Product Description Here's the absolutely hysterical, wonderfully wild, cosmic adventure comedy THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY. Based on Douglas Adams' worldwide best-selling novel, and starring an outrageous intergalactic cast, this is one ride you don't want to miss. Seconds before Earth is destroyed to make way for a new hyperspace express route, mild-mannered Arthur Dent is whisked into space by his best friend (an alien posing as an out-of-work actor). And so the misadventures begin as he and fellow travelers, including the cool but dim-witted President of the Galaxy, the Earth girl Trillian, and Marvin the paranoid android, search for answers to the mystery of Life, the Universe, and Everything. .com Don't panic! After twenty years stuck in development (a mere blink compared to how long it takes to find the answer to life, the universe, and everything), The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy has finally been turned into a movie. Following the radio play, TV series, commemorative towel, and books, this latest installment in the sci-fi-comedy franchise is based on the screenplay and detailed notes by Douglas Adams. Hitching a ride. For those unfamiliar with the story, everyman Arthur Dent (Martin Freeman) wakes up one morning to discover that his house is set to be demolished to make room for a bypass. Little does he know the entire planet Earth is also set to be destroyed for an interplanetary bypass by the Vogons, a hideous and bureaucratic race of aliens realized in the film by Jim Henson's Creature Shop. Whisked off the planet by his best friend, alien-in-disguise Ford Prefect (Mos Def), Dent embarks on a goofy jaunt across the galaxy accompanied by his trusty Hitchhiker's Guide, which looks like a really fancy PDA.The guide itself provides some of the funniest bits of the movie, little animated shorts that explain the ludicrous life forms and extraterrestrial phenomena our heroes encounter. Along the way Arthur meets the two-headed party animal/president of the galaxy Zaphod Beeblebrox (Sam Rockwell) and develops an unrequited crush on fellow earthling Trillian (Zooey Deschanel). The creatures and sets are inspired and answer to the sci-fi fan's primal need to see lots and lots of cool stuff. In particular, there's John Malkovich's creepy, CGI-enhanced Humma Kavula. He's a guru leading a religion that worships the gigantic nose that allegedly sneezed the universe into existence (naturally all their prayers end not with "Amen" but with "Bless you.") The aliens the team encounters are inspired creations, eminently worthy of action figure-ification, and the sets belie an attention to detail worthy of freeze-framing. Fans of the other Hitchhiker manifestations, namely the British TV series, will be amused by a number of in-jokes sprinkled throughout the movie. Concept art: The Heart of Gold pod on the planet Vogsphere Where the story stumbles is in the telling--as books, the Hitchhiker's Guide was foremost about goofy and brilliant ideas that raised questions about our place in the universe while getting a laugh. The cast seems at times bewildered, at least when Sam Rockwell isn't picking pieces of scenery out of his teeth, perhaps a natural reaction to an adaptation of a book with no traditional plot. The movie has enough trouble figuring out how to get the characters from one fantastical location to the next that Adams's funniest concepts often feel left in the dust. While the reverence the filmmakers felt toward Adams's legacy is apparent, one wonders what we could have expected had the creator of this science fiction universe lived to see it with his own eyes. -- Ryan BoudinotA Guide to the Guide The Soundtrack The Radio Play (CD) The TV Series The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide (Deluxe Edition) The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide (Paperback) The Filming of the Douglas Adams Classic (book)Interviews with The Cast and Director Watch our interviews with the cast and director of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and find out what they think of other DVDs and books: high bandwidth low bandwidth P.when('A').execute(function(A) { A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse', function(data) { window.scroll(0, data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100); }); }); Review "Every bit as smart and funny as the book that inspired it!" -- STEVE OLDFIELD/FOX TV"Four Stars" -- TODD DAVID SCHWARTZ/CBS RADIO"It should do for British sci-fi what Shaun Of The Dead did for British horror." -- JAMIE RUSSELL/BBC.CO.UK"It s firmly rooted in the grand tradition of English absurdity bounded by Lewis Carroll and Monty Python." -- JAY CARR/AM NEW YORK" a massively epic and wonderfully improbable trip " -- DESSON THOMSON/THE WASHINGTON POST Set Contains: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (the book, not the movie, or rather, the book within the--oh, never mind) is ideally suited for DVD adaptation. Navigating menus designed to look like the pages of the Guide itself, viewers can access such choice bits as deleted scenes, scenes designed to look like they were meant to be deleted but are actually little mini-spoofs of the movie, and a short featurette documentary. The animated short about the existence of God is hilarious and it's a shame it didn't make it into the movie. The sing-along-with-the-dolphins sequence is mildly amusing, and only die-hard fans will want to spend much time with "Marvin's hangman game." Spirited commentary by the cast and executive producer (and Douglas Adams's friend) Sean Solle round out the generous grab bag of extras. Perhaps most fun of all is the "Improbability Drive," a menu option that serves up a random sampling from the extras. See more
B**D
Love!!
