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The Dead Zone - Collector's Edition [Blu-ray] [DVD]

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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Tuesday, Jul 15
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Format: Blu-ray July 27, 2021


Genre: Horror


Format: DVD, NTSC


Contributor: Christopher Walken, Tom Skerritt, David Cronenberg, Debra Hill, Brooke Adams, Martin Sheen, Jeffrey Boam, Herbert Lom, Anthony Zerbe, Stephen King See more


Language: English


Runtime: 1 hour and 43 minutes


MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ R (Restricted)


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.51 x 6.77 x 0.63 inches; 2.68 ounces


Director ‏ : ‎ David Cronenberg


Media Format ‏ : ‎ DVD, NTSC


Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 43 minutes


Release date ‏ : ‎ July 27, 2021


Actors ‏ : ‎ Christopher Walken, Brooke Adams, Tom Skerritt, Herbert Lom, Anthony Zerbe


Producers ‏ : ‎ Debra Hill


Studio ‏ : ‎ SHOUT! FACTORY


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Review of The Dead Zone 1983
I had seen the movie when I was a teenager in the 80's with my family, but for some reason, had a strong craving to see the movie again, present day. I guess I had an interest in seeing this again because I have a renewed interest in psychic phenomena. I have had some experiences lately, that have been brought to me by someone close to me, and so I believe that these sorts of things can indeed happen. But getting back to the movie. This movie is absolutely amazing, and is a great performance by Christopher Walken, Brooke Adams (who plays Walken's love interest in the film), and Tom Skeritt, just to name a few of the major characters in the film. In case some of you aren't familiar with the story, Christopher Walken's character -- Johnny Smith, is a schoolteacher in a tiny town in New England. One rainy Friday night, he is driving home from his friend, and fellow schoolteacher's house (Sarah Bracknell, played by Brooke Adams) He is involved in a terrible car accident with an 18-wheeler truck, and the accident puts him into a coma for "5 long years", to use his mother's words. When he awakens from the coma, he is shortly startled to find out that he has the amazing ability to know what is going on in a person's life just by having physical contact with the person (holding their hand, hugging them, etc.) He can tell the past, present, and the future of the person -- just by doing that. The first time he does this, he reaches up and touches the hand of a nurse tending to him in the hospital (the one he was in during, and after awakening from the coma). He has a very like-like vision of her daughter being in trouble because there is a fire in the nurse's home. Johnny tells the nurse to run and take care of her daughter, that there is still time to save her from the fire. The nurse runs home and finds that Johnny's vision was spot-on accurate. His psychic abilities continue and intensify as the story develops. While he was in the coma, a serial killer in Johnny's town is murdering numerous women, in very grisly sorts of ways. The town sheriff (played by Tom Skeritt) is frustrated and baffled by these occurrences, especially since he doesn't have a clue as to who is doing the murders. The sheriff eventually pays a visit to Johnny's home, to try to use his psychic ability to help him solve the murders. Johnny is very reluctant to help him at first, thinking his power is more of a "curse" than a blessing, but eventually decides to help him. Johnny is eventually taken to one of the scenes where a woman was recently murdered, and he holds a piece of her clothing or something and can visualize exactly what happened during the crime, as well as who murdered her! Turns out it is the sheriff's deputy that had been committing the murders, all along! Anyway, I guess I won't continue to spoil it for those that maybe haven't seen it. But I thought it was an excellent, excellent film, and I would pay again to see it, I liked it so much. My favorite line in the whole movie (which I still remember clearly from nearly 30 years ago) is when Christopher Walken says, "The ICE is gonna BREAK!" You'll have to see the film if you haven't already, to know what I'm talking about there! Extremely powerful scene! Great, great film, and had I given any thought to rating it when I was a kid, I would have given it 5 stars, and I will do the same for today, as well. As far as the technical aspects go of viewing it through Amazon's "instant video" program, it was just fine. Picture came through my computer clearly, and the volume was just fine. You can also rewind to a certain scene, or fast forward to it, as well. That takes a little bit of time. But it still works. Thanks for reading, folks. I have bought quite a few things from Amazon.com over the years, but I don't always get around to reviewing them. Watch the film. I'm sure you'll like it. :-) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2012 by Steve from South Florida

  • Terrific Film. Watching it Again Felt like Opening a Time Capsule from 1983.
I saw this movie on cable or VHS back when it first came out, in the early eighties. I read the book that is its source material back then, too. It's all been stuck echoing in my memory ever since then: Images from the film, the sense of eerie dread that pervades the story. Scenes from the book actually seem to have inhabited my memory as being from the movie, interestingly enough, because I had "memories" of Christopher Walken doing a few things that he apparently didn't do in the film.. Either there's a slightly longer cut of the film that I saw back then, or else my memories of the book have fused with, confused my memory.. He was so perfectly cast here, his character in the book may have taken on his features in my imagination and memory. As I say, this movie feels a bit a time capsule to me. It's reminded me how the 70's and 80's we were scrappier, poorer, less materially refined. Everything from the interior furnishings of the houses, the cars, the rotary phones - all of it was more boxy angular and grimier, less smooth rounded and glossy. I've noticed this in other media from back then- e.g. watching talk shows from the 60's through the late 80's, Carson, Parr, Letterman, etc. - how their sets were rudimentary, the furniture was obviously mass produced - of basically the same sort of quality that normal people had at home who bought their furniture and clothes from a Sears catalogue.. Consumer products have gotten a lot more elegant since the late 80's - just look at car design. Something happened between 1985 and 1995; so many sharp angles, corners and boxes have been smoothed away.. The politician who is the villain in this story runs around wearing a hardhat at campaign rallies for a senate race. Another salient indicator of how much this country has changed: try and imagine a senatorial candidate doing that today. "The working man's candidate" - he'd have a national constituency of about 30. A few other reviewers here have said this political villian reminds them of Trump - well, all I can say to that is that politicians back before about 1984 (ahem) often thought it useful to create the fiction that they were of the working class (used to wear a hardhat, were born in a log cabin, all that) now they find it useful to bllsht us that they're billionaires. Again, we've come a long way.. baby. We used to have a system where the unions and blue collar vote used to really matter. Now only speculators and billionaires matter. There's a scene in the movie where this evil politician invades a newspaper editor's office at night, and threatens him with violence and scandal to make him withdraw a negative editorial. There's a picture of Ronald Reagan barely visible behind the desk on the editor's dimly lit office wall. I thought that was pretty deft and amusing. The evil politician is a "third party challenger," neither a Democrat nor a Republican.. Neither the movie nor Stephen King (who is, I think, a Democrat) want to alienate anyone by making their villain partisan in raw terms. Martin Sheen plays the politician. It's pretty amazing how much of a resemblance his son Charlie actually has to him in this picture, when Martin was younger. Qualis pater, talis filius. It's striking. Anywhich, what, however the case, this is a terrific film and story. It's spooky, sad and heroic; a tale of frustrated love and triumph over evil. It's a classic, and you should watch it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2019 by The Lone Striker

  • A shout-out for Shout Factory's The Dead Zone 4K UHD
We've recently had some exceptional 4K releases come along that have gotten the attention of some of the more prominent physical home media pundits. Cases in point, The Fugitive and James Cameron's Titanic, which are indeed amazing for their sharp detail, natural color timing, contrast and audio quality. Well, Shout Factory has risen to the occasion with this 4K upgrade of one of the best motion picture renditions of one of Stephen King's best novels to boot. Highly recommend. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2023 by W. Craig

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