| | | "When Lives Are on the Line, Sacrifice Everything. " Features: DVD, Widescreen, Aspect Ratio 1.85:1, Dolby Digital (5.1), French, Spanish, Dubbed & Subtitled An aging USCG rescue swimmer''s team is killed in a horrific rescue mission. Immediately prior to this terrible event, his wife also announced that she cannot take anymore. His first love is always the rescue mission. This leaves him an obviously emotional wreck. His commander gives him a choice - quit or take a position as an instructor at the USCG training facility in Louisiana. Reluctantly he takes the position. Moving into the school, he immediately increases the 18-week curriculum that routinely fails half of the people that attend. Here he meets a young man with unlimited potential, but with some secret that seems to hold him back as a team player. Delving into his past, links are found that make him a psychic twin to the older man. Thrown into the midst of the story is a romance with a local girl. Rescue missions punctuate the beginning and end of the story with the training sessions the center of the film. Running time: 139 minutes. "...an action movie displaying brains and heart..." Chris Kaltenbach, Baltimore Sun "...genuinely well-made...moving." M.E. Russell, Portland Oregonian "...Kutcher is probably the most appealing he has been in a big-screen role." William Arnold, Seattle Post-Intelligencer
 Editor's Note
 IN THEATERS SEPTEMBER 29, 2006Kevin Costner is Ben Randall, a maverick teacher who trains rescue swimmers for the coast guard. As THE GUARDIAN unravels, Randall shows the talented Jake Fischer (Ashton Kutcher) how to become a member of his team, only for danger to loom large when the men set off on a trip to Alaska.
| Features | Audio Commentary With Director Andrew Davis & Writer Ron L. Brinkerhoff |  | Audio: English, French, Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound |  | Deleted Scenes |  | Dubbed: French, Spanish |  | Featurettes: Making Waves - The Making Of The Guardian & Unsung Heroes - A Tribute To The Real-Life Coast Guard Rescue Swimmers |  | Interactive Menus |  | Never-Before-Seen Alternate Ending With On-Camera Introduction By Director Andrew Davis |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: French, Spanish |
| Entertainment Reviews
 | The Guardian - DVD By: Sean O'Connell - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 1/13/2007 8:29 PM | |
Much like Top Gun and, to a lesser extent, An Officer and a Gentleman, Andrew Davis' boys-in-basic-training melodrama The Guardian primarily functions as a recruitment tool for its chosen military branch. The Coast Guard would do well to have volunteers posted outside theaters this weekend. Put down the popcorn, pass around the sign-up sheet, and point the way to the pool – we're ready to enlist....read the full review |
 | The Guardian - DVD By: Edward Perkis - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 1/23/2007 9:14 PM | | Costner strikes the right note of gruff and compassion in the Coast Guard's "A" school, and Kutcher is better than expected when required to drop the smart-ass act and come out with his own deep driving secret. Their relationship comes off as more natural than some in this type of movie, but it's at the service of a story that can almost be laid out by the viewer five minutes after the DVD is put in the player. ...read the full review |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Buena Vista |
 | Release Date: 12/26/2008 |
 | Running Time: 139 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2006 |  | Catalog ID: 5064803 |  | UPC: 00786936705119 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English, French Dubbed, Spanish Dubbed |  | Available Subtitles: French, Spanish |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Widescreen 1.85:1 |
| Cast & Crew | Ashton Kutcher |  | Kevin Costner |  | Melissa Sagemiller |  | Sela Ward |  | Andrew Davis - Director |  | Andrew Max Cahn - Art Director |  | Armyan Bernstein - Executive Producer |  | Austin Gorg - Art Director |  | Dennis Virkler - Editor |  | Lowell D. Blank - Producer |  | Ron L. Brinkerhoff - Writer |  | Stephen St. John - Cinematographer |  | Thomas J. Nordberg - Editor |  | Trevor Rabin - Original Music By |
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| | Professional Reviews | New York Times "[A]n action movie, a basic training movie, a swaggering sea adventure, a home front melodrama and an inspiriting tough-love heroic fable." 09/29/2006 p.E6Total Film 3 stars out of 5 -- "[Kutcher] is running at full power throughout....There's real chemistry between Kutcher and Kev..." 11/01/2006 p.46 Sight and Sound "[Costner] brings a seasoned, low-key authority to the part....Kutcher's performance manages to keep pace with Fischer's growing maturity." 12/01/2006 p.56 Ultimate DVD 4 stars out of 5 -- "[A] very watchable drama....The personal conflicts are complemented by some terrific action sequences..." 07/01/2007 p.18 ReelViews 6 of 10 There's nothing in The Guardian that audiences haven't previously been exposed to ad nauseam. Take a little of An Officer and a Gentleman and a little Top Gun and throw in some waves and underwater sequences, and you have The Guardian - only with less charismatic actors, more tame sex scenes, and a lot less energy. The director is Andrew Davis, who made The Fugitive more than a decade ago. It hardly seems possible that this lazy, sluggish, overlong production could be the work of the same man...There's not much to say about a movie that fails to take the time to develop real characters or provide a few interesting plot points, yet still manages to run for well over two hours. The Guardian expects us to fill in the blanks using our experiences with previous productions of this sort. - James Berardinelli Variety 7 of 10 Cliches and conventions from several generations of basic-training scenarios are proficiently recycled in "The Guardian," a shrewdly updated version of classic (and not-so-classic) military-themed pics about grizzled, blunt-spoken vets who transform cocksure hotheads into coolly efficient professionals. With Kevin Costner well cast as a demanding mentor haunted by past failures, and Ashton Kutcher surprisingly effective as a brash recruit dealing with his own demons, the overlong but involving drama has obvious cross-generational appeal...Pic clocks in at an indulgent 139 minutes, though it never feels draggy. The training-school story is bracketed with genuinely thrilling rescue sequences convincingly filmed in a 750,000-gallon water tank constructed for the production in Shreveport, La. - Joe Leydon
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