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action  hit man  lance henriksen  martial arts  steven seagal  

Pistol Whipped

Pistol Whipped

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Director: Roel Reine
Actors: Steven Seagal, Paul Calderon, Renee Goldsberry, Lance Henriksen, Bernie Mcinerney
Studio: Sony Pictures
Category: DVD

List Price: $19.94
Buy Used: $3.99
You Save: $15.95 (80%)



New (49) Used (36) from $3.99

Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 21 reviews
Sales Rank: 14538

Format: Ac-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), Korean (Subtitled), Thai (Subtitled), French (Dubbed), Portuguese (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Region: 99
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 96 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.7

MPN: COLD22833D
UPC: 043396228337
EAN: 0043396228337

Release Date: March 4, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 09/23/2008 Run time: 96 minutes Rating: R

Amazon.com
Steven Seagal muscles his way through Pistol Whipped, another brutal action flick. This time Seagal is a boozing, compulsive gambler forced by a mysterious stranger to assassinate mob guys and corrupt cops. Naturally, this makes it hard for him to be a doting father to his adoring young daughter. Pistol Whipped has some twists to its plot, but this is all moot--you either like Steven Seagal or you don't. If you do, this is one of the better of his straight-to-video oeuvre. Seagal's attempt to be tender is laughable, but the story isn't completely predictable, the supporting cast isn't bad (Lance Henriksen, Aliens, brings some elegant menace to the proceedings), and though the martial-arts scenes are brief, they're not as choppily edited as in some of his other movies. If you don't like Steven Seagal, you'll find his bloated, wooden presence as repulsive and hateful as it was in every other movie he's ever made. He has two expressions--squinty and scowly--and they're increasingly difficult to tell apart. His one cinematic quality is a lumbering menace, and for his fans, that seems to be enough. For them, Pistol Whipped has plenty of lumbering and scowling on display. --Bret Fetzer


Customer Reviews:   Read 16 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars I'd love a sequel   October 25, 2008
Music Lover (European)
Steven is great, Lance is superb, Roel is awesome...

Thanks Steven.Please, make a sequel together...The three!!

Great fights, what a way to anticipate to the leg kicking!!

You can learn a lot about martial work with this dvd!!



4 out of 5 stars Pistol whipped   October 21, 2008
J. L. van Wijk (New Zealand)
My Husband and I are Steven Seagul Fans and have enjoyed all his movies and Pistal Whipped is full of action and thats what we like plenty of action


2 out of 5 stars (2.5 STARS) Improvement, But Not Much   September 28, 2008
Tsuyoshi
"Pistol Whipped" is one of the better films of Steven Seagal in recent years. It is far better than "Flight of Fury" and "Attack Force," two dismally terrible flicks that can kill anyone's career instantly. Somehow Seagal has survived them and come back with "Urban Justice," which is certainly an improvement over the previous ones. And now "Pistol Whipped" arrives, which is not a bad film, thanks largely to the capable supports and nice stunts, but still is not as good as his earlier films made back in the 90s.

The biggest problem is Steven Seagal himself, or the character he plays. "Pistol Whipped" is about Matt, a compulsory gambler who, despite his down-and-out life, still loves his daughter. Seagal plays this anti-heroic protagonist, who is also a disgraced elite cop and now perpetually drunk, but he simply does not look like the man he is supposed to play.

But when action scenes start, things get better. There is a nice car chase and a shoot-out in the cemetery. However, you have to wait for these actions very long. As to Seagal himself, martial arts action scenes are only slightly better than choppily-edited ones seen in his previous flicks, but are still disappointingly brief and few in number.

Probably the film's greatest merit is its supporting actors: Lance Henriksen and Paul Calderon. Lance Henriksen appears as a mysterious man who hires Seagal's character as assassin. His charismatic presence is intact, but he spends most of his screen time (which is too short) doing nothing particularly impressive. Paul Calderon, who almost became Jules in "Pulp Fiction" (but the role eventually went to Samuel L. Jackson), fares better as an enigmatic henchman "Blue." You can see this underrated actor is in fact as talented as Samuel L. Jackson. Perhaps the film could have been better with them as the leads with Seagal as support.



1 out of 5 stars For the love of God someone stop Stephen Segal   September 6, 2008
Mr. Fantastic (Greensboro, NC)
Alright, first of all He always wears a jacket. Is it because he is 50 lbs overweight? Seriously the whole movie, people wearing shorts and tee shirts and mister Wayne Newton, with fake, slicked back hair and crazy fake spray on dark A tan, is walking around wearing a jacket the whole damn movie.

