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Johnny_Mnemonic [DVD]
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Descripción del producto
Formato DVD
Detalles del producto
- Dimensiones del paquete : 19 x 14 x 1,3 cm; 100 gramos
- ASIN : B0055KLV5I
- Número de discos : 1
- Clasificación en los más vendidos de Amazon: nº38,437 en Películas y TV (Ver el Top 100 en Películas y TV)
- nº19,046 en DVD
- nº37,285 en Películas (Películas y TV)
- Opiniones de los clientes:
Opiniones de clientes
4,5 de 5 estrellas
4,5 de 5
694 valoraciones globales
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Reseñas más importantes
Principales reseñas de España
Ha surgido un problema al filtrar las opiniones justo en este momento. Vuelva a intentarlo en otro momento.
Revisado en España el 12 de febrero de 2021
La edición de a contracorrientefilm, es la qué debéis comprar la mejor en calidad de imagen, las demás ediciones están obsoletas imagen no compatible 16/9, y menús en 4:3.
Revisado en España el 26 de mayo de 2019
Llegó en perfectas condiciones y es exactamente como se describe. Estoy muy satisfecha.
Reseñas más importantes de otros países
Davide Alberti
5,0 de 5 estrellas
Fantastico
Revisado en Italia el 30 de agosto de 2023
Questo film è una piccola perla.
Guardandolo scoprirete quante cose sono state riprese da questo film in prodotti successivi.
Attori che diventeranno famosi, una trama semplice e lineare ma efficace: personaggi curati, ben tratteggiati, e un bravissimo Keanu Reeves.
Sono un amante del cyberpunk da sempre, e questo film non poteva mancare nella mia collezione.
Guardandolo scoprirete quante cose sono state riprese da questo film in prodotti successivi.
Attori che diventeranno famosi, una trama semplice e lineare ma efficace: personaggi curati, ben tratteggiati, e un bravissimo Keanu Reeves.
Sono un amante del cyberpunk da sempre, e questo film non poteva mancare nella mia collezione.
Kevin C. Trott
4,0 de 5 estrellas
Smuggling data in your brain, what could go wrong
Revisado en los Estados Unidos el 12 de junio de 2023
This film is based on a William Gibson short story of the same name. A future data courier/smuggler with a brain implant ends up carrying corporate data that the bad guys are willing to kill him for. The now retro technology is a hoot - he uses a doubler (remember those) to increase his capacity from 80GB to 160GB, then uploads 320GB, which will kill him if he can't unload it. But, of course, the access password gets lost. Great bad guys, including an assassin with a detachable thumb linked to a monofilament line that can cut through anything. Way cooler than a light saber.
nflbolt14
5,0 de 5 estrellas
Black and White version
Revisado en los Estados Unidos el 21 de agosto de 2022
It seems Amazon is mixing the regular version and the black and white version together. This is for the b&w. This movie is out of print at the time of this release (2022), so it's great Sony reissued it. If you already have the original version, do you really need this one? It depends on how much you are a fan. I couldn't find any information on special features or film version so I went and took a chance. After viewing, it is the same version as the original color, just in black and white. It is beautiful and even though there is so much color in the original with all the CGI, the black and white still makes it shine, even more so sometimes. There are only two special features. One is the original theatrical trailer, which is in color curiously. The other is a conversation with the director Robert Longo, actor Keanu Reeves and screen writer William Gibson who wrote the original story this film was based on. It's also in color and was filmed in 2021 during the second year of the COVID pandemic. All three are on a video chat in three different countries: America, France and Canada. They talk about their memories making the fim with Robert Longo in the lead explaining that he never got a director's cut and this is the closest he can get. However, I own a blu-ray of the film released overseas that has extended scenes. Maybe that was not released with his consent, but this black and white version is definitely the theatrical version. Of all three, I still prefer the original color theatrical version the best but I'm still so happy to own this, just for that video chat alone. The conversation runs about 25 minutes and it is so interesting and fascinating. It is actually heartwarming hearing how all three loved working together and being able to see other again. I started crying a bit. Maybe one day the movie will be released on 4K and all three released versions will be included. If you don't have the original, this is definitely a buy. If you do own the original, it would not be a double dip to own this as well. I'm so glad to have discovered this gem. I will always cherish this. I hope you will too. Thank you and cheers!
the masked reviewer
5,0 de 5 estrellas
BAD MOVIE DELIGHTS await you lucky viewers in Johnny Moronic...er...Mnemonic.
