| | | A Jerry Bruckheimer Production. Features: DVD Fasten your seatbelts for the extended ride of your life in this high-performance, fuel-injected Gone in 60 Seconds Directors Cut from producer Jerry Bruckheimer (National Treasure, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, Pearl Harbor). Never-before-seen footage adds fuel to this already high-octane action hit, starring Nicolas Cage, Robert Duvall, and sexy Angelina Jolie. A legendary car booster (Cage) thought he'd left the fast lane behind him until he's forced out of retirement to save his kid brother from the wrath of an evil mobster. It's nothing less than a full-throttle race to pull off the ultimate car heist: 50 exotic beauties in 24 hours - and the cops are already on to them! What is UMDTM? UMD, Universal Media Disc, is a brand-new and groundbreaking optical storage medium, designed for the high speed and efficient delivery of digital entertainment content that can store up to 1.8 GB of digital data on a 60mm disc -- or an entire feature film on a single UMD video. All UMD DVDs are produced in Widescreen and encoded using advanced AVC compression. UMD for PSP will play on the new PlayStation Portable handheld entertainment system.
Specifications
Diameter: 60 mmMaximum Capacity: 1.8GB (Single-sided, dual layer)Laser wavelength: 660nm (Red laser) "A wild ride!" David Sheehan, CBS-TV "...a high-speed, slicker-than-slick car-chase movie with unexpected deposits of character and comedy." Michael Wilmington, Chicago Tribune "...puts pedal to the metal in a product that will delight car junkies..." Peter Travers, Rolling Stone "Comfortably cheesy -- a real beer-and-pizza movie." Rob Gonsalves, eFilmCritic.com "...mindless hot-rodding fun, especially for those with a weakness for vintage cars hurtling down city streets..." The New York Times
 Editor's Note
 Memphis Raines (Nicholas Cage) is a former car thief who is forced to come out of retirement when his younger brother, Kip (Giovanni Ribisi), is unable to deliver 50 expensive cars to dangerous smuggler Raymond Calitri (Christopher Eccleston). With his brother's life on the line, Memphis must enlist his old car-stealing partners for help in order to pull off the ultimate crime. His team includes his mentor, Otto (Robert Duvall), and an old flame (Angelina Jolie), plus a crew of other colorful characters. Once he gets them all together, Memphis has to do the impossible: organize the theft of 50 cars from all over Los Angeles in a single night, hampered by rivals, security systems, and the best efforts of the LAPD detective (Delroy Lindo) who is out to get him. GONE IN 60 SECONDS is a fun, action-packed movie featuring producer Jerry Bruckheimer's trademarks: a simple, heartfelt story, comedy, spectacular action, an excellent cast of stars and character actors, and an amazing car chase through the crowded streets of Los Angeles. This film is based on the cult classic 1974 movie of the same name, and it's a must-see for lovers of classic cars or action fans of any stripe. Dominic Sena, the director of KALIFORNIA, directed this fast-moving crime-adventure extravaganza.
 Plot Summary
 This explosive action-thriller from director Dominic Sena (KALIFORNIA) and writer Scott Rosenberg (CON AIR) features enough car chases for 10 movies. Nicolas Cage plays a reformed car thief who must steal 50 cars virtually overnight in order to save his brother's (Giovanni Ribisi) life. He seeks out Robert Duvall and Angelina Jolie, among others, to do the impossible. Fasten your seat belts for this pulse-pounding thrill ride, compliments of producer Jerry Bruckheimer.
| Features | DVD Picture Quality |  | Full Length Movie |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Buena Vista |
 | Release Date: 9/1/2006 |
 | Running Time: 127 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2000 |  | Catalog ID: 4163403 |  | UPC: 00786936299342 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Anamorphic Widescreen 2.35:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | MTV Award (2001) |  | Gone in 60 Seconds, Nominee, Best Action Sequence |
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| | Professional Reviews | New York Times "...Quite an accomplishment...[the movie] is mindless hot-rodding fun, especially for those with a weakness for vintage cars hurtling down city streets..." 06/12/2000 p.E1USA Today "...It's a pretty good ride even if it blatantly steals some of its best stunts from AMERICAN GRAFITTI and GREASE..." 06/09/2000 p.8E Rolling Stone "...[Sena] puts pedal to the metal in a product that will delight car junkies..." 07/06/2000 p.146 ReelViews 6 of 10 With Mission: Impossible II, director John Woo showed how the combination of tight editing and filmmaking flamboyance can transform a seemingly ordinary action film into something genuinely exhilarating. Gone In 60 Seconds illustrates the opposite: that bland direction and lifeless action sequences can turn a supposedly exciting experience into a humdrum affair. Instead of offering a heady adrenaline-and-testosterone cocktail, this motion picture, which is plagued by a lack of innovation and a needlessly protracted running length, may cause some viewers to nod off during the proceedings...Gone In 60 Seconds delivers what it advertises - lots of cars (they easily upstage the actors), a souped-up music score, slick production values, and a fair number of generic action sequences. Everything is overdone to the point of being ludicrous; cars in Bruckheimer films don't just catch fire - they explode spectacularly, typically taking a few adjacent vehicles along with them. And car crashes are always loud and violent - but everyone in Gone In 60 Seconds wears their seat belts, because they walk away from the accidents. For action to quicken the pulse, see Mission: Impossible II. For action to dull the senses, Gone In 60 Seconds will do the job. - James Berardinelli Reel.com 6 of 10 The Academy Awards should start handing out statuettes for Best Trailer: Even more than the stars or director, a wham-bang preview is what really puts asses in seats on opening weekend. Hands-down, this year's Best Trailer winner would be the preview for Gone in 60 Seconds. A roaring montage of wild chases and stolen cars set to a stopwatch's frantic ticks, it gives the illusion that the film is a breakneck-paced thriller packed with elaborate boosts of expensive automobiles...Sure, there are some cool crashes and a wild section in which a compressed gas tank bounces around like a 300-pound pinball, but that's drab when compared to the first Gone's 93-car pileup denouement. In fact, much of the film is below even Bruckheimer's usual popcorn-munching standards. The pacing seems off, and there's none of the laugh-out-loud moments from Con Air ("Put the bunny back in the box."), or the nail-biting suspense of Enemy of the State. Besides a Raising Arizona-esque foot chase and a hilarious trick played with a tractor-trailer tow truck, viewers spend most of the time watching the cast ham it up, Armageddon-style, as when the whole car theft ring listens to War's "Low Rider" before going out on the job. Ultimately, Gone in 60 Seconds is an occasionally fun ride, but a totally unremarkable one... - Tor Thorsen
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