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    Redemption [Includes Digital Copy]

    Director: Steven Knight, Jon Alpert, Matthew O'Neill, Jason Statham, Agata Buzek, Vicky McClure, Joseph Paul Stachura, Steven Night, Paul Webster, Guy Heeley
    Cast: Jason Statham

    Jason Statham
    , Christian Brassington
    Christian Brassington
    , Benedict Wong
    Benedict Wong
    , Vicky McClure
    Vicky McClure
    , Agata Buzek
    Agata Buzek


    DVD

    (Wide Screen / Subtitled)

    $9.99
    $9.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 09/24/2013
    • UPC: 0031398169734
    • Original Release: 2013
    • Rating: R
    • Source: LIONS GAT
    • Region Code: 1
    • Presentation: [Wide Screen]
    • Sound: [Dolby Digital Stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround]
    • Language: English
    • Runtime: 6000
    • Sales rank: 26,020

    Special Features

    Closed Caption; Redemption: behind the scenes

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    Jason Statham Joey Jones
    Christian Brassington Actor
    Benedict Wong Actor,Chinese Guy
    Vicky McClure Actor
    Agata Buzek Actor
    Siobhan Hewlett Actor
    Ian Pirie Actor
    Dario Marianelli Composer
    Ger Ryan Actor
    Youssef Kerkour Actor
    Anthony Morris Actor
    Victoria Bewick Actor
    Danny Webb Actor
    David Bradley Actor
    Steven Beard Actor
    Sang Lui Tony
    Bruce Wang Tim
    John Killoran Cop 1
    Lillie Buttery Young Christina
    Ed Gaughan Stan
    Sheng-Chien Tsai Chinese Waiter
    Josef Altin Pizza Delivery Guy
    Christopher Logan Ticket Clerk
    Jeff Mirza Asian Shop Owner
    Michelle Lee Mrs. Choy
    Joseph Long Italian Restaurant Owner
    Anna-Maria Everett Italian Woman
    Cesare Taurasi Corsican
    Andrew Ellis Football Supporter 1
    James Bye Football Supporter 2
    Drama Actor
    Lee Asquith-Coe Actor
    Adam Chambers Actor
    Derek Burke Actor
    Marco Neves Actor
    An?bal Silveyra Actor
    Senem Temiz Actor
    Steven Knight Actor

    Technical Credits
    Steven Knight Screenwriter
    Paul Webster Producer
    Guy Heeley Producer
    Stuart Ford Executive Producer
    Brian Kavanaugh-Jones Executive Producer,Producer
    Deepak Nayar Executive Producer
    Joe Wright Executive Producer,Producer
    Tracy Rector Producer
    Mark Appleby Sound Effects
    Nigel Bennett Sound Effects
    John Casali Sound Effects
    Gary Dodkin Sound Effects
    Paul Hanks Sound Effects
    Steven Night Screenwriter

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Redemption
    1. Scene 1 [4:44]
    2. Scene 2 [3:58]
    3. Scene 3 [3:54]
    4. Scene 4 [7:04]
    5. Scene 5 [5:04]
    6. Scene 6 [3:47]
    7. Scene 7 [9:39]
    8. Scene 8 [8:45]
    9. Scene 9 [4:01]
    10. Scene 10 [9:30]
    11. Scene 11 [6:19]
    12. Scene 12 [6:22]
    13. Scene 13 [6:30]
    14. Scene 14 [4:48]
    15. Scene 15 [8:57]
    16. Scene 16 [6:43]

    Writer/director Steven Knight's Redemption stars Jason Statham as a British Special Forces veteran named Smith who has fallen on very hard times. He's an alcoholic homeless man huddling inside a box on a dingy London alley with a fellow homeless woman when a couple of criminals start harassing the junkies and the destitute. He reverts to his training, subdues the baddies, and makes a run for it, ending up in the home of a wealthy creative type who happens to be in New York for the next eight months. Smith movies in, cleans himself up, and gets a job as a toughman for a local Asian gangster. Haunted by horrific acts he committed while serving in Afghanistan, he spends much of the money he makes now to help fund a local soup kitchen run by Sister Cristina (Agata Buzek). When the woman he was with at the beginning of the movie turns up dead, Smith decides to hunt down the man responsible. Meanwhile, Cristina questions her own faith, confronts her haunted past, and makes Smith contemplate his own violent nature. Redemption is the feature directorial debut for Knight, who had previously scripted Eastern Promises and Dirty Pretty Things.

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    Jason Statham is arguably the leading action star of his generation, but with Redemption, the feature directorial debut from talented screenwriter Steven Knight, he attempts to expand his range for the first time since The Bank Job. While it's not going to lead to any Oscar or BAFTA recognition, it does give viewers the chance to see the charismatic hero kiss a nun. Statham plays a British Special Forces veteran named Smith who has fallen on very hard times. He's an alcoholic homeless man huddling inside a box on a dingy London alley with a fellow homeless woman when a couple of criminals start harassing the junkies and the destitute. He reverts to his training, subdues the baddies, and makes a run for it, ending up in the home of a wealthy creative type who happens to be in New York for the next eight months. Smith movies in, cleans himself up, and gets a job as a toughman for a local Asian gangster. Haunted by horrific acts he committed while serving in Afghanistan, he spends much of the money he makes now to help fund a local soup kitchen run by Sister Cristina (Agata Buzek). When the woman he was with at the beginning of the movie turns up dead, Smith decides to hunt down the man responsible. Meanwhile, Cristina questions her personal faith, confronts her haunted past, and makes Smith contemplate his own violent nature. While we are used to seeing Statham as a rock hard, remorselessly efficient criminal, we've rarely seen him play characters that have the inclination or capacity to talk about how they feel. At one point, Smith confesses to Cristina that he drinks to slow down the killing machine they made. It's a make-or-break moment for the movie, and while he's not going to be mistaken for Brando or De Niro, Statham can deliver a line like that without triggering a giggle response in viewers or sounding like he's asking them to pity his character. Turns out that in dramatic scenes as well as action ones, he's a no-frills-attached, get-the-job-done kind of performer. Steven Knight has carved out a career crafting urban thrillers that offer subtle but pointed commentary about the hard realities of life for those scraping by in the big city. In his scripts for Dirty Pretty Things and Eastern Promises he gave talented directors the blueprint to keep the tension sustained while also keeping an eye on humanity's occasional inhumanity. All those elements are there in Redemption, and his straightforward directing style hits those notes efficiently. Redemption doesn't stick in the memory as well as his collaborations with better directors, but it does indicate he has a baseline skill as a director and could grow as a filmmaker to the point that he may not need the services of such internationally respected names like Stephen Frears and David Cronenberg to say what he wants to say.

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