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    Zero Dark Thirty [Blu-ray/DVD]

    3.5 4

    Director: Kathryn Bigelow, Mark Boal, Megan Ellison
    Cast: Jessica Chastain

    Jessica Chastain
    , Jason Clarke
    Jason Clarke
    , Joel Edgerton
    Joel Edgerton
    , Kyle Chandler
    Kyle Chandler


    Blu-ray

    (Wide Screen / Bonus DVD / 2 PACK)

    $9.99
    $9.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 03/19/2013
    • UPC: 0043396423770
    • Original Release: 2012
    • Rating: R
    • Source: Sony Pictures
    • Region Code: A
    • Presentation: [Wide Screen]
    • Sound: [Dolby Digital Stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround]
    • Language: English
    • Runtime: 9420
    • Sales rank: 12,902

    Special Features

    No Small Feat-Making Zero Dark Thirty; The Compound-Tour The Film's Rebuilt Compound; Geared Up-Watch The Cast Train With Authentic SEAL Gear; Targeting Jessica Chastain-A Look At The Role Of Maya

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    Jessica Chastain Maya
    Jason Clarke Dan
    Joel Edgerton Patrick,Actor
    Kyle Chandler Joseph Bradley
    Mark Strong Actor,Actor
    Chris Pratt Actor
    James Gandolfini Actor
    Fares Fares Actor
    Frank Grillo Actor
    Jennifer Ehle Actor
    Reda Kateb Actor
    J.J. Kandell Actor
    Wahab Sheikh Actor
    Alexander Karim Actor
    Nabil Elouahabi Actor
    Aymen Hamdouchi Actor
    Simon Abkarian Actor
    Ali Marhyar Actor
    Parker Sawyers Actor
    Akin Gazi Actor
    Derek Siow Actor
    Mohammad K. Actor
    Henry Garrett Actor
    Homayoun Ershadi Actor
    Darshan Aulakh Actor
    Navdeep Singh Actor,Actor,Actor
    Yoav Levi Actor
    Musa Sattari Actor
    David Menkin Actor
    Scott Adkins Actor
    Eyad Zoubi Actor
    Julian Lewis Jones Actor
    Christian Contreras Actor
    Lauren Shaw Actor
    Zachary Becker Actor
    John Antonini Actor
    Jessica Collins Actor
    Fredric Lehne Actor
    Ashraf Telfah Actor
    Jonathan Olley Actor
    Ben Lambert Actor
    Tushaar Mehra Actor
    Daniel Lapaine Actor
    Udayan Baijal Actor
    Mark Duplass Actor
    Stephen Dillane Actor
    John Schwab Actor
    Martin Delaney Actor
    Nabil Koni Actor
    Antony Edridge Actor
    John Barrowman Actor
    Jeff Mash Actor
    Taylor Kinney Actor
    Callan Mulvey Actor
    Siaosi Fonua Actor
    Phil Somerville Actor
    Mike Colter Actor
    Brett Praed Actor
    Aron Eastwood Actor
    Heemi Browstow Actor
    Chris Scarf Actor
    Barrie Rice Actor
    Spencer Coursen Actor
    Chris Perry Actor
    Alex Corbet Burcher Actor
    Robert Eastman Actor
    Tim Martin Actor
    Mitchell Hall Actor
    P.T. Actor
    Alan Pietruszewski Actor
    Kevin LaRosa Actor
    Michael David Selig Actor
    Benjamin John Parrillo Actor
    Christopher Stanley Actor
    Hadeel Shqair Actor
    Noureddine Hajjoujou Actor
    Nour Alkawaja Actor
    Malika Sayed Actor
    Rida Siham Actor
    Moula Mounia Actor
    Zalfa Seurat Actor
    Tarik Haddouch Actor
    Ricky Sekhon Actor
    Mark Valley Actor
    Harold Perrineau Jack
    Edgar Ram?rez Larry
    Rob Young DEVGRU Operator
    Edgar Ramirez Actor
    Alexandre Desplat Composer,Conductor

    Technical Credits
    Mark Boal Screenwriter,Producer
    Megan Ellison Producer
    Kathryn Bigelow Producer
    Greg Shapiro Executive Producer,Producer
    Ted Schipper Executive Producer
    Colin Wilson Executive Producer,Producer
    Paul N.J. Ottosson Sound/Sound Designer
    Mark Bennett Casting
    Richard Hicks Casting
    John Mahaffie Second Unit Director
    Stuart Thorp Stunts
    Richard Stutsman Special Effects Supervisor
    Jamie Hardt Sound Effects
    Lee Gilmore Sound Effects
    Matthew Budman Producer
    Jonathan Leven Producer
    Tabrez Noorani Producer
    Pravesh Sahni Producer
    Gary Dodkin Sound Effects
    Francisco Fernandez Sound Effects
    Joseph Beddelem Stunts
    Geo Corvera Stunts
    Othman Ilyassa Stunts
    Todor Lazarov Stunts
    Lauren Shaw Stunts
    Emil Tonev Stunts
    Mustapha Touki Stunts
    Matt Berberi Stunts
    David Anthony Buglione Stunts
    Aron Eastwood Stunts
    Dennis Fitzgerald Stunts
    Anthony Genova Stunts
    Panuvat Anthony Nanakornpanom Stunts
    Omid Zader Stunts

