X
The Killing (1956) DVD Stanley Kubrick Sterling
The Killing (1956) DVD Stanley Kubrick Sterling

The Killing (1956) DVD Stanley Kubrick Sterling Hayden

Product ID : 55189775


Galleon Product ID 55189775
UPC / ISBN 312333660081
Shipping Weight 0 lbs
I think this is wrong?
Model
Manufacturer Generic
Shipping Dimension 0 x 0 x 0 inches
I think this is wrong?
-
No price yet.
Price not yet available.

Pay with

The Killing (1956) DVD Stanley Kubrick Sterling Features

  • Format: DVD

  • Language: English

  • Subtitle: English, Korean, None (All removable)

  • Region: Region 0/All (1/2/3/4/5/6)

  • Screen Format: NTSC / Full Screen / Black & White

  • Running time: 87 min

  • Cover has the foreign language text as the picture shows. Some Korean letters on the front & back cover - Korean import release

  • Remove/Choose Subtitles? Click “subtitle” button on your DVD player remote Press the subtitle button and the options will pop up on the screen. No Sound? Click “audio” or “language” button on your DVD player remote Actual covers of the item that you will receive, Click the image to see it large. All our products are examined and registered by KMRB (Korea Media Rating Board) This is region free item and playable any types of DVD player.


About The Killing (1956) DVD Stanley Kubrick Sterling

At the beginning of the film, the viewer is presented with several unrelated, at first glance, people who have one thing in common - they all desperately need money. The voice-over says that these are "pieces of a single puzzle." Gradually it becomes clear that these people - a former prisoner, a hippodrome cashier, a corrupt policeman, a sniper, a Russian hero - are involved in a plan to rob the hippodrome, which Johnny Clay, recently released from prison, carefully thought out. The accomplices hope to break the unheard-of sum of 2 million. A careless racist remark by a sniper, an excessive frankness of a cashier with his wife - such small oversights turn out to be enough for Clay's seemingly perfect plan to go awry with the inexorability of a Greek tragedy ...