FRI FRAKT ÖVER 1200 KR, VÄLJ BLAND 30000 BD/4K

Surf II (BLU-RAY)

Surf II (BLU-RAY)

449 SEK
2 st BLU-RAY Region 0 USA (fungerar i alla blu-ray spelare) Regissör: Randall Badat Skådespelare: Eric Stoltz, Eddie Deezen Bild: Widescreen, Språk: Engelska, Text: Engelska Längd: 100 minuter, År: 1983, Bolag: Vinegar Syndrome
Läs mer...

Alternativ

Varianter som matchar dina val:

Pris
Ej tillgänglig
Värdet har inte rätt antal decimaler. Det angivna värdet är för litet. Det angivna värdet är för stort. Detta val är obligatoriskt. Ogiltigt värde.

Du kommer bli meddelad när produkten finns i lager.


  • Frakt 39 kr / Fri frakt på order över 1200 kr
  • Beräknad leveranstid 3-5 vardagar
  • 30000 BD/4K - Nyheter alla dagar

Beskrivning

Art.nr: BD396262

Surfing is the only thing to do for high school students Chuck and Bob who are in preparation for the big surf competition. However, their fathers, sales reps for a new soda named Buzzz Cola, disapprove of surfing as a whole. Everything is going swell until the area’s surfing population start getting kidnapped by Menlo, a vengeful nerd turned mad scientist, with a particular vengeance aimed at surfers. Using Buzzz Cola, Menlo has begun turning surfers into brain dead zombies, with the aid of his assistant, Sparkle. Can Chuck and Bob thwart his evil master plan in time to save the surfing competition? A completely wild and thoroughly unhinged comedy that manages to integrate slapstick humor, surreal sight gags, horror and sci-fi elements, T&A, as well as having possibly served as an influence to the most famous animated TV series in history, Randall Badat’s one of a kind and completely bonkers gem, SURF II (The End of a Trilogy) stars Eddie Deezen (Grease, War Games), Lyle Waggoner (TV’s Wonder Woman), Linda Kerridge (Fade to Black), Terry Kiser (Tammy & the T-Rex), and Eric Stoltz (Back to the Future, Pulp Fiction), in one of his earliest roles. Never released on disc, Vinegar Syndrome brings SURF II to Blu-ray, newly restored from long lost 35mm elements and presented both in its commonly seen theatrical version as well as in its unreleased and radically different original director’s cut.