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Sicario [4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital HD] [4K UHD]
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Genre | Action |
Format | 4K |
Contributor | Basil Iwanyk, Dylan Kenin, Thad Luckinbill, Emily Blunt, Julio Cedillo, Maximiliano Hernández, Molly Smith, Daniel Kaluuya, Jeffrey Donovan, Trent Luckinbill, Alex Knight, Josh Brolin, Denis Villeneuve, Victor Garber, Lionsgate, Lora Martinez-Cunningham, Benicio Del Toro, Jon Bernthal, Edward McDonnell, Raoul Trujillo See more |
Language | English |
Runtime | 1 hour and 51 minutes |
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From the manufacturer
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Our 4K releases | ||||
Format | 4K, NTSC, Widescreen | 4K, NTSC, Widescreen | 4K, NTSC, Widescreen | 4K |
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.72 ounces
- Audio Description: : English
- Item model number : 17754417
- Director : Denis Villeneuve
- Media Format : 4K
- Run time : 1 hour and 51 minutes
- Release date : March 1, 2016
- Actors : Emily Blunt, Benicio Del Toro, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Jon Bernthal
- Dubbed: : Spanish
- Producers : Edward McDonnell, Basil Iwanyk, Thad Luckinbill, Molly Smith, Trent Luckinbill
- Studio : Lionsgate
- ASIN : B01AI2HODA
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 2
- Best Sellers Rank: #380 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #58 in Drama Blu-ray Discs
- #72 in Action & Adventure Blu-ray Discs
- Customer Reviews:
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Sicario 4K UHD & Blu-ray (Quick Review)
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But a badly made movie can go very badly very quickly right from the beginning where people would shut it off or walk out of the theater. What really saved this was Emily Blunt and Benicio Del Toro and the interaction between them. These two are some of the best facial-expression artists in Hollywood today. And their characters are each being treated indifferently in their own special way. Yet they clash with one another, emotionally, and almost brutally without doing any real harm. And speaking of flimsy, it's Benicio Del Toro's character's strong presence that makes everyone else around him look weak or odd. That's because Benicio Del Toro plays The Ghost. A very dangerous man (protected by higher powers) is commonly referred to as a "ghost" in Spanish culture because they move with such ease at night, and when one attacks they leave everyone dead in their wake. Such as Geronimo, so named by the Mexicans in his day because he snuck in bandit camps and killed quietly. Knowing this about The Ghost he plays one can appreciate the interaction between him and Emily Blunt's character toward the end. As weak and flimsy as she is, she makes him feel like a man for once, and he hasn't felt that way in a very long time. With that being said, he also wants her out of his way.
Right from the start, Emily Blunt's character, Kate, realizes quickly she is being isolated from the op the moment she steps in the private jet and Josh Brolin's character, Matt, lies down: the so called D.O.D Adviser. Where she thought she was going to be apart of a very important mission she starts to second guess why she's there. Del Toro's character, Alejandro, scared her the moment he stepped into the plane. If that was an agent being pulled from the field, like her bosses had told her, he was one very scary dude. Unlike Matt, he didn't lie down to go to sleep, he sat up and alert. He was also better dressed than Matt, and when it comes to dress, women notices everything: this was no ordinary agent.
I have to give Emily Blunt a five star performance because everything you need to know about those two men came across her face, brilliantly.
But why were these two men treating her differently? She 's an F.B.I Agent, was it because she was a woman? Yet, being a woman, she is picking up on everything around her and she caught Alejandro in a moment of weakness when he woke suddenly from a nightmare and scared the bejesus out of her. If the plane wasn't in the air, she would have most likely jumped off: she was truly frighten. But she also had the womanly ability and charm to calm him as he suddenly woke and looked around, trying to figure out where he was at.
Everything you need to know about those three people and the mission was brilliantly played out on the jet and the facial-expressions of Del Toro's character, Alejandro, and Emily Blunt's character, Kate. And right away she knew everything around her was way over her head.
All that was reenforced at the briefing at A.I.C. She was surrounded by law enforcement yet none of the men wanted to know who she was or why she was there. In fact, when they broke from the meeting, the men damn near walked over her and she felt small, weak and useless. They also avoided Alejandro: instead of joking around with the likes of Matt, and walking over Kate, they walked clear around him. The only two who were left were her and him. But at least Alejandro didn't try to lie to her, and when she discovered he didn't come from the field but Colombia, she knew, as a F.B.I Agent, there were only two things that came out that country: drug lords and murderers.
