Cheap The Manhattan Project (Special Edition) (DVD) (Marshall Brickman) Price
CHEAP-PRICE.NET ’s Cheap Price
$17.99
Here at Cheap-price.net we have The Manhattan Project (Special Edition) at a terrific price. The real-time price may actually be cheaper — click “Buy Now” above to check the live price at Amazon.com.
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| DIRECTOR: | Marshall Brickman |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 1986 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Lionsgate |
| MPAA RATING: | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| FEATURES: | Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Action, Action / Adventure, Adult Language, Adventure, Color, Comedy, Comedy Thriller, English, Feature, Feature Film Action Adventure, Feature Film-action/Adventure, Humorous, Light, Matter-of-Fact, Message Movie, Mild Violence, Paranoid, Paranoid Thriller, Political Corruption, Questionable for Children |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| MPN: | D21407D |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 012236214076 |
Related Products
Customer Reviews of The Manhattan Project (Special Edition)
The movie has even more resonance after the cold war in an age of threatened suitcase bombs While the central character in this movie is a teenager, a very smart teenager, it isn't anything like the other "science fair" movies you have seen. True, what the kid does he wants to show at a science fair and the other smart kids there have a bit of a role in the plot in addition to their purpose of adding some color and comic relief. <
> <
>John Lithgow plays Dr. John Matthewson. A new business moves to town and he befriends Elizabeth Stevens (Jill Eikenberry). He takes a shine to her brilliant teenage son Paul (Christopher Collet). One of the interesting aspects of the movie is the suble way we are shown how bright Paul is and how they use his girlfriend to make him very sympathetic and human. When Paul is given a tour of the facility, he quickly sees through the cover story and decides to expose them. Now, the plan he concocts is quite over the top, but he decides to build his own, small, atomic bomb. <
> <
>Paul's girlfriend, Jenny Anderman (Cynthia Nixon), helps him by distracting some folks while Paul gets his hands on the key ingredient. Again, what Paul then goes through in attempting to build the device is quite interesting, but not really possible for even a genius without very specialized equipment. It isn't the kind of stuff one can simply build on one's own. But we suspend disbelief for the movie. <
> <
>Things escalate and the final sequence, of course, involves Matthewson and Paul and a bunch of government types inside the facility. This is where the plot has to ride on our sympathy for Paul. In real life, I would suspect, and in fact I would hope that once the realized that Paul hadn't yet armed his device that they would kill him before he could. But that would be too harsh for a Hollywood movie. One simply doesn't kill good boys who have done something stupid even if they are going to accidentally on purpose blow up an entire city and poison a couple of small states downwind. <
> <
>Still, it is a pretty good thriller and Lithgow and Eikenberry bring good adult maturity to the story without becoming villains or fools. I enjoyed that. And Collet and Nixon do have a very caring and human relationship. While the movie isn't, in the end, realistic, it isn't a cartoon either. <
> <
>A quite good movie that still holds up after the cold war. In fact, in our age of terrorism and the threat of suitcase bombs, it probably has an even louder ring to it.