Jumper (Blu-ray) PG-13
anywhere is possible.
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
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Brand New
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Blu-ray Details
- Rated: PG-13
- Run Time: 1 hours, 28 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Originally Released: 2008
- Label: 20th Century Fox
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Hayden Christensen, Jamie Bell, Rachel Bilson & Samuel L. Jackson | |
Performer: | Diane Lane, Michael Rooker, AnnaSophia Robb & Max Thierot | |
Directed by | Doug Liman | |
Screenwriting by | David S. Goyer, Jim Uhls & Simon Kinberg | |
Composition by | John Powell | |
Produced by | Arnon Milchan, Lucas Foster, Jay Sanders & Simon Kinberg | |
Director of Photography: | Barry Peterson | |
Executive Production by | Stacy Maes, Kim Winther, Vince Gerardis & Ralph M. Vicinanza |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 2.5/4 --
Jumper can't make the leap from cool concept to good movie.
Full Review
The Oklahoman
Rating: 4/10 --
A movie that has a tremendous premise and awesome special effects that are ultimately hindered by a script that prevents its characters from every fully taking off.
Full Review
Lyles' Movie Files
3 stars out of 5 -- The Jumping effect...is faultlessly executed -- a sort of hazy implosion that leaves a sphere of destruction around it...
Empire
Rating: 3/5 --
Important plot points are left unexplored, and there's no killer climax, so you leave the cinema deflated rather than thrilled.
Full Review
BBC.com
Jumper is almost in too much of a hurry at times and logic and cohesion suffer as a consequence.
Screen International
Rating: 2.0/5 --
Jumper is a popcorn movie, but without salt or butter. Too many of the kernels remain unpopped. It's like the Saturday matinees of yore. But by the time you've crossed the lobby after seeing Jumper, you've forgotten it.
Full Review
Fayetteville Free Weekly
Rating: 5/10 --
Light entertainment is all about playing to an audience's fantasy. There have been quite a few well-crafted and entertaining films that have started the same way and gotten away with it, out of sheer creativity. Jumper is not one of those films.
Full Review
ComingSoon.net
Product Description:
Based on Steven Gould's critically acclaimed novel, JUMPER leaps onto the screen courtesy of director Doug Liman. David (Hayden Christiansen) has inexplicably been given the power to teleport himself, or jump. He can jump into a bank vault, then to the top of the Sphinx, then back to his luxury Manhattan apartment. But despite all his power, he still misses his childhood love, Millie (Rachel Bilson, THE O.C.). When the opportunity arises, David jets off to Rome with Millie, but it's not all romance in the Italian city. David's unique abilities place him in the middle of a war between the jumpers and the paladins, a secretive group intent on hunting down the teleporters. Led by Roland (Samuel L. Jackson), the paladins track David and fellow jumper Griffin (Jamie Bell) across the world, and Millie may be caught in the crossfire.
JUMPER moves as fast as its teleporting hero, condensing the novel into a slim, action-packed offering. The slick special effects and impressive locations are certainly on par with Liman's previous work in THE BOURNE IDENTITY and MR. AND MRS. SMITH, but JUMPER bears a closer resemblance to comic book adaptations. Like Spider-man and most other costume-clad protagonists with unearthly abilities, David grapples with his newfound talents. But unlike his tights-and-cape-wearing brethren, David doesn't use his ability for the greater good. Instead, it gets him piles of money and, perhaps, the girl he's been dreaming of since he was five years old. Though most action films are driven by the struggle between good and evil, JUMPER interestingly offers up a central character who lies somewhere in the middle. Slightly less ambiguous is the film's ending that leaves the option for a sequel completely open.
JUMPER moves as fast as its teleporting hero, condensing the novel into a slim, action-packed offering. The slick special effects and impressive locations are certainly on par with Liman's previous work in THE BOURNE IDENTITY and MR. AND MRS. SMITH, but JUMPER bears a closer resemblance to comic book adaptations. Like Spider-man and most other costume-clad protagonists with unearthly abilities, David grapples with his newfound talents. But unlike his tights-and-cape-wearing brethren, David doesn't use his ability for the greater good. Instead, it gets him piles of money and, perhaps, the girl he's been dreaming of since he was five years old. Though most action films are driven by the struggle between good and evil, JUMPER interestingly offers up a central character who lies somewhere in the middle. Slightly less ambiguous is the film's ending that leaves the option for a sequel completely open.