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

Taking Tiger Mountain (BLU-RAY + DVD)

Taking Tiger Mountain (BLU-RAY + DVD)

399 SEK
BLU-RAY Region 0 USA (fungerar i alla blu-ray spelare) DVD Region 0 USA (fungerar i alla dvd-spelare) Regissör: Tom Huckabee Skådespelare: Bill Paxton, Townspeople of Llangadog Bild: Widescreen, Språk: Engelska, Text: Engelska Längd: 83 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: BD372013

In a dystopian future, Billy Hampton (Bill Paxton, in his first on-screen role) is a World War III draft dodger who finds himself part of an experimental brainwashing program created by a group of radical feminists. After being released from the program, Billy heads to Wales for what he believes will be a sex-filled vacation. But, unbeknownst to him, Billy is really there to assassinate the Welsh Minister of Prostitution. A wild hybrid of art and experimental filmmaking techniques, TAKING TIGER MOUNTAIN began production in 1974, under the direction of Kent Smith using short ends left over from LENNY. After languishing in an unfinished form, the film was resurrected and completed by Tom Huckabee and eventually released in 1983; immediately making it an underground legend. Adapted in part from William S. Burroughs' classic short story 'Bladerunner,’ TAKING TIGER MOUNTAIN transcends genres and engulfs the viewer in a high contrast fever dream of science fiction based surrealism. Never officially released on home video and long viewable only from poor quality bootlegs, Vinegar Syndrome proudly presents the world home video premiere of TAKING TIGER MOUNTAIN, newly restored in 4k from its original 35mm black and white Techniscope negative.