Revisado en los Estados Unidos el 29 de julio de 2007
What makes so many bad movies so endearingly laughable? More to the point, what got the film Johnny Mnemonic nicknamed Johnny Moronic? The sight of high-paid Hollywood actors gamely trying and failing to utter dialogue that could have defeated Laurence Olivier, that's what. William Gibson may be a god to cyberpunks, but the screenplay he wrote of his own short story Johnny Mnemonic foists a terminal case of terrible chatter onto a cast that already had his plot to deal with.
Keanu Reeves is a "mnemonic courier" who has rented out so much of the memory space in his brain that he's now desperate to download data before "synaptic seepage" kills him (so much for your theories on what makes Keanu Reeves strange). How is it he has room up there to rent? "I had to dump a chunk of longterm memory--my childhood," he tells his vampy bodyguard Dina Meyer. When Meyer points out that if the villains who want what's in Reeves's head get hold of him, there's "going to be one dead Johnny," Reeves replies, "I'm gonna be dead anyway if I don't get this sh-- outta my head!" Which is exactly what the audience is thinking.
Reeves and Meyer call on "flesh mechanic" Henry Rollins, who can't do much for Reeves, but diagnoses Meyer as having the fatal virus that's killing half the planet. Pointing to plugged-in widgets all around him, Rollins claims that the virus is the product of "information overload, all the electronics around you poisoning the airwaves! What causes it? The world causes it! Technological f---ng civilization! But we still have all this sh-- 'cause we can't live without it!" (Like, it's the DVD player, not this movie, that's going to kill us.)
"Street preacher" Dolph Lundgren, decked out in robe, sandals and long blond locks to look like a born-again Michael Bolton, is good for a solid laugh when he tries to kill Reeves and Rollins, shouting "Come to Jesus!", but Johnny Mnemonic hits its high point when Reeves climbs atop a pile of garbage (no comment) and yells: "What the ---- is going on? What the ---- is going on? Listen, you listen to me! You see that city over there? That's where I'm supposed to be! Not down here with the dogs and the garbage and the f-----' last month's newspapers blowing back and forth! I've had it with them, I've had it with you, I've had it with all of this! I want room service! I want the club sandwich! I want the cold Mexican beer! I want a ten-thousand-dollar-a-night hooker! I want my shirts laundered like they do at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo!"
After that spectacular monologue, you're ready for anything, which is fortunate, because the answer to Reeves's and Meyer's problems turns out to come from a cheesy animatronic dolphin who resides in a large fish tank "set up to sample software from enemy subs--infrasound scan, right through the hull." Reeves is told, "He will teach you can-opener code." We'll leave you wondering what he does for Meyer's virus. Rest assured this fake mammal is not the answer to the film's problems. Then again, what can you do for a film in which even the extras have bad lines?
Keanu Reeves is a "mnemonic courier" who has rented out so much of the memory space in his brain that he's now desperate to download data before "synaptic seepage" kills him (so much for your theories on what makes Keanu Reeves strange). How is it he has room up there to rent? "I had to dump a chunk of longterm memory--my childhood," he tells his vampy bodyguard Dina Meyer. When Meyer points out that if the villains who want what's in Reeves's head get hold of him, there's "going to be one dead Johnny," Reeves replies, "I'm gonna be dead anyway if I don't get this sh-- outta my head!" Which is exactly what the audience is thinking.
