Collateral (Blu-ray) R
It started like any other night.
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Also released as:
Collateral (Blu-ray)
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Collateral
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Collateral (4K UltraHD + Blu-ray)
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Blu-ray Details
- Rated: R
- Run Time: 2 hours
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: January 8, 2013
- Originally Released: 2004
- Label: Paramount Catalog
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx & Jada Pinkett Smith | |
Performer: | Mark Ruffalo, Peter Berg, Javier Bardem, Bruce McGill & Irma P. Hall | |
Directed by | Michael Mann | |
Edited by | Jim Miller & Paul Rubell | |
Screenwriting by | Stuart Beattie | |
Composition by | James Newton Howard | |
Produced by | Michael Mann & Julie Richardson | |
Director of Photography: | Dion Beebe & Paul Cameron | |
Executive Production by | Frank Darabont, Chuck Russell, Rob Fried & Peter Giuliano |
Entertainment Reviews:
COLLATERAL has the texture and gravity of an old-school classic.
Uncut
[A] feast for the eyes....[Mann] really uses the electronic sheen that comes with the format.
Premiere
A very superior thriller with excellent direction and utterly top-notch performances...
Full Review
Cinema Crazed
[A] tensely funny and alive Los Angeles night-world thriller....Cruise and Foxx are so good together because they allow the two characters to get under each other's skin.
Entertainment Weekly
If the final destination's a bit of a disappointment, getting there is a lot of fun.
Full Review
The Spectator
Rating: 7/10 --
If anyone is ever to mount an argument for the superiority of video over film, this movie would of necessity be very near to the center of that argument.
Full Review
Antagony & Ecstasy
[With] complex, intriguing characters...
Chicago Sun-Times
Product Description:
Jamie Foxx plays Max, a Los Angeles cab driver who has a pretty wild night in this thriller from Michael Mann (HEAT, THE INSIDER). First, Max picks up, flirts with, and gets the number of Annie (Jada Pinkett Smith), an attractive District attorney. Next, Vincent (Tom Cruise) climbs into his cab. He is a professional hit man who reserves Max for the night with a whole shopping list of victims he needs to visit. As the night moves forward and the body count rises, Max must wrestle with the question of how to do the right thing while staying alive. Gradually the two men bond in unlikely ways, as each learns survival mechanisms from the other, and it all doubles as a metaphor for morality vs. capitalism. Mark Ruffalo and Peter Berg play cops who eventually get on Max and Vincent's trail, leading to a spectacular action set piece inside a night club. Irma P. Hall (2004's THE LADYKILLERS) gets laughs as Max's hospitalized "momma," and Javier Bardem (BEFORE NIGHT FALLS) is a sinister drug lord. With a capable director like Mann at the wheel, this remains a smooth, enjoyable ride while also being fast, bumpy, and full of twists and turns. The streets of urban, nighttime Los Angeles--captured via a specially modified digital camera--never looked so beautiful or desolate. As typical of the director, the film is both artistic and action-packed; operatically over-the-top while never skimping on the little details.