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Spring Breakers (Blu-ray + UltraViolet Digital Copy)

  • Based on 6,267 reviews
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Availability: Only 3 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Saturday, Jun 28
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Format: Multi-Format July 9, 2013


Description

Four college girls who land in jail after robbing a restaurant in order to fund their spring break vacation find themselves bailed out by a drug and arms dealer who wants them to do some dirty work. Word on Spring Breakers has been loud enough for everyone to know that this is not a typical teen romp about college kids blowing off steam and getting their party on along the golden shores of Florida's Gulf Coast. It is that for sure, but writer-director Harmony Korine's vision of the masses of toned hardbodies' drink- and drug-fueled days and day-glo nights goes far deeper than playful exploitation. His intention is to peel away the trappings of a genre to uncover realms much more disturbing. Though wildly uneven, Spring Breakers is always entertaining, from the early gaudy scenes of girls and guys gone wild, to the unsettling apparitions of a hallucinatory thug life that come later. The camera gawks at all of this with slightly detached dread, whether it's brightly lit bikinis bouncing on the beach in slow motion or the automatic weapons, heavy-duty drugs, and unsavory characters who inhabit the place when all the spring breakers are gone. Much has been made of the fact that Spring Breakers is a breakout from good-girl status for stars Selena Gomez (as Faith) and Vanessa Hudgens (as Candy). Along with Brit (Ashley Benson) and Cotty (Rachel Korine, the director's wife), this quartet is itching to play bad as they first get the money to travel to Florida by pulling a heist, then letting loose once they get there with the thousands of other mostly undressed youths (we almost never see the four leads in anything other than op-art bikinis). Being a little too bad, they end up in a jail cell, but they find themselves bailed out by a loony local named Alien. By all movie logic, this should go down as one of James Franco's defining performances. He is truly sensational. The movie soars when he enters the story as a cornrowed, be-grilled, heavily tattooed gangsta whose ear-to-ear smile and poetic rap patter enrapture the girls into the kind of danger they've only been playing at so far. Alien proves a little too creepy for one, who soon escapes home; another heads back north after an incident of gunplay brings the reality too close. But Candy and Brit stick around as Alien's soulmates, all sharing his guns, his bed, his money, and his inflated sense of self as one. A nominal plot pits Alien against a rival drug kingpin, and the movie devolves into farce in the final reel, but not before Korine has a chance to elevate the hypnotic imagery and obscenely elegiac dialogue into something much higher than the sum of its parts. For some, Spring Breakers may seem a transgressive nightmare of debauchery in its depiction of a social reality that Hollywood would dare not touch. But it's also a fever dream of color, humor, horror, wit, and craziness that has something to say. If for no other reason, see Spring Breakers simply for the image of James Franco losing himself with a glee even one such as the great and powerful Oz could never imagine. --Ted Fry

Genre: Action


Format: AC-3, Multiple Formats, Ultraviolet, Ultraviolet, Blu-ray, Closed-captioned, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC, Widescreen, Subtitled, Digital_copy See more


Contributor: Gucci Mane, Harmony Korine, David Zander, Vanessa Hudgens, Jordan Gertner, Ashley Benson, Ashley Lendzion, Rachel Korine, Sidney Sewell, Chris Hanley, Thurman Sewell, Heather Morris, Selena Gomez, James Franco, Charles-Marie Anthonioz See more


Language: English


Runtime: 1 hour and 34 minutes


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ R (Restricted)


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


Audio Description: ‏ ‎ English


Item model number ‏ : ‎ 26920374


Director ‏ : ‎ Harmony Korine


Media Format ‏ : ‎ AC-3, Multiple Formats, Ultraviolet, Ultraviolet, Blu-ray, Closed-captioned, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC, Widescreen, Subtitled, Digital_copy


Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 34 minutes


Release date ‏ : ‎ July 9, 2013


Actors ‏ : ‎ James Franco, Selena Gomez, Vanessa Hudgens, Ashley Benson, Rachel Korine