Reeves and Meyer call on "flesh mechanic" Henry Rollins, who can't do much for Reeves, but diagnoses Meyer as having the fatal virus that's killing half the planet. Pointing to plugged-in widgets all around him, Rollins claims that the virus is the product of "information overload, all the electronics around you poisoning the airwaves! What causes it? The world causes it! Technological f---ng civilization! But we still have all this sh-- 'cause we can't live without it!" (Like, it's the DVD player, not this movie, that's going to kill us.)
"Street preacher" Dolph Lundgren, decked out in robe, sandals and long blond locks to look like a born-again Michael Bolton, is good for a solid laugh when he tries to kill Reeves and Rollins, shouting "Come to Jesus!", but Johnny Mnemonic hits its high point when Reeves climbs atop a pile of garbage (no comment) and yells: "What the ---- is going on? What the ---- is going on? Listen, you listen to me! You see that city over there? That's where I'm supposed to be! Not down here with the dogs and the garbage and the f-----' last month's newspapers blowing back and forth! I've had it with them, I've had it with you, I've had it with all of this! I want room service! I want the club sandwich! I want the cold Mexican beer! I want a ten-thousand-dollar-a-night hooker! I want my shirts laundered like they do at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo!"
After that spectacular monologue, you're ready for anything, which is fortunate, because the answer to Reeves's and Meyer's problems turns out to come from a cheesy animatronic dolphin who resides in a large fish tank "set up to sample software from enemy subs--infrasound scan, right through the hull." Reeves is told, "He will teach you can-opener code." We'll leave you wondering what he does for Meyer's virus. Rest assured this fake mammal is not the answer to the film's problems. Then again, what can you do for a film in which even the extras have bad lines?
The Librarian
5,0 de 5 estrellas
Johnny Mnemonic (1995)
Revisado en Reino Unido el 23 de mayo de 2015
Johnny Mnemonic (1995) is a cyberpunk action thriller starring Keanu Reeves, Dolph Lundgren, Dina Meyer, Ice-T, Takeshi, Udo Kier, and Henry Rollins. The film is directed by Robert Longo and based on the dystopian novel by William Gibson.
In 2021, Johnny Mnemonic (Reeves) is a mnemonic courier with a cybernetic brain implant that stores information. The information he carries is too sensitive to be transmitted across the internet and the courier business offers him a lot of money. The downside is that in order to do this, he has to loose some of his past, in this case his childhood. The only way to regain his childhood memories is to have the implant removed. Ralfi (Kier), his handler, offers Johnny one last job that will cover the cost of the operation to remove the implant.
When he reaches the location of the job, Beijing, he discovers that the data he is asked to carry is far too much for his type of implant. Carrying this much data will almost certainly lead to psychological disorders or even death. But he accepts the job regardless. Following the data upload, the uploaders are killed by the Yakuza and only Johnny escapes with some of the encrypted information intact. There are now two groups of people who need the data: Pharmakon, owned by Takahashi (Takeshi) and the Yakuza.
Friends are not quite who they appear to be and Johnny finds himself on the run with Jane (Meyer), a cybernetically-enhanced female and an underground tribe called the Lo-Teks led by J-Bone (Ice-T). They take Johnny to Spider (Rollins), who may be able to remove the dangerous implant (he had previously installed Jane's implants) but this could cause both the loss of the data and kill Johnny. From hereon in Johnny has to watch his back and trust no-one until he can have the implant safely removed.
The film was shot on a medium budget of $26m and did not fair as well as expected at the box office but did bring in $52m worldwide. This was due to a large amount of negative reviews. Longo and Gibson had originally planned to shoot the film on a shoestring budget, but were unable to secure the financing. Ironically, with the birth of the internet and technological advances throughout the 1990s, the film ended up being shot for $26m, when originally they were unable to borrow just $1.5m.
Trivia
Val Kilmer was originally supposed to play Johnny Mnemonic but pulled out to begin filming Batman Forever.
Christopher Lambert was in the running for the role.
The film is based on both William Gibson's short story, Johnny Mnemonic, and his novel, Virtual Light.
This is Dina Meyer's first feature film.
Henry Rollins, who plays Spider, wrote the song I See Through for the soundtrack and performed it with Rollins Band.
