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Enter The Void Limited Edition
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Blu-ray
RRP: £29.99
£24.99
Save: £5.00
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4 instalments of £6.24 with clearpay Learn more
A caption flashes: Cannes Film Festival. Official selection in competition
The view of a car reaching the end of a tunnel at night.
A caption reads: Enter the Void.
Focus on the lights at the top of a tunnel.
A Japanese city street at night. There appears to be emergency vehicles. The road is empty except for a few parked cars.
The back of a man as he walks down the street then a series of shots where he meets a group of women, begins to kiss and become intimate with one.
He hands her something to snort which she puts by her nose.
Shots of different men handing the man money. We also see people taking drugs.
The man meets a woman on the street, becomes intimate, goes back to a room where she sleeps naked then walk out in the city again.
A scene in a club of people dancing. A female stripper is on stage. Two women kiss each other backstage as the man watches.
The man gets into an argument with another man and is hit in the face with a glass that smashes.
A police car is parked by a building.
Somebody smokes drugs outside a building with a neon sign that says "Enter" and further writing in Japanese script.
A shaven headed young man, Oscar, looks in the mirror.
He opens the door to a bearded man who enters his apartment, takes a bottle from the fridge and makes a drink.
The two of them walk out onto a city street. They enter a bar. A shout is heard. Oscar hides in the bathroom. A gun is fired. Oscar looks at his blood stained hands then falls to the floor.
Two men crouch near Oscar as he lies on the floor. Another person is screaming while people carry them away. A lone figure runs down a dark, empty street at night.
We see a gaudy neon sign on front of a building that reads: Sex. Money. Power.
A topless woman dances in a club filled with red light. A woman throws a glass that smashes in a messy apartment.
A bird's eye view of the city, just above the buildings looking down on the roads.
A caption reads: A Gaspar Noe Film
A few buildings lit up with neon signs. One of them reads: Love Motel.
A caption reads: Enter The Void
A shot of the city at night from further away before the camera pans up to the dark sky.
Eight years after the controversial and shocking Irreversible, director Gaspar Noé cemented his reputation as the enfant terrible of New French Extremity with perhaps his most challenging film to date - a hallucinatory meditation on life, death and rebirth, shot entirely in the first person.
American siblings Oscar (Nathaniel Brown) and Linda (Paz de la Huerta, The Limits of Control) eke out a shared existence in Tokyo - he by dealing drugs, she by working as a stripper. However, tragedy strikes when a deal turns sour and Oscar is shot by the police. As his lifeless body lies on the floor of a public toilet, his soul floats high above the neon-drenched Tokyo streets, observing the effect of his death on his sister and reliving the events in his life that brought him to this juncture.
Described by Noé himself as a "psychedelic melodrama", Enter the Void boasts mesmerising cinematography by the award-winning Benoît Debie (Climax, Spring Breakers) and a hypnotic soundtrack of experimental and electronic music. Powerful and transcendent, it offers viewers an immersive cinematic experience like no other.
- High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentations of both the 143-minute UK theatrical cut and the full-length 161-minute director's cut
- Original lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 and PCM 2.0 stereo soundtracks
- Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
- Enter the Sensorium, a brand new visual essay on the film by author and critic Alexandra Heller-Nicolas
- Brand new video interview with typography designer and long-term Noé collaborator Tom Kan
- 8 deleted scenes
- Archival Making of - Special Effects featurette
- Archival Vortex featurette
- Archival DMT Loop featurette
- French and international theatrical trailers
- 8 teaser trailers
- 3 unused trailers
- Image gallery
- Limited edition packaging with reversible sleeve featuring two choices of artwork
- Illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film by Jon Towlson and Rich Johnson, and an oral history of the film by Steven Hanley
- Fold-out double-sided poster featuring two choices of artwork
- Six double-sided, postcard-sized artcards
- Arrow Video
- 142 mins approx
- Gaspar Noé
- 18
- Cyril Roy
- Paz De La Huerta
- English SDH
- 2.35:1
- 2009
- English
- 1
- B
- Arrow Video
Enter The Void Limited Edition
-
Blu-ray
RRP: £29.99
£24.99
Save: £5.00
Sold out
-
4 instalments of £6.24 with clearpay Learn more
Delivery & Returns
A caption flashes: Cannes Film Festival. Official selection in competition
The view of a car reaching the end of a tunnel at night.
