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    Lucy

    Director: Luc Besson Cast: Scarlett Johansson

    Scarlett Johansson
    , Morgan Freeman
    Morgan Freeman
    , Choi Min-sik
    Choi Min-sik
    , Amr Waked
    Amr Waked
    , Julian Rhind-Tutt
    Julian Rhind-Tutt


    DVD

    (Slip Sleeve)

    $14.99
    $14.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 01/20/2015
    • UPC: 0025192234033
    • Original Release: 2014
    • Rating: R
    • Source: UNIVERSAL
    • Region Code: 1
    • Presentation: [Wide Screen]
    • Sound: [Dolby Digital Stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround]
    • Language: English
    • Runtime: 5400
    • Sales rank: 15,819

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    Scarlett Johansson Lucy
    Morgan Freeman Professor Norman
    Choi Min-sik Mr. Jang
    Amr Waked Pierre Del Rio
    Julian Rhind-Tutt The Limey
    Pilou Asb?k Richard
    Lio Tipton Caroline(as Analeigh Tipton)
    Nicolas Phongpheth Jii
    Jan Oliver Schroeder German Mule,French Mule
    Lo?c Brabant Professor,Professor
    Pierre Grammont Professor
    Pierre Poirot Professor
    Bertrand Quoniam Professor
    Pascal Loison Drug Addict
    Pierre G?rard Airport Doctor
    Isabelle Cagnat Airport Nurse
    Fr?d?ric Chau Cabin Manager
    Claire Tran Flight Attendant
    Fran?ois Legrand Business Man Plane
    Bob Martet Customs Officer
    C?dric Chevalme Cop Daniel
    Alexis Rangheard Cop Robert
    Tonio Descanvelle Cop Sergeant
    Christophe Lavalle Cop
    Julien Personnaz Cop
    Laura D'Arista Adam Lucy's Mother
    Eunyul Hong Phone Voice Royal Suite
    Luca Angeletti Italian Mule
    Matthew Bravais Student
    Renaud Cestre Student
    Thibault Segouin Student
    Claire Zaniolo Student
    Alessandro Giallocosta Marco Brezzi
    Wolfgang Pissors Berlin Custom Officer
    Sifan Shao Chinese Doctor
    Paul Chan Taipei Surgeon
    I. Cheng-Sheng Jang's Man
    Chou Chung-Wei Jang's Man
    Huan Jhih-Cyuan Jang's Man
    Frank Ma Jang's Man
    Tseng Sheng-En Jang's Man
    Liu Hsieh-Min Mahjong Room Man
    Sandra Abouav Prehistoric Lucy
    Abel Aboualiten Prehistoric Man
    Ken Lin Regent Hotel Concierge #1
    Hsing Feng Lucy's Driver
    Hsu Hao-Hsiang Warehouse Man Driver
    Samuel Churin The Receptionist
    Mason Lee Regent Hotel Concierge #2
    Mohammad Ansari Fakir
    Kevin Dust Native American
    Diego Llano Native American
    Timothy Reevis Native American
    Jeysson Reyes De La Cruz Native American
    German Mamani Native American
    Kanneti Sawe Han Rubik's Cube Boy
    Min-Sik Choi Actor
    ?ric Serra Composer

    Technical Credits
    Luc Besson Screenwriter
    Marc Shmuger Executive Producer
    Virginie Besson-Silla Producer
    Nathalie Cheron Casting
    Guillaume Bouchateau Sound/Sound Designer
    St?phane Bucher Sound/Sound Designer
    Didier Lozahic Sound/Sound Designer
    David Parker Sound/Sound Designer
    Aymeric Devoldere Sound/Sound Designer
    Shannon Mills Sound/Sound Designer

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Lucy
    1. Chapter 1 [5:26]
    2. Chapter 2 [3:11]
    3. Chapter 3 [7:06]
    4. Chapter 4 [5:50]
    5. Chapter 5 [4:28]
    6. Chapter 6 [4:21]
    7. Chapter 7 [7:08]
    8. Chapter 8 [4:07]
    9. Chapter 9 [2:10]
    10. Chapter 10 [3:38]
    11. Chapter 11 [2:38]
    12. Chapter 12 [5:21]
    13. Chapter 13 [4:03]
    14. Chapter 14 [2:31]
    15. Chapter 15 [2:43]
    16. Chapter 16 [2:22]
    17. Chapter 17 [2:41]
    18. Chapter 18 [2:30]
    19. Chapter 19 [6:24]
    20. Chapter 20 [3:40]
    21. Chapter 21 [6:55]

