Product Details
Shoot 'Em Up

Shoot 'Em Up
From New Line Home Video

List Price: $12.98
Price: $5.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

202 new or used available from $1.88

Average customer review:

Product Description

No Description Available.
Genre: Feature Film-Action/Adventure
Rating: UN
Release Date: 1-JAN-2008
Media Type: DVD


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3427 in DVD
  • Brand: Unknown
  • Released on: 2008-01-01
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Digital Sound, NTSC, Widescreen
  • Original language: English, Italian, Spanish
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 86 minutes

Features

  • A gritty, fast-paced action thriller, Shoot Em Up kicks into high gear with a memorable opening scene and never relents. Clive Owen stars as Mr. Smith, a mysterious loner who teams up with an unlikely ally (Monica Belluci) to protect a newborn baby from a determined criminal (Paul Giamatti) who hunts them throughout the bowels of the city.Running Time: 86 min. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: AC

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Every action movie has a moment so over the top you have to laugh; Shoot 'Em Up consists of nothing but these moments. A carrot-eating, lone wolf kind of guy named Smith (Clive Owen, Children of Men, Inside Man) steps in to protect a pregnant woman from a gunman--and finds himself, with the aid of a lactating prostitute (Monica Belluci, The Matrix Revisited), defending the newborn child from a sleazy contract killer Mr. Hertz (Paul Giamatti, American Splendor, Sideways) and his army of thugs. That's pretty much the plot, but story is beside the point. Writer/director Michael Davis (Monster Man) has a keen sense of what matters in an action movie. The rapid-fire editing is scrupulously coherent; you always grasp what happened in every shoot-out, even if it flagrantly violates the laws of physics or basic plausibility. Explaining how Smith survives a four-story fall--even if that explanation is beyond ridiculous--demonstrates both a sense of wit and a winking respect for the audience's imagination. As a result, Shoot 'Em Up is ten times more entertaining than the likes of Transformers or Rush Hour 3, movies so self-satisfied with special effects or movie stars that they forgot to be fun. (Shoot 'Em Up's only weakness is a sliver of misogyny, the one action movie cliche that it's not clever enough to transcend.) --Bret Fetzer