Salt

Angelina Jolie  Actor Liev Schreiber  Actor Chiwetel Ejiofor  Actor Daniel Olbrychski  Actor August Diehl  Actor

PG13

MPAA Rating: PG13
Contains:Violence

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Salt

Theatrical Release Date: 2009 (USA) / 2010 07 23 (USA) / 2010 (USA)

UPC: 043396350113

Studio: Sony Pictures

MPAA Rating: PG13   Contains:[Violence]

Summary: Director Phillip Noyce teams with screenwriters Kurt Wimmer (Equilibrium) and Brian Helgeland (Mystic River) to craft this thriller starring Angelina Jolie as dedicated CIA officer Evelyn Salt, who is accused by a defector of being a Russian spy. With each attempt Salt makes to prove her innocence, her mentor, Winter (Liev Schreiber), only grows more suspicious of her true motivations. The longer she eludes capture by ambitious CIA agent Peabody (Chiwetel Ejiofor), the higher the stakes get. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Category: Thriller

Awards: Best Sound Mixing – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Sound Mixing – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Sound Mixing – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Sound Mixing – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

Features: The ultimate female action hero
Spy disguise: the looks of evelyn salt
Radio interview with director Phillip Noyce
Filmmakers' commentary
Top secret blu-ray exclusives! -
Salt: declassified - an undercover look at the secrets of making Salt
The real agents
The modern master of the political thriller: Phillip Noyce
False identity: creating a new reality
Spy cam: picture-in-picture track
Movie iq

Salt

Format: Blu-ray

Release Date: 12/21/2010

Audio: DHMA null, DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, DD2 Dolby Digital Stereo