This is a classic and they need to make more!!! There are all kinds of possibilities, they're endless! Don't forget your towel!
G**L
Another take on one of my favorite Books/TV shows: Hitchhiker's Guide is still a good laugh
I'm a Douglas Adams fan from way, way back: read all the books in the Hitchhiker's series as well as everything else he wrote, watched the TV show, listened to the radio program. I love the Hitchhiker's Guide best, read it in high school and I am such a nerdy gal that I had to get me a towel, which I carried in my backpack all times (but then, I also carried a Tribble key ring and a Dr. Who - Tom Baker scarf that I knitted myself ... ). So, let's take it as read that I couldn't wait to see the movie. I was excited when I heard it was in the works, read the updates and production notes, and actually went to the theatre, in a snowstorm in upstate New York, the night it opened. I watch it on video whenever I can, and I've gotten my kids hooked on it, they think it's really funny, too.Highlights: Sam Rockwell was absolutely over the top as Zaphod Veeblebrox, Mos Def as Ford Prefect was just crazy enough to telegraph alien, as in 'not from around here', and Alan Rickman as Marvin the Paranoid Android was SOOO pained and put out ... I felt the movie was more like how I imagined the characters and their interactions when I read the books; but then, the budget for the movie was much better, so that Mr. Adams could do things the way he wanted. I didn't care for Zoey Deschanel as Trillian, but she always comes across to me like someone stoned out of her head, even when she's excited.I know there are lot of people out there who didn't care for the movie because the story wasn't exactly like the television program (also have heard it described as dumb, disjointed, confusing), but they don't know the history of how the story was revised and rewritten over the years to change the emphasis, that it was all meant to (in whatever version you may have first experienced it) point out some of the more absurd, small everyday things in British life (like the die-hard daytripper - Ford - for example) or maybe it's a simple as, they don't get British humor. It can be an acquired taste, after all.In any case, Doug Adams didn't intend for the movie to be just like the book or the TV show, or the radio programs, rather, he wanted the viewer to see the same story from a different viewpoint than the last retellng. He developed the movie concept and wrote the script himself, before he died, and interviews he gave, he stated that he wanted to focus on parts of the story he felt were glossed over or left out in the radio and tv versions, details that were important to him and to many of the long-time fans. He also stated that he especially did not want to cover well-worn ground. I'd say he did a good job on that score.
A**7
Magical
Intelligent, beautiful, funny, thought provoking, great time!!
C**Z
Funny movie
Very unique and ahead of it’s time
D**K
A true gem for lovers of cult classic movies.
Although you can't match the books, the fact that Adams had a big hand in this movie version goes far toward recommending it. Funny, both as sci fi and as a send up of British culture.Also, get the BBC Television teleplay version, written by Adams himself. Worth the duplication.
D**S
Truly Intelligent Comedy That Hides Underneath the Surface of Blockbuster Vanity.