A caption reads: Enter the Void.
Focus on the lights at the top of a tunnel.
A Japanese city street at night. There appears to be emergency vehicles. The road is empty except for a few parked cars.
The back of a man as he walks down the street then a series of shots where he meets a group of women, begins to kiss and become intimate with one.
He hands her something to snort which she puts by her nose.
Shots of different men handing the man money. We also see people taking drugs.
The man meets a woman on the street, becomes intimate, goes back to a room where she sleeps naked then walk out in the city again.
A scene in a club of people dancing. A female stripper is on stage. Two women kiss each other backstage as the man watches.
The man gets into an argument with another man and is hit in the face with a glass that smashes.
A police car is parked by a building.
Somebody smokes drugs outside a building with a neon sign that says "Enter" and further writing in Japanese script.
A shaven headed young man, Oscar, looks in the mirror.
He opens the door to a bearded man who enters his apartment, takes a bottle from the fridge and makes a drink.
The two of them walk out onto a city street. They enter a bar. A shout is heard. Oscar hides in the bathroom. A gun is fired. Oscar looks at his blood stained hands then falls to the floor.
Two men crouch near Oscar as he lies on the floor. Another person is screaming while people carry them away. A lone figure runs down a dark, empty street at night.
We see a gaudy neon sign on front of a building that reads: Sex. Money. Power.
A topless woman dances in a club filled with red light. A woman throws a glass that smashes in a messy apartment.
A bird's eye view of the city, just above the buildings looking down on the roads.
A caption reads: A Gaspar Noe Film
A few buildings lit up with neon signs. One of them reads: Love Motel.
A caption reads: Enter The Void
A shot of the city at night from further away before the camera pans up to the dark sky.
Eight years after the controversial and shocking Irreversible, director Gaspar Noé cemented his reputation as the enfant terrible of New French Extremity with perhaps his most challenging film to date - a hallucinatory meditation on life, death and rebirth, shot entirely in the first person.
American siblings Oscar (Nathaniel Brown) and Linda (Paz de la Huerta, The Limits of Control) eke out a shared existence in Tokyo - he by dealing drugs, she by working as a stripper. However, tragedy strikes when a deal turns sour and Oscar is shot by the police. As his lifeless body lies on the floor of a public toilet, his soul floats high above the neon-drenched Tokyo streets, observing the effect of his death on his sister and reliving the events in his life that brought him to this juncture.
Described by Noé himself as a "psychedelic melodrama", Enter the Void boasts mesmerising cinematography by the award-winning Benoît Debie (Climax, Spring Breakers) and a hypnotic soundtrack of experimental and electronic music. Powerful and transcendent, it offers viewers an immersive cinematic experience like no other.
- High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentations of both the 143-minute UK theatrical cut and the full-length 161-minute director's cut
- Original lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 and PCM 2.0 stereo soundtracks
- Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
- Enter the Sensorium, a brand new visual essay on the film by author and critic Alexandra Heller-Nicolas
- Brand new video interview with typography designer and long-term Noé collaborator Tom Kan
- 8 deleted scenes
- Archival Making of - Special Effects featurette
- Archival Vortex featurette
- Archival DMT Loop featurette
- French and international theatrical trailers
- 8 teaser trailers
- 3 unused trailers
- Image gallery
- Limited edition packaging with reversible sleeve featuring two choices of artwork
- Illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film by Jon Towlson and Rich Johnson, and an oral history of the film by Steven Hanley
- Fold-out double-sided poster featuring two choices of artwork
- Six double-sided, postcard-sized artcards
- Arrow Video
- 142 mins approx
- Gaspar Noé
- 18
- Cyril Roy
- Paz De La Huerta
- English SDH
- 2.35:1
- 2009
- English
- 1
- B
- Arrow Video
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at the beginning there was...
A movie for the senses, not. mind only please.
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