| | | An Oliver Stone film Features: DVD, Sensormatic, Special Edition Jim Morrison (Val Kilmer), one of the most sensual and exciting figures in the history of rock and roll, explodes on the screen in "THE DOORS," the electrifying move about a time called the sixties and a legendary outlaw who rocked America's consciousness - forever. Meg Ryan, Kyle MacLachlan, Frank Whaley, Kevin Dillon, and Billy Idol also star.System Requirements:Starring: Val Kilmer, Meg Ryan, Kevin Dillon, Kyle MacLachlan, and Frank Whaley Directed By: Oliver Stone Running Time: 138 minutes, Color Presented in "Widescreen" formatFormat: DVD MOVIE "Spectacular filmmaking. Staggering performance by Val Kilmer." Joel Siegel, Good Morning America "One hell of a ride..." Los Angeles Times "The Doors opens the mind, then blows it away." Gannett Newspapers
 Editor's Note
 Covers the period from 1965-1971; Produced and released in 1991.Val Kilmer stars as Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone's electrifying profile of the Doors, which takes the group from its inception to its demise with the death of the "Lizard King" in a Paris hotel room in 1971. In the early days of the group's formation, Morrison is at his most benign; he's just a guy hanging out at the beach writing poetry. But soon the Doors' fame begins to spread--with Morrison as the focus of attention. Capable of an eerily correct vocal imitation of Morrison, Kilmer makes manifest the talent and charisma, as well as the confusion and despair, of the complex man who was the focal point of the group. As Morrisson's drug consumption and erratic behavior increase exponentially, the rest of the band--Ray Manzarek (Kyle McLachalan), John Densmore (Kevin Dillon), and Robby Krieger (Frank Whaley)--begins to grow tired of his late arrivals, the increasing number of cancellations, and the drunken recording sessions requiring infinite retakes. But no one can help Morrison as he spirals downward into an inferno of drugs, alcohol, public obscenity, and depression, bringing the music to an untimely close. Stone's intimate familiarity with SoCal in the 1960s provides the film with a high degree of surface verisimilitude, though the film is as much a tribute to the enduring power of the Doors' music as it is a cautionary tale about the perils of both celebrity and substance abuse.
| Features | Theatrical Trailer And Teaser |  | Cast And Crew Information |  | Production Notes |  | Commentary With Director Oliver Stone |  | Audio: English 5.1 Dolby Digital |  | 43 Minutes Of Additional Scenes |  | Behind-The-Scenes Footage |  | Interviews With Val KIlmer, Meg Ryan, Frank Whaley, Kevin Dillon, Kyle MacLachlan, Oliver Stone, Kathleen Quinlan, Robby Krieger, Patricia Kennealy-Morrison |  | Cinematographic Moments |  | Digitally Mastered |  | Scene Access |  | Interactive Menus |  | "The Road Of Excess" Documentary |  | Widescreen Version |  | Featurette |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Artisan |
 | Release Date: 5/1/2007 |
 | Running Time: 138 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 1991 |  | Catalog ID: 11581 |  | UPC: 00012236115816 |  | Number of Discs: 2 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English [CC], English |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | 2.35:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | MTV Award (1992) |  | Val Kilmer, Nominee, Best Male Performance |
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| | Professional Reviews | Rolling Stone "...THE DOORS is a thrilling spectacle - the KING KONG of rock movies..." 03/21/1991 p.83-4New York Times "...Clamorous, reverential, much-larger-than-life....Kilmer captures all of Morrisons's reckless, insinuating appeal..." 03/01/1991 p.C1 Los Angeles Times "...The whole movie is white hot, lapped in honeyed golds, evilly blue and black or drenched in those swoony, fiery reds. THE DOORS blasts your ears and scorches your eyes..." 03/01/1991 p.F1 Total Film "...Val Kilmer is an authentic lead and Meg Ryan supplies credible support as his tortured soulmate..." 05/01/2000 p.110 Chicago Sun-Times 7 of 10 The songs (Morrison) left behind, it is true, are wonderful. Many of them are on the soundtrack of The Doors, which combines Morrison's original vocals and new vocals by Val Kilmer so seamlessly that there is never, not even for a moment, the sensation that Kilmer is not singing everything we hear. That illusion is strengthened by Kilmer's appearance. He looks so uncannily like Jim Morrison that we feel this is not a case of casting, but of possession. - Roger Ebert
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