"Why are we here?" is the constant question of existentialism that often nourishes further curiosity in regards the meaning of life and life's place in the universe. Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (1983) touched this philosophical notion with a devastating amount of humor and parody. The same question, in the light of humor, will be asked in the cinematic adaptation of Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. What is more important, director Garth Jennings accomplishes in conveying a refreshing existential comedy that exploits human error, ineptness, and pride in a radically amusing parody. This is also expressed in the opening where the audience learns that dolphins are far more intelligent that human beings.Heavy philosophical notions are blended into a diverging comic brew where both bellyaching and dry humor softens the audience's guard and makes them more receptive to the insightful hypotheses. However, it is easy for an audience member to get lost within the absurdity of the film, but for those who allow themselves to reflectively drift along with the silly storyline will discover a cinematic gem. Amusingly, Jennings adapts Adams' literary work that visualizes an intergalactic society that encompasses strange religions, corporate power, political bureaucracy, and scientific progress among many other aspects of the universe.The film opens a Thursday morning when the story's protagonist Arthur Dent (Martin Freeman) discovers that the government has decided to build a bypass through his house. The location for a bypass is outrageously comical in a cerebral way. There are no other houses in miles, yet they want to tear down Arthur's house and build a bypass. What Arthur does not know is that Earth is facing a similar fate, as the galactic government has decided to build an intergalactic freeway through Earth. Luckily, Arthur's friend Ford Prefect (Mos Def) has discovered Earths apocalyptic destiny, as he reveals for Arthur that he is an alien (not the kind from foreign soil) and he can save them both. Ford's visit to Earth was one in countless celestial visits through the galaxy, as he is currently working on a guide for intergalactic hitchhikers.What do you do when you only have 12 minutes left to exist on Earth? Ford takes Arthur to the pub where they slam 3 pints of beer while he explains the situation for a slightly perplexed Arthur. It is an incredible tale, a tale most humans would disregard, as ignorance sometimes is bliss. However, what is to come after these 12 minutes will baffle Arthur even more when a spaceship materializes in the sky. In disbelief, Arthur exclaims, "What the hell are those things?" This scene, despite its amusing approach, presents an impression that awareness can shake the very foundation of personal wisdom.Through a thumb ring, far beyond the technological advances on Earth, Ford and Arthur hitch a ride with a spaceship. It brings them on a fantastic journey through space, dimensions, and metamorphosis, as they encounter the Intergalactic President Zaphod Beeblebrox (Sam Rockwell) who has kidnapped himself, the adventurous woman Trillian (Zooey Deschanel), and the robot Marvin (body performed by Warwick Davis and the voice of Alan Rickman) who suffers from clinical depression as a consequence of his human like personality programming. Together these five venture through space on board the starship, whose name has some witty symbolic connotations, Heart of Gold, as they seek the ultimate answer to all.The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy employs playful mise-en-scene that brings Star Trek and other science fiction films, which help create an alien atmosphere. Together with clever camera framing there are terrific performances by several actors such as Martin Freeman, Mos Def, Sam Rockwell, Zooey Deschanel, Warwick Davis, Alan Rickman, John Malkowich, Helen Mirren among many others. The script was initiated by Douglas Adams and later finished by Karey Kirkpatrick after Adams' death, which Jennings gave terrific adaptation. An adaptation that at first look emerges like a light comedy, but offers something much more profound for a more reflective audience.Visual tidbits, fragments, and other remnants of ideas begin to wander aimlessly from the opening scene until the end in the film . Within these diverging ideas the storyline follows a rather straight pattern, which generates additional comic nonsense. The chaotic presentation of the many concepts brings different notions to light. The idea is that life emerges out of chaos. After all, this is true if the audience considers the big bang, or evolution theory, where life surfaced through chaos. Jennings creates an atmosphere of chaos that converge in a reflective state of mind the way a bouquet of wild flowers creates a pattern. In this potpourri of ideas the audience will discover a truly intelligent comedy that hides underneath the surface of blockbuster vanity.
R**6
A classic
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