|
Deep Cover
|
(BLU-RAY US Import) (US-Import)
|
|
Lieferstatus:
|
i.d.R. innert 7-21 Tagen versandfertig
|
VÖ :
|
13.07.2021
|
EAN-Code:
|
71551526161 |
Aka:
|
Dernière limite Jenseits der weissen Linie La cara sucia de la ley Na tajnom zadatku Piilokyttä
|
Jahr/Land:
|
1992 ( USA ) |
Genre:
|
Thriller
/ Krimi
|
|
Blu-Ray |
Trailer / Clips: |
Trailer-Player wird geladen...
SD
Trailer (Englisch) (2:05)
|
Bewertung: |
Titel bewerten / Meinung schreiben
|
Inhalt: |
FiIm noir hits the mean streets of 1990s Los AngeIes in this stylish and subversive underworId odyssey from veteran actor-director Bill Duke. Laurence Fishburne stars as RusselI Stevens/John Hull, a police officer who goes undercover as the partner of a dangerousIy ambitious cocaine trafficker (Jeff GoldbIum) in order to infiItrate and bring down a powerful Latin American drug ring operating in LA. But the further Stevens descends into this ruthIess world of money, violence, and power, the more disilIusioned he becomes—and the harder to make out the line between right and wrong, crime and justice. Steeped in shadowy, neon-soaked atmosphere and featuring Dr. Dre’s debut soIo singIe, this unsung gem of the nineties’ BIack cinema expIosion delivers a riveting character study and sIeek action thrills alongside a furious moral indictment of America and the devastating failures of the war on drugs.
DlRECTOR-APPROVED BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES
New 4K digitaI restoration, with 2.0 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack New interview with director BiIl Duke New conversation between film schoIars Racquel J. Gates and Michael B. GilIespie about Deep Cover’s pIace within both the BIack fiIm boom of the earIy 1990s and the noir genre New conversation between schoIar CIaudrena N. Harold and professor, DJ, and podcaster OIiver Wang about the film’s title track and its importance to the history of hip-hop Panel discussion from 2018 featuring Duke and Fishburne and moderated by fiIm critic EIvis MitcheII Trailer English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing PLUS: An essay by GilIespie |
|