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Jacob's Ladder [Blu-ray + Digital HD]

  • Based on 1,842 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Sunday, May 25
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Format: Blu-ray August 25, 2015


Description

Jacob Singer is tormented by strange, hallucinatory images invading his life. He does not know what has happened to him and struggles to solve the mystery. Film is a visionary thriller laced with suspense, terror and passion.

Genre: Drama


Format: Blu-ray, Widescreen, Digital_copy


Contributor: Elizabeth Pena, Jason Alexander, Adrian Lyne, Danny Aiello, Tim Robbins, Alan Marshall, Carolco


Language: English


Runtime: 1 hour and 29 minutes


Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ Unknown


MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ R (Restricted)


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 0.01 ounces


Audio Description: ‏ ‎ English


Item model number ‏ : ‎ 47386


Director ‏ : ‎ Adrian Lyne


Media Format ‏ : ‎ Blu-ray, Widescreen, Digital_copy


Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 29 minutes


Release date ‏ : ‎ August 25, 2015


Actors ‏ : ‎ Tim Robbins, Elizabeth Pena, Danny Aiello, Jason Alexander


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Most reviews are of Jacob's Ladder are wrong.
No other film has been so misunderstood. Jacob's Ladder is a film about the pain and fear felt by a man coming to terms with his imminent death. In the movie Jacob is stabbed with a bayonette and lie dying in the jungle. That's real. While laying there he struggled to live and that struggle manifested itself in the chaos that went through his mind. The real success of the film is that we the audience participate in his death and the terror of his dying through the flashback sequences with Jezebel, the chiropractor, Sarah and Gabriel. When Jacob fought his death he was always in distress and always with Jezebel. She was a literary construct to torment him. When he would accept his death he was always happy, with the ones he loved such as the chiropractor, his wife Sarah, and of course his son Gabriel. The movie goes back and forth with his struggle to live or die. What makes it so successful is how the film imparts the terror and pain of a dying man onto the viewer. That's what did it for me. No other film in cinematic history has accomplished this task. Although Jacob's death took place in Vietnam the movie is NOT about Vietnam, hallucinogenic drugs, demons or psychotic ex-girlfriends. The character in the movie that explains the movie's plot - and literary mechanisms - is Danny Aiello's character the chiropractor. The chiropractor explains so eloquently that "if you fight your death you'll see demons tearing away at your life. But if you accept your death, the devils are really angels setting you free." Dante. The flashbacks in the movie are deliberately misleading deliberately terrifying. Jacob kept flashing back and forth between Jezebel and Sarah. Live or die. Jezebel was the dark manifestation of his fear tearing him away from the life he loved with Sarah. The metaphor of "The Ladder" is Jacob's ascension to heaven where he is met at the gate by Gabriel his deceased son. It's one of the most beautifully written screenplays of all time but for obvious reasons difficult to follow because of the chaos created by the flashbacks. What you have to understand is that in all likely hood Elizabeth Penas character never existed because he never made it back to New York. He had no life after Vietnam because he died in Vietnam. Jacob died on the table in Vietnam with a smile on his face after finally accepting and making peace with his life. What do the doctors say in the very last scene of the movie? "Put up a hell of a fight. The guy looks kinda peaceful." I hope this helps your understanding of the film. I cherish it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2006 by The Atheist Monk

  • They don't make movies like this anymore...
A true, layered horror art-film. If you have ever played Silent Hill before, you can see how much inspiration it drew from this movie. I highly recommend this film to anyone from any age group.
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2024 by charles betancourt

  • More Than A Supernatural Thriller
This is one of my favorite movies, but after watching it many times, I'm still having trouble describing this complex supernatural thriller. Jacob Singer is a man leading a tripple life-- perhaps more. When we first see him he's in Vietnam and in bad shape; then we see him living in New York with his girlfriend Jezzie; but after a horrific and feverous night, we see him living with his wife and kids. Which is his real life? That we are never quite sure of as he moves from one life to another. Nor are we completely sure about the people in Jake's lives as some of them seem to be demons, out to destroy him. He sees them on the subway car, he sees one in the VA's office, and he sees them as they try to run over him with a car, and eventually Jake is so confused he doubts the existence of his girl Jezzie. He gets even more confused when he and his ex- Army buddies try to hire a lawyer to find out what has been going on with the death of one of his friends, only for the lawyer to reject him on the grounds that SInger was never in the Army. Was Jake in the Army? Was he and his friends part of secret experiment conducted by the Army? Which life is real-- the one with Jezzie or the one with his ex-wife Sarah? Jake's struggle to determine what's real and what's not leads him to a startling and unexpected conclusion that I won't spoil for folks who haven't seen this intriguing film. Usually we get alternate endings on DVD's like this, but in this case we get only a few cut scenes along with the director's commentary that really doesn't explain much if anything at all, except for one scene that suggests Jake's problems with the demons were chemically induced, but in the end, that doesn't really matter a whole lot. Although, if Adrian Lyne had kept those scenes the movie would have gone in a different direction, and a less powerful one as well. For fans of the supernatural or fans of Tim Robbins, this is a really great movie that you just have to see! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 8, 2006 by Orion E. Hubbard

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