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Hot Fuzz (Widescreen Edition) | 
enlarge | Director: Edgar Wright Actors: Jim Broadbent, Kenneth Cranham, Timothy Dalton, Julia Deakin, Patricia Franklin Studio: Universal Studios Category: DVD
List Price: $12.98 Buy Used: $3.15 You Save: $9.83 (76%)
New (56) Used (82) Collectible (1) from $3.15
Avg. Customer Rating: 308 reviews Sales Rank: 1497
Format: Ac-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed) Rating: R (Restricted) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 121 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: MCAD62033218D UPC: 025193321824 EAN: 0025193321824 ASIN: B000RJO578
Theatrical Release Date: 2007 Release Date: July 31, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BUY ME! DVD near spotless. All artwork included. Free upgrade to 1st class.
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Product Description Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 01/27/2009 Run time: 121 minutes Rating: R
Amazon.com In Shaun of the Dead, it was the zombie movie and the anomie of modern life. In Hot Fuzz, Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg set their sights on the buddy cop blockbuster and the eccentric English village. The two worlds collide when overachieving London officer Nicholas Angel (Pegg) is promoted to sergeant. The catch is that he's being transferred to Agatha Christie country. His superiors (the comic trifecta of Martin Campbell, Steve Coogan, and Bill Nighy) explain that he's making the rest of the force look bad. On the surface, Sandford is a sleepy little burg where the most egregious crimes, like loitering, are committed by hoody-sporting schoolboys. In truth, it's a hotbed of Willow Man-style evil. Upon his arrival, Chief Butterman (Jim Broadbent) partners Angel with his daft son, Danny (Nick Frost, Pegg's Shaun co-star), who aspires to kick criminal "arse" like the slick duo in Bad Boys II. When random citizens start turning up dead, he gets his chance. With the worshipful Danny at his side, Angel shows his cake-eating colleagues how things are done in the big city. As in Shaun, their previous picture, Wright and Pegg hit their targets more often than not. With the success of that debut comes a bigger budget for car chases, shoot-outs, and fiery explosions. Though Hot Fuzz earns its R-rating with salty language and grisly deaths, the tone is more good-natured than mean-spirited. A wall-to-wall soundtrack of boisterous British favorites, like the Kinks, T-Rex, and Sweet, contributes to the fast-paced fun. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
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| Customer Reviews: Read 303 more reviews...
bad January 6, 2009 i have tried to play this and it wont work...can someone get back to me about this....not a happy customer!!!
Starts out with four stars, but then. . . December 30, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I am like so many other reviewers who liked Shaun of the Dead, but was vastly underwhelmed by this. Started off OK and I laughed quite a few times in the first half. But then it just kept going.
My expectations dropped when I thought, well, it looks like we're near the end and my wife informed me there was at least another hour to go. An hour? She fell asleep (I envy her) and I still struggled on. I kept checking the satellite time. With 20 minutes left and nothing new happening (long stretches of running and shooting, mild wounding, and the same ain't-this-cute joke over and over) I could stand it no longer.
Hot Fuzz gets most of its pacing from crackerjack editing and multitudinous camera set-ups, but editing can only go so far.
Really disappointed in this one. Really disappointed.
Hot Fuzz December 16, 2008 For people who enjoy the Englis type of humor. Was a little hard to get into the beginning of it. But I think well worth it.
Good movie? It's a fair cop... December 12, 2008 Hot Fuzz After Shaun of the Dead, the writer/director/actor trio of Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost came up with this new comedy that does for cop movies what Shaun did for zombie flicks. As before Wright directs a script written by himself and Pegg, and Pegg and Frost star. Pegg plays Nick Angel, a London cop so dedicated and efficient he starts to skew the statistics away from his less motivated colleagues. He soon finds himself transferred to Sandford, a tiny little rural village on the books with the lowest crime rate in England. Angel is understandably miffed by this, especially when partnered with the local police chief's son (Frost), who's a likable lunkhead. Shortly after his arrival, though, gruesome deaths start occurring. Angel is sure it's murder, but everyone else in town thinks the deaths are accidental. Angel becomes determined to solve the crimes no matter how many toes he must step on. This very funny movie manages to walk a very fine line: it spoofs American action movies hilariously but never stops being British. It does, however, come by its R rating very honestly, with rampant profanity and some very gory murders. The violence is as over the top as it was in Shaun of the Dead, but with that same matter of fact/deadpan tone that pushes it past icky into icky-but-funny. (kind of like the gore in a Monty Python movie) And what a cast the boys have in support this time: Timothy Dalton (2 time 007), Edward Woodward (The Wicker Man-1973), a couple of unidentifiable but hilarious celebrity cameos, and briefly, Martin Freeman (The Office-British version). If you enjoy English humor or thought Shaun of the Dead was fun, definitely check this one out.
Top Truncheon November 5, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Simon Pegg and Nick Frost are superb in this cracking little British comedy. Nick Angel (Pegg) is the London supercop who is so good he's making all his colleagues look fools, and so is shunted off to the 'sticks' and utter boredom - or so it seems. Danny (Frost) is his hapless partner and bane, short on experience but big in enthusiasm.
Angel becomes suspicious as the accident mortality rate in the village begins to rise, only to be held back by the cluelessness of his colleagues and bizarreness of the locals.
The support cast is allstar, if you're British, and must have been a director's dream. At times the film almost had a Wallace and Gromit feel to it, and you can tell it was made with with a lot of affection. Jim Broadbent must be fast approaching the 'national treasure' level, as Sgt. Frank Butterman, stalwart of the Police station and village.
Truly funny in places and very watchable on the whole, it builds to an over-the-top finale that gets away with it precisely because the characters are so likeable. One of my faves.
Yours,
Baby Cromwell
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