Soundtrack
Lost by Stabbing Westward
3 AM Incident by Cop Shoot Cop
Complete by Helmet
Sad But True by Orbital
Virus by KMFDM
I See Through by Rollins Band
No More Love by God Lives Underwater
Alex Descends into Hell for a Bottle of Milk/Korova 1 by Bono and the Edge
Nothing by Stabbing Westward
Send It Out by Brad Fiedel*
*Section of the film's score by the composer.
I thought the film was very interesting personally, and suffered a lot of unnecessary negative reviews. There is a mixture of genres here from action, to science fiction, to thriller. Although there is plenty of conflict, this is a film that will make you think, in a thriller sense, but also about the future in general. It appeals to a wide range of audiences; those who like all-out action and shoot-ups, to those also interested in science fiction and what the future could hold, albeit in this future the world is run by megacorportions and totalitarian governments. This dystopian view of the future can be found in many classic works including those of H G Wells and George Orwell.
5/5
In 2021, Johnny Mnemonic (Reeves) is a mnemonic courier with a cybernetic brain implant that stores information. The information he carries is too sensitive to be transmitted across the internet and the courier business offers him a lot of money. The downside is that in order to do this, he has to loose some of his past, in this case his childhood. The only way to regain his childhood memories is to have the implant removed. Ralfi (Kier), his handler, offers Johnny one last job that will cover the cost of the operation to remove the implant.
When he reaches the location of the job, Beijing, he discovers that the data he is asked to carry is far too much for his type of implant. Carrying this much data will almost certainly lead to psychological disorders or even death. But he accepts the job regardless. Following the data upload, the uploaders are killed by the Yakuza and only Johnny escapes with some of the encrypted information intact. There are now two groups of people who need the data: Pharmakon, owned by Takahashi (Takeshi) and the Yakuza.
Friends are not quite who they appear to be and Johnny finds himself on the run with Jane (Meyer), a cybernetically-enhanced female and an underground tribe called the Lo-Teks led by J-Bone (Ice-T). They take Johnny to Spider (Rollins), who may be able to remove the dangerous implant (he had previously installed Jane's implants) but this could cause both the loss of the data and kill Johnny. From hereon in Johnny has to watch his back and trust no-one until he can have the implant safely removed.
The film was shot on a medium budget of $26m and did not fair as well as expected at the box office but did bring in $52m worldwide. This was due to a large amount of negative reviews. Longo and Gibson had originally planned to shoot the film on a shoestring budget, but were unable to secure the financing. Ironically, with the birth of the internet and technological advances throughout the 1990s, the film ended up being shot for $26m, when originally they were unable to borrow just $1.5m.
Trivia
Val Kilmer was originally supposed to play Johnny Mnemonic but pulled out to begin filming Batman Forever.
Christopher Lambert was in the running for the role.
The film is based on both William Gibson's short story, Johnny Mnemonic, and his novel, Virtual Light.
This is Dina Meyer's first feature film.
Henry Rollins, who plays Spider, wrote the song I See Through for the soundtrack and performed it with Rollins Band.
Soundtrack
Lost by Stabbing Westward
3 AM Incident by Cop Shoot Cop
Complete by Helmet
Sad But True by Orbital
Virus by KMFDM
I See Through by Rollins Band
No More Love by God Lives Underwater
Alex Descends into Hell for a Bottle of Milk/Korova 1 by Bono and the Edge
Nothing by Stabbing Westward
Send It Out by Brad Fiedel*
*Section of the film's score by the composer.
I thought the film was very interesting personally, and suffered a lot of unnecessary negative reviews. There is a mixture of genres here from action, to science fiction, to thriller. Although there is plenty of conflict, this is a film that will make you think, in a thriller sense, but also about the future in general. It appeals to a wide range of audiences; those who like all-out action and shoot-ups, to those also interested in science fiction and what the future could hold, albeit in this future the world is run by megacorportions and totalitarian governments. This dystopian view of the future can be found in many classic works including those of H G Wells and George Orwell.
5/5
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