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Falling Down (Blu-ray Book Packaging) by Joel Schumacher
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DVD Cover InformationActor: Barbara Hershey, Frederic Forrest, Michael Douglas, Rachel Ticotin, Robert Duvall Director: Joel Schumacher Brand: DOUGLAS,MICHAEL Producer: Arnold Kopelson Producer: Herschel Weingrod Producer: Timothy Harris Producer: Arnon Milchan Writer: Ebbe Roe Smith Blu-ray: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); Danish (Subtitled); Dutch (Subtitled); English (Original Language); French (Original Language); Spanish (Original Language); Italian (Original Language); Portuguese (Original Language) Format: Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen Picture Format: 2.40:1 Running Time: 113 minutes Blu-ray Release Date: 2009-05-26 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Studio: Warner Home Video Product features: - Freeways are clogged. Terror stalks our cities. At shops and restaurants, the customer is seldom right. Pressures of big-city life can anger anyone. But Bill Foster is more than angry. Hes out to get even.Foster abandons his gridlocked car license plate D-FENS on the hottest day of the year and walks straight into an urban nightmare both absurdly funny and shatteringly violent. Academy Award winne
Movie Reviews of Falling Down (Blu-ray Book Packaging)Movie Review: Falling Down Blu Ray Summary: 5 Stars
Falling Down (Blu-ray Book) [Blu-ray]
Falling Down looks better than ever on Blu Ray.
Summary of Falling Down (Blu-ray Book Packaging)Freeways are clogged. Terror stalks our cities. At shops and restaurants, the customer is seldom right. Pressures of big-city life can anger anyone. But Bill Foster is more than angry. Hes out to get even. Foster abandons his gridlocked car license plate D-FENS on the hottest day of the year and walks straight into an urban nightmare both absurdly funny and shatteringly violent. Academy Award winner Michael Douglas is Foster, an ordinary guy at war with the frustrations of daily life. Fellow Oscar winner Robert Duvall is the savvy cop obsessed with stopping Fosters citywide rampage. This spellbinding thriller is their story, asking ?Are we falling apart?? This film, about a downsized engineer (Michael Douglas) who goes ballistic, triggered a media avalanche of stories about middle-class white rage when it was released in 1993. In fact, it's nothing more than a manipulative, violent melodrama about one geek's meltdown. Douglas, complete with pocket protector, nerd glasses, crewcut, and short-sleeved white shirt, gets stuck in traffic one day near downtown L.A. and proceeds to just walk away from his car--and then lose it emotionally. Everyone he encounters rubs him the wrong way--and a fine lot of stereotypes they are, from threatening ghetto punks to rude convenience store owners to a creepy white supremacist--and he reacts violently in every case. As he walks across L.A. (now there's a concept), cutting a bloody swath, he's being tracked by a cop on the verge of retirement (Robert Duvall). He also spends time on the phone with his frightened ex-wife (Barbara Hershey). Though Douglas and Duvall give stellar performances, they can't disguise the fact that, as usual, this is another film from director Joel Schumacher that is about surface and sensation, rather than actual substance. --Marshall Fine
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