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Zodiac (Widescreen Edition)

Reviewed on 11/03/07       Plays: 10

Zodiac (Widescreen Edition), starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Mark Ruffalo, and Robert Downey, Jr.

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Target is rated 2.5 out of 5
207 Store Reviews
In stock Check Site $0 $14.98 Shop from Target
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Transcript of Featured Review

Hello everyone. This is the DVD for Zodiac. This is a movie starring Jake Gyllenhaal Robert Downey Jr. and Mark Ruffalo as a cartoonist a reporter and an investigator all during the 70s and early 80s and early 90s. They're all investigating trying to figure out who the zodiac murderer is. He was a guy who killed a bunch of people and then mailed letters to the San Francisco Chronicle kind of taunting them because no one was ever able really to find out who he was and yeah this is a really good movie. It is directed by David Fincher who directed Alien 3 Se7en The game Fight Club Panic Room and then this and it's a really good movie. It has very very very good photography and its got very accurate portrayal of the 70s in terms of these costumes and set designs and stuff and that. It's a really good movie. Anthony Edwards who use to be an ER is also in this movie and Charles Fleischer who was the voice of Roger Rabbit also is in this movie as a suspect who might be the zodiac killer and his scene is particularly effective and its very strange considering you know he's the voice of African cartoon rabbit you know you wouldn't expect him to be as scary as he is in this movie and creepy. There is nothing on this DVD other than the movie. This is the movie only version. It is widescreen and its in a widescreen version and it has for widescreen televisions which is a good thing because as the way we were headed you know in the future and what not and this is a really good movie and here's a clip from the film in which Robert Downey Jr. and Jake Gyllenhaal are discussing the case in a bar and Jake Gyllenhaal is drinking an aqua Volvo which is a really stupid looking fancy messy drink and he says to Robert Downey Jr. " you wouldn't make fond of them if you tried them" so he tries one and what's the verdict? He likes them a lot. I myself have not had one but soon as I have one I will record the view for aqua Volvo and but for now this review of this movie will have to do -- this is a good movie and I recommend it.

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Zodiac (Widescreen Edition)

Average Rating:

4.5 stars

based on 16 video reviews

Closer in spirit to a police procedural than a gory serial-killer flick, David Fincher's Zodiac provides a sleek, armrest-gripping re-invention of the crime film. It surveys the investigation of the Zodiac killings that terrorized the San Francisco Bay area in the late -60-early -70s; Zodiac...

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Summary
Closer in spirit to a police procedural than a gory serial-killer flick, David Fincher's Zodiac provides a sleek, armrest-gripping re-invention of the crime film. It surveys the investigation of the Zodiac killings that terrorized the San Francisco Bay area in the late -60-early -70s; Zodiac not only killed people, but cultivated a Jack the Ripper aura by sending icky letters to the newspapers and daring readers to solve coded messages. But the film's focus isn't on the killer. We follow the reporters and detectives whose lives are taken over by the case, notably an addictive crime writer (a sartorially splendid Robert Downey Jr.), an awkward editorial cartoonist (Jake Gyllenhaal), and a hard-working cop (Mark Ruffalo). Fincher and his brilliant cinematographer Harris Savides are deft at capturing the period feel of the city, without laying on the seventies kitsch, and James Vanderbilt's script doles out its big moments to major and minor characters alike. Fincher's confidence is infectious; the movie glides through its myriad details with such dexterity that even the blind alleys and red herrings seem essential. The well-chosen cast includes unexpected people popping up all over: Anthony Edwards as a lunch-bucket homicide cop; Charles Fleischer as a mysterious suspect; Elias Koteas and Donal Logue as small-town policemen whose districts are hit by Zodiac; Chloe Sevigny as Gyllenhaal's sweet-natured wife; Brian Cox as the media-friendly lawyer Melvin Belli, so famous he once appeared on Star Trek ; and the mighty John Carroll Lynch, as a supremely creepy suspect. The film is based on non-fiction books by Robert Graysmith (he's portrayed by Gyllenhaal), although Fincher and co. did extensive research on their own. The result is a propulsive whodunit without (thus far) an ending, but the uncertainty makes the film even more intriguing. --Robert Horton Beyond Zodiac The Zodiac (2005) Curse of the Zodiac (2007) The Novel Stills from Zodiac (click for larger image)
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