Right away, Kate questioned who she thought was her boss, Matt, and asked if both of them were C.I.A. Her direct confrontation clearly caught Matt off guard. Matt did lie to her telling her both were D.O.D Advisers but she refuse to believe a very scary guy like Alejandro -- whom well-armed policemen walked clear around, was anything but a well-paid, well-dressed, murderer. That fear was reenforced at the bridge: she was so scared she jumped from one seat to the other in the van when Matt told the men to go get those guys in the cars and Alejandro shot with no hesitation and killed unmercifully. When they came back to the Army base, Kate had to catch her breathe, getting out of the van, and once again jumped all over Matt and called him a "spook" right to his face. But who in the hell is that? referring to Alejandro. Yet the beauty of the film, while Matt kept lying to her, Alejandro kept treating her with the up most respect and went out of his way to protect her, not once but twice, for what she did for him in the plane: calming him when he came out of his nightmare that one wonders: if she hadn't been there on the jet, when he was suddenly jerked from that really bad dream back to reality, would Alejandro have pulled out his gun and start shooting at phantoms all around him?
That respect Alejandro had for Kate kept building into the picture, and the relationship between the two kept moving into a love for one another starting in the bathroom scene: the two were having a conversation with each other like a husband and wife might have. And the director leaves that impression on us the two could easily fall in love but couldn't because who they are in relations to law and the ongoing drug war.
By the way, the second time he saved her was near the last scene.
After Kate went up "the wrong tunnel" and caught Alejandro kidnapping a Mexican cop, he shot her equipment which made her fall. Alejandro told her "to catch her breathe and get back up there." Which she did, almost like a dutiful wife. In fact, Kate was catching her breathe a lot in this movie because she was way over her head in something that she didn't quiet understand that it was scaring the hell out of her at every turn. Going by the book, like good agent, wasn't helping her in any way, shape or form. Alejandro told her early on to "keep an eye on the time" -- time, being, the one true factor in this film. Instead, she found herself stumbling out of the "house of horrors", coughing and gagging; took a crazy ride in and out of the belly of "the beast", bumped into a "spook", ghost, and cops on-the-take who clearly wanted to kill her. Not to mention her trusted partner took her to the "Wild Pony" where she suddenly found herself surrounded by cowboys that she didn't really know were there. Even her long-time partner was a cowboy. Time was the one thing she wasn't paying any attention to. Even Matt threaten her in a ditch, that resembled a grave, she was standing in, and told her it would be a mistake if she went public about their mission. And if wasn't for Alejandro she would probably already be dead in that grave-looking ditch.
But no one was touching Kate, not even the C.I.A. When Alejandro was through with his mission, he came back with the paper Matt needed to be signed that "everything went by the book" and warned her "not to stand on balconies" for a while. And although Alejandro pointed a gun at her to get her to sign that form, he had no intention of killing her. He so loved and respected her, he gently wiped the tears of fright from her face, and Kate, again, like a dutiful wife, reluctantly signed it.
Black eyed and used, she sat there in the dark for while.
With all that to consider in this film, what did you make of that last scene between them? Kate standing on the balcony and Alejandro below her looking up. Did that remind you of a classic story in some odd way? It certainly wasn't "by the book" of Shakespeare with her beaten, bruised, used, scared out of her wits, with a gun in her hand. To me, anyway, it was emphasizing this was also a classic lecture to those still hooked on drugs.
I know there's a lot of boos and thumps down on this movie, but the acting is so very good, you can't miss it. The movie also has a strong message and when there is a message buried in a film like this it generally takes a few more looks at it in order to uncover the truth and how it all fits together. You may not know what's really going on at first, but all you really have to do is watch Emily Blunt's reaction to everything.
This is probably hers and Del Toro's best work yet. I do hope they make a part two. Please. I love these actors.
*Some minor plot spoilers.*
I share in the complaints about the character played by Emily Blunt (who always acts well). The film poses the difficult issue of what does a country do in the face of appalling violence when the legal means simply do not work. She’s a plot device to put forth the *follow the law anyway* argument: but her actions are incoherent. So is there really no coherent way to make the point?
The movie starts off with a hostage rescue under her command, but it’s a false alarm: there are no hostages! And yet the entry is made by using a military-type vehicle to knock down a wall! And they all pile out with full military-type gear! And she machine guns down a man (trying to kill her)!
It turns out that this militaristic approach was fully justified, so why is she then so freaked out when a convoy transporting a major drug kingpin was attacked by 8 gang-bangers—some with automatic weapons—and those transporting the prisoner defended themselves? Self defense is not “illegal”, and had they not acted quickly many innocent civilians would have been killed by stray bullets. And why did she then protest that she was not a “soldier” when she acted exactly like one just a few days before?
If she is so “by the book” why did she regularly disobey orders? If she is so opposed to action in Mexico, why does she go into Mexico and point her gun at her own team member and give him orders? What was her authority to do so—going by her own theory?
Her character does illustrate one important point: if you don’t know a man well enough to know that he’s working for a cartel, and intends to kill you, don’t decide to have casual sex with him. Casual sex is irrational.
Top reviews from other countries
la calidad del video es exelente HDR el audio no se diga buena calidad.
Les envio fotos.
Reviewed in Mexico on July 14, 2018
la calidad del video es exelente HDR el audio no se diga buena calidad.
Les envio fotos.