OK, enough of the petty stuff (but seriously more will come later), this movie has absolutely no plot. He can shoot the tip off of a match, but when it comes to a target the size of what should be an out of work actor he misses constantly, and in a very boring, but consistently boring way. You know the scene in the Matrix 2 where Keanu beats a bunch of agents with a parking meter for 45 min.? The way it made you want to go to the Warner Brother Studio with a parking meter of your own an 45 min to spare? THE WHOLE MOVIE WAS LIKE THAT. It just kept going, and going.

Every time an expensive car is shown in the movie get ready for the director's attempt to get his foot in the door of the car commercial industry. It was to the point that it COMPLETELY detracted from what should, but probably couldn't ever be an actual movie. The director knew that at best he could shoot a car commercial, which is probably how he ended up with Segal, at a Hyundai dealership, hatching up this whole movie as a genius scheme to get a sweet Santa Fe for free. So, so very insane, and transparent. Tisk, tisk Segal.

Last and least was the conversation between the girl at the bar and Segal. I don't know how else to put it, but the manner of speech changed drastically when he was around this African-American woman. If my mind was not entirely consumed with other obvious and constant flaws in the movie, it might have the capacity to be offended by this. On a completely different note, what the hell is the deal with his contact with Blue? Is he supposed to be Jamaican? He sounds undeniably Jamaican in exactly two scenes, but in all the rest of the scenes, just sounds like a regular bad actor that is not unsuccessfully attempting a Jamaican accent.

For the love of God, don't watch this movie. If someone recommends it, punch them in the face or at the least the face of their groin, then just empty a large bag of skittles over the victim on the floor (the guy that just got groined), trust me it really, REALLY confuses people.



3 out of 5 stars Decent Seagal Movie: Add Good Cast, Mortality, and Stir   August 7, 2008
Mike Schorn (APO, AE United States)
Once in a rare while, there comes along a Steven Seagal film about which I'll be really torn. Whereas most of his DTV releases can be classified as either good ("Urban Justice") or bad ("Attack Force"), a few really make me scratch my head as to whether the film's plusses outweigh its faults. "Pistol Whipped" clearly falls into this category because it is a movie that resembles neither Seagal's worst work nor his best.

In the film, Matt Conner (Seagal) is a disgraced ex-detective, having all but forsaken his career and family for the vices of gambling and alcohol. After losing a costly poker game, Matt is approached by the agent of a mysterious "Old Man" (Lance Henriksen, "Aliens" ) who promises to wipe out his towering debts in exchange for assassinating the city's most influential gangsters. Matt's second thoughts regarding his employment are realized when he finds out that he is to kill his daughter's stepfather (Mark Elliot Wilson), who has been a force in his life ever since aiding him during his expulsion from the police department...

The plot eventually gets a bit too confusing for your run-of-the-mill action film, but not in such a manner that a vigilant viewer wouldn't be able to follow it. Even if you are lost, all of the murders and double-crosses come to a head at the end, so there won't be too much head-scratching going on by the time the credits roll. While previous Seagalian ventures like "The Foreigner" ended up being confusing in the process of trying to appear smart, there doesn't really exist a moment in "PW" during which it seems the storyline is consciously outshining the action. Alas, one might be quick to think so on account of there being relatively little action in the movie: two gunfights, a couple of hand-to-hand encounters, and a car chase seem rather meager when you consider a 96-minute production. Luckily, most of what you see is pretty decent: Seagal finally gives his stunt doubles a day off to perform his own aikido, and the car chase is thoroughly decent for a DTV attempt (the gunfights, however, are old-hat, with Seagal being able to dodge bullets at will ).

Thankfully, there's a strong supporting cast to back up the theatrically clumsy Seagal (who actually does a marginally better job than usual): Paul Calderon as a two-faced assassin, Renee Goldsberry ("One Life to Live") as Conner's love interest, and Mark Elliot Wilson as the dirty cop are all stellar co-stars, and even the lower performers like Lydia Jordan as Matt's daughter do their jobs well.
Oh, and the music was cool. No, it wasn't extraordinary, but this is officially the first film of Seagal's in which I noticed the score - going to show that even the smallest of details can make a difference.
The film deviates surprisingly from the standard focus of Seagal's other movies: while most of those were focused on our hero's quest for vengeance, "PW" takes considerable time to portray Matt Conner as more than a killer. Throughout the movie, we never forget that Conner is vulnerable through his love for his family. Though this isn't as effectively incorporated as I would've wished, it opens subliminal character opportunities that the likes of Casey "Invincible" Ryback sorely lacked.

In all, "Pistol Whipped" is a bit too different from my favorite Seagal films to give a higher rating, but make no mistake: I'd watch this a dozen times before I tortured myself with "Out for a Kill" again. Only those fans of Steven who are wary of him taking his talents in a slightly different direction should consider this a rental. For other devotees, it's worth owning, and maybe even worth playing for your buddies on a slow night.


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