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Posté : 28.07.2008 - 17:42
par hulk
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Posté : 28.07.2008 - 20:59
par Superflo
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Posté : 29.07.2008 - 00:18
par Le Cancre
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Un polar sobre et efficace avé la poursuite automobile culte qui fait vroum-vrooooooom dedans... (Faut que je me dégotte "Gone in sixty seconds" première version)
Bullit mérite une édition Z2 digne de ce nom avec une meilleure définition et débarrassée de ces griffures et autres signes de changement de bobine.
Faut dire que c'est une des toutes premières édition DVD en France. Ceci explique peut-être cela.





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Film expurgé de ces rares et furtifs plans grivois...
Controversies and Easter eggs

Several Easter eggs were hidden in the film by its animators. Tape-based analog video such as VHS did not reveal these, but technologies with better image quality, such as the analog laserdisc, were said to reveal the phone number of then Disney CEO Michael Eisner. Also, when Benny the Cab wrecks at night and Eddie and Jessica roll out, there are two separate frames (2170-2172 on side 4 of the CAV laserdisc version), within two seconds of each other, showing a blurry shot of what seems to be her with no underwear[3]. Disney recalled the laserdisc and issued another disc, later claiming that it was an incorrectly painted cell. Disney also stated that the cell in question could be seen on the new disc and on the VHS version.

Two DVD versions edit the scene where Jessica Rabbit rolls out of the cab after Benny the Cab crashes. The 1999 DVD version reanimated the scene so that Jessica is wearing white panties underneath her dress. When the DVD set was reissued in 2002, the scene was reanimated so that a piece of Jessica's skirt strategically covers Jessica as she rolls down the hill.

Just before Eddie falls off the building, the words "For Good Times, call Allyson 'Wonderland'" can be seen on the wall behind him.

A brief scene consisting of the toon Baby Herman passing by a female (human) extra on the set of the opening cartoon and sticking his middle finger up her dress, and then coming back from under the dress with a drool of spit on his lip. This was edited out of the first DVD edition of the movie, though it can be found on editions of the VHS, laserdisc, and DVD issues.

In the sequence where Bob Hoskins is seen falling an incredibly long distance flanked by Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny, shockingly Mickey and Bugs are best friends.Gary Wolf, author of the original novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit?, corresponded with many fans of the film through written letters and the Internet, compiling an exhaustive listing of the many hidden "easter eggs" in the film and in the later Roger Rabbit short films. Wolf also sued Disney in 2001 for unpaid earnings related to the film.

In the piano duel scene with Donald Duck and Daffy Duck, Donald Duck wins the duel, Daffy says "I've worked with a lot of wise-quackers, but you are despicable." and, according to some, Donald replies, in his kazoo-like voice, "God damn stupid nigger...." Snopes, a noted debunking website, debunks this with the closed-captioning and Cartoon Network airings which records Donald as saying "Goddurn stubborn nitwit," though Snopes actually believes he's saying something akin to his typical exclamation, "Doggone stubborn little...That did it...waaa-aaaghghgh!" as is heard in many old Disney cartoons. The Vista Series DVD release uses the latter quote in its closed-captioning.
http://www.wikipedia.org

Posté : 29.07.2008 - 01:05
par peter wonkley
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Posté : 29.07.2008 - 01:26
par Pp79
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Posté : 29.07.2008 - 11:44
par creepers
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Posté : 29.07.2008 - 17:00
par peter wonkley
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Posté : 29.07.2008 - 19:54
par dino VELVET
Pp79 a écrit :Image
Tiens, je l'ai revu hier.

Posté : 29.07.2008 - 20:52
par peter wonkley
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Posté : 29.07.2008 - 21:04
par Superflo
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Posté : 30.07.2008 - 00:29
par peter wonkley
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Posté : 31.07.2008 - 01:38
par peter wonkley
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Posté : 31.07.2008 - 01:40
par peter wonkley
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Posté : 31.07.2008 - 08:30
par creepers
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Posté : 31.07.2008 - 12:18
par peter wonkley
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