    Morgan Freeman and Scarlett Johansson headline this EuropaCorp/TF1 Films co-production directed by Luc Besson, and released by Universal Pictures. The story centers on a woman (Johansson) who falls prey to sinister underworld forces, but who gains superhuman abilities that allow her to strike back at her oppressors.

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    • Lucy
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    Following in the recent tradition of high-concept sci-fi action thrillers like Inception, Lucy is at its best when it's either reveling in explosive action sequences, or delving into deep, metaphorical philosophy. The moments in between, when the characters actually attempt to explain the pseudo-science that drives the plot, as always, are this genre's weak points. But while you're in the middle of enjoying the ride, it probably won't matter. The story rests entirely on the oft-quoted factoid that human beings only use 10% of their brains, proposing that thus, activating that unused 90% could offer us wild and crazy superpowers. Of course, any nerd worth their salt knows this figure isn't even true -- it's a bastardization of the assertion by early 20th century neurologists that they only understood how we use around 10% of the brain. But in the end, this probably isn't a deal-breaker for most viewers, because director and writer Luc Besson (The Fifth Element, The Professional) is adept at distracting us with sweet car chases and tense shootouts. He eventually eclipses the dumb exposition from the movie's first act with some way-smarter content, which comes in the form of subtext. It's sort of like The Matrix (the first one, anyway), where the story makes a lot more sense if you take it as an analogy for more abstract, spiritual ideas. But in the meantime, you get to follow a badass woman as she rapidly evolves beyond the human understanding of the universe and exacts unflinching, hardcore beat downs on the Taiwanese gangsters who get in her way. That woman is the titular Lucy (Scarlett Johansson), who is kidnapped by Asian drug kingpins and used as a drug mule to cart a bag of a new, uncut synthetic superdrug across borders. The only catch is that the criminals do this by surgically implanting it into her abdomen. So when one of her captors (who apparently didn't get the message from his superiors not to beat the hostage) beats the hostage, the bag leaks and Lucy gets a rapid overdose of the mysterious substance, which instantly sends her body into evolutionary overdrive, granting her access to the latent abilities offered by that heretofore unused 90% of her brain. She can do everything from control her own metabolism and heart rate to perceive and manipulate electromagnetic fields, and as the process that the drug set into motion continues, she only gets more powerful. She's free from attachment and fear, and injury doesn't mean much when she can control the divisions of her own cells. With the gangsters still on her tail, she tracks down Professor Norman (Morgan Freeman), a neuroscientist who focuses on the evolution of the brain. You may remember one of the last times Besson focused his movie around a female supreme being, the orange-haired Leeloo (Milla Jovovich) from The Fifth Element. But Lucy is a very different character; she's not cute or bubbly, she's cool and calculated. Like Dr. Manhattan from Watchmen, part of Lucy's character arc is that her abilities make her so removed from her ego, her attachments, and her former perceptions of space and time that she's in danger of no longer relating to the human experience. But this isn't to say that Lucy is cold -- as a film or as a character. Besson's directorial style is kinetic: His edits and cutaways crackle with hyperactive references, and Lucy's exploits in superhuman badassery are dotted with tongue-in-cheek humor. The plot points may sound kind of silly on their own, but by the end, Lucy literally sits through a sequence in which she realizes that time isn't linear, humans just perceive it that way. The idea of utilizing 100% of her brain's "capacity" emerges as a metaphor for profound, nonphysical enlightenment. This is where the Matrix comparison becomes apt. Remember "There is no spoon,"? It's like that. It's possible that Besson (or the studio) tried to balance out the fact that the movie gets so heavy in the final act by making it kind of stupid in the first act. This would explain the apparent lack of a science consultant, who could have made the brain stuff at least sound like it kind of makes sense. But if you can forgive or ignore those faults, Lucy delivers the goods by the end, both as a brainy thought experiment and as a summer popcorn flick.

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