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Jun 28

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • I always wanted to be bad.
I wouldn't recommend reading this unless you've seen the film. The bright sun glistens off the bright blue water as the warm sand squishes between your toes. Laughter and joyful screams fill the air. The beer funnel is full again and you're up next. "Woooo!" echoes throughout the beach. Smiles surround you and everyone is inviting. This is Spring break. This is the dream. Though just as all dreams do it is sure to come to an abrupt end. Bright lights and neon swim wear can only last so long before the harsh world comes bounding upon you. How far would you go to make it last? What would you be willing to do in order to have spring break forever? These are just a few of the questions Harmony Korine posits in his newest effort Spring Breakers. A study on the youth culture today and how amoral and corrupt just having fun can become. Korine's nonlinear editing is a thing of genius here and really drives the film on. The constant foreshadowing and hints of the future assure that the tension never lets up and the view is never able to be at ease. Something isn't right here. Even through all the partying and seeming happiness something darker lies just beneath the surface. It will not be all laughter and smiles. Something will go very wrong. This feeling is met with truth as the film unfolds. Korine uses erratic dubstep music and quick cuts to illustrate the ever decomposing attention span of today's youth, then slowly eases the film into a more lingering and abstract statement on the moral decay of society at large. Selena Gomez and Rachel Korine do well with what they have to work with. Vanessa Hudgens, Ashley Benson and James Franco however knock their parts out of the park. In particular Hudgens and Franco. Hudgens' Candy is so disconnected from reality that when a friend who she's known since kindergarten is fearful for their lives and wants to go back home her first instinct is to roll her eyes. Her constant finger gun shooting is very telling. She wants to "have fun" and do whatever she wants no matter the cost. Life to her is a video game. A movie. Drugs, alcohol, mindless robbing, unlimited money and no consequences. Sound familiar? Almost like a description for the newest Grand Theft Auto video game. This is her perception. This is how she makes the world around her. This is her reality. A girl making out with another girl and dancing raunchy is considered edgy and when she sees this happening at a party her reaction is to gyrate around and scream in joy. Something that many girls would do as well, but this is only a small glimpse into her psyche. It's not the act that excites her it is the fact that it is edgy and considered by some to be wrong. Money excites her because of the power it brings with it. She, several times, becomes aroused in the presence of money. Of all the girls she is the one who seems to be the first and most accepting of Alien and his lifestyle. After Cotty has been shot and tells Brit and Candy that spring break is over Candy again seems to not care. Just as Faith wanting to go home this only interrupts Candy's fun. She just wants this annoyance to be over. Get back to the fun stuff. Get back to being bad. "I always wanted to be bad." A statement made by Franco's Alien that completely defines his character. Guns, drugs, money and power are his American Dream. Alien's idea of having fun is robbing spring breakers and blowing tons of money at strip clubs. He is gangster rap fully realized and defined. As he tells the girls he is a hustler and a rapper. It is quite important that he lists them in that order. It's as if being a rapper comes with the territory of being a hustler and plays second fiddle to it. The idea that all gangsters and hustlers are also rappers means he has to be one as well. Music is not his first love nor why he does this. He just wants to be bad and rappers are "bad" so he must do it. Scarface is the ultimate bad guy so it plays on repeat in his house. He surrounds himself with what he sees as bad. The necessities of being a bad guy. Just as when he is explaining his back story he says it's the same old sob story. It doesn't matter. All that matters is being the baddest guy he can be. There doesn't have to be a reason why other than he simply wants to be. This is his ultimate downfall. Spring Breakers is worth seeing for Franco's performance alone. Hudgens performance, Harmony Korine's brilliant direction and hyper sensual style are just the icing on the cake. After seeing this for the second time it only got better. I expect the third time will only reveal more about this masterwork. 10/10. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2013 by Nic

  • Entertaining
The movie itself was amazing but being able to purchase it of Amazon was even better
Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2023 by Dayan Wolf Morin

  • A Stand For The One-Star!
Note: I originally posted this as a comment on another review that had boiled all the one-star reviews down to men in their early twenties who were either looking for a good time and didn't get it, or didn't like the social commentary it presented. I am 23, and I hated this movie. So far, you have got me. I did not watch this movie for a good time but rather because so many people said it was so bad, that one day at my friend's house I had to watch it when we saw it on Netflix. "It can't actually be the worst movie ever!" I said to him, but he assured me that it was. I had been under the impression that this movie was intended as a film for a 'good time,' as you put it, and I still thought that after viewing it, until reading your review just moments ago. I do believe you are correct on Korine and his intended message, but the film was just unpleasant. Many viewers may have seen what it was supposed to be and just didn't care, as with its cover and choice of actresses they did not go into it for moral complexities but just to see beautiful girls showing off their bodies. They did not get quite what they wanted. Personally, I could not have cared what this movie was about or what content was in it because the incessant repetition of lines and scenes (not to mention bad ones) and the scatterbrained timeline would ruin anything for me. For instance, Predator is one of my favorite movies ever. I love the over the top attitude it takes to so many scenes, the violent themes, and the classic Last-Man-Standing plot. While these are very different films, these elements are all shared with Spring Breakers. However, if you viewed all the scenes in a different order while listening to some one-liner rumbled by the heavily accented Arnold over and over and every ten seconds you got to watch five more seconds from the scene in which Arnold covers himself in mud, the movie would only exist to be laughed at. No one could enjoy it as a serious action movie and it would forever be given one-star ratings by people who did not enjoy watching it, regardless of how good it could have been. Most one-star reviewers apparently didn't feel a one-star movie was worth their time to write about and so you have short uninformative reviews that might not reflect their complex reactions. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2015 by The Wulfe The Wulfe

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