Spirit

Gabriel Macht  Actor Samuel L. Jackson  Actor Sarah Paulson  Actor Eva Mendes  Actor Dan Lauria  Actor

PG13

MPAA Rating: PG13
Contains:Violence,Brief Nudity,Sexual Situations

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Spirit

Theatrical Release Date: 2008 12 25 (USA)

UPC: 031398108450

Studio: Lionsgate

MPAA Rating: PG13   Contains:[Violence, Brief Nudity, Sexual Situations]

Summary: A resurrected cop does battle with a villain whose quest for immortality threatens an entire metropolis in Sin City creator Frank Miller's adaptation of Will Eisner's acclaimed graphic novel. When a rookie cop is brutally killed and mysteriously brought back to life, he assumes the guise of The Spirit (Gabriel Macht) -- a masked crime fighter who prowls the shadows of Central City on a supernatural mission to keep the urban landscape safe. Upon discovering that his arch nemesis, The Octopus (Samuel L. Jackson), is determined to live forever even if it means wiping out the entire population of Central City, The Spirit must race to stop the diabolical villain from achieving his cold-blooded plan. But even with his unique powers, the brave masked crusader will face a series of deadly challenges as a bevy of treacherous beauties including deceptively sweet girl next door Ellen Dolan (Sarah Paulson), spitfire secretary Silken Floss (Scarlett Johansson), wraithlike siren Lorelei (Jaime King), seductive policewoman Morgenstern (Stana Katic), and French black widow Plaster of Paris (Paz Vega) set out to seduce or consume him at every turn; even The Spirit's one true love, a volatile jewel thief named Sand Saref (Eva Mendes), could ultimately destroy our hero before he accomplishes his mission of saving Central City. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Category: Crime

Features: "Green World" featurette
"Miller on Miller" featurette
Alternate storyboard ending with voiceover by Gabriel Macht and Samuel L. Jackson
"History Repeats" featurette
Audio commentary with director Frank Miller and producer Deborah Del Prete
Theatrical trailer
Includes MoLog - the first BD Live application that allows users to insert and animate shapes, text, audio, and other graphics right into the film to create :blogs" to share with other MoLog users
Lionsgate Live - introducing a unique BD LIve menu system that lets you access exclusive content, receive special offers, ringtones and more

Spirit

Format: Blu-ray

Release Date: 04/14/2009

Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Cinemascope

Audio: DHMA null, DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1

Runtime: 108 Minutes

Sides: 1

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) English,French

Subtitles: English,Spanish

Region: Blu-ray region A (North America, Central America, South America, Japan, Taiwan, North Korea, South Korea, Hong Kong, Southeast Asia)

Jeremy Wheeler

Heaps of empty style and awkward exchanges are unleashed in The Spirit, a colossal misstep from comic visionary Frank Miller, who imposes his stark Sin City aesthetic upon his mentor Will Eisner's long-unappreciated creation. Painful in its presentation and content, this Lionsgate release crashes and falls at nearly every step of its torturous 100-minute time frame. Crummy when it should be comedic, and laborious when it tries to be literate, this is one of those book-to-screen adaptations that comic readers dread -- the moment that gives detractors a time to say, "See? We told you that the two mediums couldn't coexist." The fact that Miller is at the helm is even more of a reason for a pile-on, considering the creative downslope of his comic career just as Hollywood hands him total control. Unfortunately, it's quite evident that without his Sin City cohort, Robert Rodriguez, he's still far too green to realize what does and does not work on the screen. Despite his unequivocal role in bringing adult sensibilities to the printed medium (and thus helping their transition to future blockbuster films), Miller stumbles through his solo cinematic outing, leading many to question just exactly what he was thinking. To understand the film's many missteps, one needs to understand its roots: comedy was always an element of Eisner's work, as was brooding storytelling -- yet here Miller amps both up to parodying degrees. In the first ten minutes, viewers are assaulted with a Looney Tunes-ish scene of broad comedic violence, where The Octopus (played to the hilt by Samuel L. Jackson) and the film's hero, The Spirit (newcomer Gabriel Macht), smash toilets over each other's heads in a drawn-out scene of ludicrous mayhem that does nothing but bore. Sure, there might be wisecracks, but the humor never connects. The same could be said of the visuals, which bounce back and forth from harsh contrasts (? la Sin City) to amateur-hour green-screen silliness. So, while Miller might have seemed as if he was honoring his master's work, what he didn't grasp was how it would all come off on the canvas he chose. For more proof, look no further than the pulpy dialogue, which, on the page, might not take up much room in panels, yet is drawn out to feverish lengths once it's said aloud. As for the actors themselves, it's quite obvious that there wasn't much help being offered to them from the man behind the camera. Jackson continues to mine his loud-mouthed persona, bringing little of interest to the table, even when he's decked out in Nazi regalia and melting a purring kitten (yes, you read it right). Macht, on the other hand, proves that there might be something to this fresh face after all, lending The Spirit a gruff enough exterior that one wishes he were given a better stage to mine his heroic chops. Of the scores of females on display, they're all relegated to being eye candy for Miller to ogle over. And if anyone thought that Sky Captain suffered from stilted dialogue on a green-screen stage, they haven't lived until they've witnessed Scarlett Johansson's dry, droning delivery as she deals with Jackson's disposable stooges, all embarrassingly played with feeble-minded glee by Louis Lombardi. Through it all, Miller's confidence in his vision is clear -- even if the end result is anything but. He's stringent to his own storyboards (which play out behind the end credits), and in dire love with the material (even amounting to him adapting his own take on The Spirit's wardrobe), but Miller's headstrong attitude only takes his filmed work so far. It doesn't help that his later work seems to be making a mockery of much of what made him edgy in the past. Whether it's the hard-boiled dialogue, his love for Converse sneakers, or his obsession with SS imagery, this is an artist who looks to be mining the same territory again and again, simply with tongue planted even more firmly in cheek as time goes on. With The Spirit, Miller proves that without a stable of effective collaborators to help him along the way, his latter filmmaking career will be a bumpy one, to say the least. As it is, the movie will go down as a bloated mess in dire need of sharp editing and a co-director or producer who will stand up and guide the production to a better place. We see what happens when those roles are not filled -- the final product might arguably be pretty (thanks to veteran Bill Pope's cinematography), but it most certainly is not a fun time -- nor is it in any way a true embodiment of Eisner's groundbreaking work. Better luck next time, Frank. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide

Cast and Crew: Michael Burns  Executive Producer 
Deborah del Prete  Producer 
David Newman  Composer (Music Score) 
Michael Paseornek  Executive Producer 
Michael E. Uslan  Producer 
Benjamin Melniker  Executive Producer 
Frank Miller  Director 
Frank Miller  Screenwriter 
Gigi Pritzker  Producer 
Steven Maier  Executive Producer 
William Lischak  Executive Producer 
Gabriel Macht  Actor 
Samuel L. Jackson  Actor 
Sarah Paulson  Actor 
Eva Mendes  Actor 
Dan Lauria  Actor 
Paz Vega  Actor 
Jaime King  Actor 
Scarlett Johansson  Actor 
Louis Lombardi  Actor 
Stana Katic  Actor 
Johnny Simmons  Actor 

Country: USA

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