of human existence in a society where only perfect people matter, and where "We now have discrimination down to a science". The story follows the life of Vincent, a young boy who dreams of going into space. One day he finds himself assuming the identity of Jerome (played by Jude Law), a genetically engineered person who, because of a tragic accident, is now crippled. Throughout the film, Vincent must use Jerome's DNA to continually fool others into believing that he is actually Jerome, thereby enabling him to secure a job with Gattaca, a space agency much like our NASA. Along the way Vincent meets Irene (Uma Thurman) and falls in love. As things progress, and Vincent nears the date of his launch, a murder takes place at the agency, and a sweep for DNA clues leads authorities to investigate Vincent as a possible suspect. Though he and Jerome are able to thwart the authorities, they remain suspicious of him and, just days before Vincent's launch into space, an eventual meeting takes place between Vincent and one of the investigators, who just happens to be a person from his past. Vincent also finds himself torn between his dream of becoming a space man and his newfound love for Irene. In the final scenes, the pieces of Vincent's life come together, and like a beautiful sonata, bring the story to a beautiful and moving conclusion. This film is clearly a work of art, and filled with quotes which will forever cement it in our hearts and memories. My favorite of all, "They say every atom in our bodies was once part of a star...Maybe I'm not leaving...Maybe I'm going home". Though this film didn't do very well at the box office, it has since become quite a cult classic, and for very good reason. If you appreciate fine art, photography and filmmaking, then you will love this film. This is definitely one to add to the movie library, and should be required viewing for anyone with a pulse.
J**.
Nada que reprochar, transferencia, steelbook, muy bien. A mí manera de ver gran película de ciencia ficción!
G**R
Une excellente dystopie avec des acteurs extraordinaire. Je recommande fortement ce film à voir et à revoir
A**L
I enjoyed watching this movie. It's scenes, dialogues, settings are compact, strong. Particularly settings have a strange, deep effect on the viewer. It feels like entire movie is taking place on a simple science fiction theatre with no computerized widget & sound crowd. Darkish pastel colors dominate the scenes from start to end creating a mystical, cubical, logical suspense. Settings are simple, colors are basic, dialogues are short, sharp, and to the point; I would call it a piece of minimalist art. Movie is combination of fantasy and reality, like a real psychology story in a fantasy setting. It is a presentation power of will, envy, determination. Story takes place in a country where humans are grouped into two in terms of their genetic; VALID, and INVALID ones. And this culture is just normal and accepted by everyone. Valid ones are superior, and candidates for prime jobs. It is a story of the mind and the will of an invalid person. Vincent is the protagonist, and he is invalid and has a dream of being an astronaut participating in space missions. And his brother Anton is a valid one. Anton seems to lack passion for anything, eventually ending up being an crime investigator on police department. Vincent first starts working as a cleaner, help boy in a space station. Knowing that he has no chance of being astronaut, he still follows his dream, does the self study on the subject, and also physical training. Eventually he concludes that his efforts are worthless unless he has a valid blood. So he decides to fake his identity, scum the system with a valid one's identity. And he finds someone for that, Jerome. Jerome is a grandiose swimmer who became second in an international competition and he can not cope with the result psychologically. And he wanted to kill himself with a traffic accident, but he fails, and his body gets paralyzed. Jerome provides Vincent all necessary material like blood, urine, hair samples to pass regular controls. Eventually Vincent is accepted to Space mission program with the identify of Jerome. Administrator of the mission has suspicion on Vincent and he gets killed. And this murder is investigated by Anton. Anton gets suspicious on Vincent. While investigation is taking too long and jeopardizing the mission to Saturn, Director of the of the company confess that he killed the administrator because of risk of failing the mission. However It is never clear who killed the administrator. Anton implies that Vincent is fake, and his participation in the mission is a scum. So he invites him to do this swimming competition where they swim into the ocean until one gives up. They used to this while they were kids, and call it chicken game. In the test, Anton gives up; and on the return, he was going get drawn, but Vincent save his life. This clears the Anton hurdle for Vincent. He eventually gets into the ship to Saturn. Jerome leaves enough blood, hair samples for the rest of Vincent's life. This was a story of great Will, and fatality of grandiosity. The Will to overcome will to set the rules; even science, rationality are not perfect enough against human will. Hard logic presents weakness against the will which fluid , smart, and strong, and eventually it triumphs. Vincent's will finds support at all corners. His valid girlfriend helps him. The doctor who does the validity control helps him. Why? Because doctor's son admires the will of Vincent for the mission. So The Will flows and find it's way. Jerome is equally interesting character. Why does he participate in this scum? Does he hate the system? is this his revenge from the system? Or is it his own unstoppable grandiosity to make his name living forever strong? Or is it both, that is living in a system you hate while still want to be at the top. He kills himself when Vincent lifts off in the space ship. Actors are superb, their performance proves they were the right choice for the movie: Ethan Hawke (Vincent), Uma Thurman (Irene), Jude Law (Jerome)