Runtime: 305 Minutes

Sides: 1

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) English,French,Spanish

Subtitles: English,French,Spanish

Jason Buchanan

There are great action movies (Die Hard, Hard-Boiled), and then there are highly entertaining action movies (Unleashed, anything directed by Rob Cohen) that keep adrenaline junkies entertained in the downtime before the next true classic arrives. A compact, streamlined espionage thriller from screenwriter Kurt Wimmer and director Phillip Noyce, Salt would never be mistaken for the former, though it snaps into the latter category with the snug click of a perfectly placed Lego. No one who sits through Salt is likely to die of boredom, though they might exit the theater a little sore due to laughing at one of the most ridiculously unconvincing movie disguises in recent memory. But plausibility isn't generally high on the list of crucial ingredients for cooking up an entertaining action flick, and thanks to a quickly paced script and some cleverly executed twists, Salt satisfies the craving for greasy fast-food cinema. Two years after being captured in North Korea and tortured as a suspected spy, top CIA agent Evelyn Salt (Angelina Jolie) is about to celebrate her second wedding anniversary to arachnologist Mike (August Diehl) when she is accused by a terminally ill Russian defective of being a sleeper agent for the Russian government. Desperate to clear her name and protect her husband, Salt takes flight, raising the suspicions of up-and-coming CIA agent Peabody (Chiwetel Ejiofor) even as her mentor, Winter (Liev Schreiber), insists that the accusation is unfounded. Now, in order for Salt to clear her name, she must outrun and outwit both the Secret Service and the CIA, all while uncovering information on a diabolical plot to breathe a big chill back into the Cold War with a high-profile assassination. The longer Salt eludes capture, the higher the stakes get. Shortly after co-writing the screenplay for The Thomas Crown Affair (alongside Leslie Dixon), Kurt Wimmer established himself as a rising force in the realm of over-the-top action cinema by jumping into the director's chair for Equilibrium and Ultraviolet, two sci-fi flicks that took ridiculous to delirious new heights. In 2003, Wimmer edged into espionage territory as screenwriter of the lukewarmly received CIA thriller The Recruit, and now he's teamed with director Noyce to deliver a high-stakes spy thriller that's short on originality, yet bristling with intensity. This time Wimmer seems to have modeled his script on a roller coaster, allowing the butterflies to flutter in our stomachs as we slowly creep up that first giant hill, then maintaining an impressive momentum until the ride stops and we exit our seats. And while there's nothing particularly inventive about a story driven by lingering Cold War tensions, sleeper agents, and assassination plots, Wimmer does manage to sneak in some savory particulars while delving into the details of a top-secret Russian program to topple the United States as a superpower, and to throw a few expertly placed third-act sucker punches. If only Noyce's talents as an action director were better matched to Wimmer's particular abilities as a storyteller, perhaps Salt would have been a bit more than a passable diversion. A talented filmmaker with an eye for detail, Noyce handles the dialogue and setup quite well -- eliciting a palpable sense of vertigo during a tense ledge escape early on, and employing sharp diversionary tactics during a suspenseful funeral scene that kicks the plot into high gear -- but the deeper he wades into the action, the more apparent it becomes that shoot-outs and car chases aren't exactly his forte. Like most action directors these days, Noyce refuses to give viewers a real sense of space by sticking primarily to close-up shots when things start to get hairy, a factor that prevents us from truly connecting with the kinetic events unfolding onscreen. But Noyce is quite good with actors, eliciting performances from Jolie, Schreiber, Ejiofor, and Daniel Olbrychski that go a long way in counter-balancing the hastily helmed action sequences. Odds are, Salt won't be the launching point for a hugely successful blockbuster action series ? la The Bourne Identity -- as the filmmakers so clearly intended with the shamelessly open ending -- but until the next time we truly taste greatness, it's digestible enough to trick our stomachs into thinking we've feasted on filet mignon and fine wine, when in reality we've just wolfed down some chicken-fried steak and a chocolate shake. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Cast and Crew: James Newton Howard  Composer (Music Score) 
Ric Kidney  Executive Producer 
Phillip Noyce  Director 
Kurt Wimmer  Screenwriter 
Sunil Perkash  Producer 
Lorenzo Di Bonaventura  Producer 
Ryan Kavanaugh  Executive Producer 
Mark Vahradian  Executive Producer 
Angelina Jolie  Actor 
Liev Schreiber  Actor 
Chiwetel Ejiofor  Actor 
Daniel Olbrychski  Actor 
August Diehl  Actor 
Daniel Pearce  Actor 
Andre Braugher  Actor 
Olek Krupa  Actor 
Cassidy Hinkle  Actor 
Corey Stoll  Actor 
Vladislav Koulikov  Actor 
Olya Zueva  Actor 
Kevin O'Donnell  Actor 
Gaius Charles  Actor 
Zach Shaffer  Actor 
Albert Jones  Actor 
Zoe Lister-Jones  Actor 
Paul Juhn  Actor 
Tika Sumpter  Actor 
David Bishins  Actor 
Yara Shahidi  Actor 
Gary Wilmes  Actor 
Jordan Lage  Actor 
Jeremy Davidson  Actor 
Michelle Ray Smith  Actor 
Marion McCorry  Actor 
Vladimir Tevlovski  Actor 
Steve Cirbus  Actor 
Roslyn Ruff  Actor 
Jeb Brown  Actor 
Lara Apponyi  Actor 
Vitaliy Baganov  Actor 
Peter Weireter  Actor 
Ryan Shams  Actor 
Colleen Werthmann  Actor 
Liam Joynt  Actor 
Victoria Cartagena  Actor 
Armand Schultz  Actor 
Ivo Velon  Actor 
Kamar De Los Reyes  Actor 
Victor Slezak  Actor 
Dionne Audain  Actor 
Jalil Lynch  Actor 
Mike Colter  Actor 
Beverly Kirk  Actor 
Barbara Harrison  Actor 
Lynn C. Sanders  Actor 
Theresa Caggiano  Actor 
Nick Poltoranin  Actor 
Vladimir Troitsky  Actor 
Hristo Hristov  Actor 
James Nuciforo  Actor 
Jose L. Rodriguez  Actor 
Avis Boone  Actor 
Scotty Dillin  Actor 
Alex Jones  Actor 
Angelo Lopez  Actor 
Stephen Breach  Actor 
Mike Conneen  Actor 
Gregory R. Kelly  Actor 
Elizabeth Kaledin  Actor 
Angel David  Actor 
Frank Harts  Actor 

Country: USA