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Zero Dark Thirty
    1. Chapter 1 [9:50]
    2. Chapter 2 [5:52]
    3. Chapter 3 [7:22]
    4. Chapter 4 [8:17]
    5. Chapter 5 [10:11]
    6. Chapter 6 [8:52]
    7. Chapter 7 [13:40]
    8. Chapter 8 [9:26]
    9. Chapter 9 [6:50]
    10. Chapter 10 [13:37]
    11. Chapter 11 [2:20]
    12. Chapter 12 [10:19]
    13. Chapter 13 [6:30]
    14. Chapter 14 [9:19]
    15. Chapter 15 [11:30]
    16. Chapter 16 [8:25]
    17. Chapter 17 [14:23]

    Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal, the Academy Award-winning duo behind The Hurt Locker, reteam for this drama detailing the hunt for Osama bin Laden, which stars Oscar nominee Jessica Chastain as the intelligence expert who dedicated a decade of her life to tracking down the world's most wanted terrorist. In the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the CIA began interrogating suspected Al Qaeda agents across the globe in a bid to locate the elusive bin Laden. Upon arriving at a CIA black site and witnessing the brutal interrogation tactics firsthand, driven operative Maya (Chastain) aids her unpredictable colleague Dan (Jason Clarke) in gathering the intelligence that will help bring their target to justice. Over the course of the next decade, numerous false leads and dead ends make the search seem more futile than ever. Meanwhile, numerous suicide bombings across the Middle East and Europe hint that Al Qaeda won't go down without a fight. Then, just when it seems as if the trail of clues has finally dried up, an old piece of evidence leads Maya to a suspect who may work directly for the man charged with planning the worst act of terrorism ever committed on American soil. Joel Edgerton, Edgar Ramirez, Mark Strong, Chris Pratt, and James Gandolfini co-star.

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    Nearly a decade after the Twin Towers were destroyed by a terrorist plot, Kathryn Bigelow's Zero Dark Thirty attempts to directly address how the country as a whole responded to that horrific event. That kind of ambition should be applauded, even if the movie as a whole never quite clears the very high bar it sets for itself. At the center of this procedural about the hunt for Osama bin Laden is Maya (Jessica Chastain), an intelligence expert whom another character describes early on as "a killer." The picture opens with her at a secret enhanced-interrogation center, where she watches as Dan (Jason Clarke), a master at exerting physical and psychological pressure on captives, applies his skills to a detainee who might have the name of a courier with access to bin Laden. The graphic depictions of accepted U.S. interrogation techniques -- what many would define as torture -- during this extended sequence force audiences to consider what was arguably the ugliest part of American policy during the presidency of George W. Bush. Make no mistake, the movie certainly takes a stand on the repercussions of this issue through the character of Dan, who is the only person we meet with any second thoughts about what he's doing. His one-sided conversation with some test monkeys is one of the most humane things in the film and offers a prime example of Zero Dark Thirty at its best. However, that turns out to be just a small fragment of what the picture aims to do. Instead, the main focus is on Maya as she slowly gathers clues and butts heads with higher-ups who, for political or personal reasons, don't want to let this driven woman accomplish her goal. When she finally feels she has a solid lead on bin Laden's actual whereabouts, she convinces the military to strike with an elite force. That raid makes up the last 30 minutes of the movie and it's a technical marvel, as are the other infrequent action sequences sprinkled throughout the long, talk-filled passages. They confirm that Bigelow remains one of the finest action directors working today, but the finale also clearly reveals the film's biggest flaw, namely screenwriter Mark Boal's inability to make any of the characters three-dimensional. We see appealing actors such as Joel Edgerton and Chris Pratt playing members of the squadron who get the job done, but the script doesn't give any of them a real identity, so we aren't invested in their survival. The lack of a personal connection to the troops is missed all the more because we already know the mission will be a success. That propensity for flat, two-dimensional characters -- even when they're played by inherently likable actors -- keeps us at a distance. The most obvious example of this is right at the center of it all. Maya doesn't exist outside of her unyielding goal of finding and stopping bin Laden. She has no personal life, and until the final shot of the movie, we're unsure if she has much of an inner life, either. That decision keeps the film from exploring the larger question it raises: Maya -- a fictional composite of different analysts and field agents -- is supposed to represent the country as a whole, but she's too narrow a character for that purpose. She's meant to be a blank slate on whom we can project our own fears, frustrations, and need for vengeance, but she's so focused on her one and only goal that it's difficult to connect with her, no matter how forceful Chastain is in the part. Bigelow's previous movie The Hurt Locker was revered because it was an expert example of building character through action. We understood the limits and talents of the main character because of what he did. Zero Dark Thirty is more about talk and making explicit points about how changes in the U.S. government and tactics had more to do with the killing of bin Laden than techniques used earlier in the War on Terror. We know Jeremy Renner's character inside and out at the end of The Hurt Locker, but in this movie we aren't left with a better understanding of Maya as a person or the country as a whole.

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