S**S
`Gattaca' bombed at the box-office. Why is unclear. So did `The Shawshank Redemption'. It's a harsh world. This movie is about an astonishingly intimate friendship between two young men, played by Ethan Hawke and Jude Law. Each is the product of different conception. One is natural and flawed, the other artificial and near perfect. The near perfect individual is crippled following an accident, and both agree to swap identities, enabling the natural and flawed specimen to cheat the system and become an astronaut. As their identities merge, intimacy becomes claustrophobic. They argue and bicker in a way that is perfectly believable, almost bitchy. It becomes necessary for the `donor' to provide all manner of bodily samples, and all the blood and urine may put some people off. However; the scam seems to work - until... There's a murder at the facility, investigation risks exposing our dubious hero. It's strange finding ourselves encouraged to cheer-on a cheat. We are left with very ambiguous morality. There are also one or two aspects of technology that seem in or out of place. Yet as a piece of cinema it has a great deal to offer. Acting is top-drawer throughout. Ethan Hawke and especially Jude Law have never been in better form. The script is intelligent. Plot and filming are well-paced. Set-pieces are seamless. And there's a host of interesting details, like the retro-cars (electric Rover 2000's). The whole production is very stylised, with an almost noirish tint to its appearance. It's in danger of becoming arty, but still holds fast to its SF credentials. A fine music score draws the narrative together. The ending twist is simultaneously triumphant and tragic. This is such a sublimely well-crafted work that it doesn't need pyrotechnics, shoot-em-ups, or any of the other typical action paraphernalia to literally prop it up. It is definitely a collector's item. Very highly recommended. But you may not want to eat while you're watching it. The DVD supplied is as clear as is should be. But when I bought mine, Amazon was knocking it our for just 2 spons, not the goofball price demanded here. Shop around. There's a bunch of special features that I haven't yet bothered to watch.
C**T
>>> ZUM FILM <<< Andrew Niccol zeichnet in GATTACA eine Welt, in der nicht mehr die soziale Herkunft oder Bildung über die Chancen entscheiden, die ein Individuum in einer Gesellschaft hat, sondern allein die genetischen Anlagen eines Menschen. Aussehen, Intelligenz, die Veranlagung zu Krankheiten, etc, alles kann in GATTACA auf Wunsch der werdenden Eltern von Ärzten zum Vorteil des Nachwuchses beeinflusst werden - oder, wie in Vincents (Ethan Hawke) Fall, einfach dumm gelaufen sein, da er auf herkömmlichem Wege gezeugt wurde... Auf dieser Basis entwickelt sich eine spannende Handlung, die Fragen wie die Genetik und Genmanipulation anspricht und die Frage aufwirft, wie wohl eine Gesellschaft funktionieren würde, in der der Mensch Gott spielt. Man sieht vornehmlich sehr schöne Menschen mit perfekten genetischen Anlagen. In einer perfekten Welt, die sauber ist und offenkundig perfekt funktioniert. Das System lässt keine Irrtümer zu, ein einmal gefälltes genetisches Urteil ist endgülig und entscheidet darüber, ob man als Mitglied der genentischen Elite ganz oben mitspielen darf - oder ob man als Mitglied einer Putzkolonne den Dreck der geistigen Elite wegräumen muss. Ober- und Unterschicht nur voneinander getrennt durch den genetischen Code, der in jedem von uns steckt. Hier macht uns Andrew Niccol vom unbeteiligten zum beteiligten bzw. betroffenen Zuschauer. Wie weit waren wir zum Zeitpunkt des Erscheinens von GATTACA (1997) von einer solchen Gesellschaft entfernt und wie nahe sind wir ihr heute? Das ist sicher keine leicht zu beantwortende Frage aber eine Frage, die berechtigt gestellt werden darf. Denn ich bin überzeugt davon, dass der Mensch die ihm von der Natur gesetzten Grenzen immer wieder übertritt und weiter übertreten wird. Wohin das führen kann? Genau das zeigt uns "Gattaca". Ein wirklich faszinierender und extrem spannender Film, bei dem man gerne mit Vincent mitfiebert, um zu verfolgen, ob er das System überlisten kann. >>> ZUR BLU-RAY <<< GATTACA war Anfang 1998 die erste DVD überhaupt, die ich mir gekauft habe. Der Film hatte mir zuvor im Kino sehr gefallen. Und als der Film auf Blu-Ray erschien, war klar, dass ich den Film erneut kaufen würde. Die Blu-ray enttäuscht nicht und vor allem ist im Vergleich zur alten DVD sehr deutlich, wie sehr die Blu-ray- der DVD-Fassung überlegen ist. Sowohl beim Bild (Sichtung auf einem 50 Zoll-Display) als auch beim Ton (Dolby TrueHD, gehört mit einem 7.1-Set) liegen geradezu Welten zwischen den beiden unterschiedlichen Formaten! Aber auch wer den Vergleich nicht ziehen kann, dürfte mit dem Bild sehr zufrieden sein. Zwar ist das Bild nicht perfekt aber für einen HD-Genuss allemal aureichend. Die Extras sind interessant. Allerdings bin ich jemand, der sich sehr gerne Audiokommentare anhört. Hier wird der interessierte Käufer leider enttäuscht. >>> FAZIT <<< Der Film zeigt eine beunruhigende Zukunftsvision, von der ich persönlich glaube, dass es nicht die Frage ist ob, sondern nur, wann sie eintreten wird. Klare Kaufempfehlung!
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