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War, Inc. | 
enlarge | Director: Joshua Seftel Actors: John Cusack, Hilary Duff, Marisa Tomei, Joan Cusack, Dan Aykroyd Studio: FIRST LOOK PICTURES Category: DVD
List Price: $28.98 Buy Used: $6.18 You Save: $22.80 (79%)
New (42) Used (29) Collectible (1) from $6.18
Avg. Customer Rating: 38 reviews Sales Rank: 5976
Format: Ac-3, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Ntsc, Subtitled, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 107 Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.7
MPN: 12199 UPC: 687797121998 EAN: 0687797121998 ASIN: B0015XHQVC
Theatrical Release Date: 2008 Release Date: October 14, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: !!!PLEASE READ!!! DISC IN VERY GOOD CONDITION! RENTAL COPY! HAS RENTAL STICKERS! SOME HAVE MARKS, WEAR AND TEAR IN BOXES AND CASE! SHIPS WITHIN 24 HRS (M-F) FREE 1ST CLASS SHIPPING UPGRADE ON SINGLE/DBL DISC. MEDIA MAIL ON BOXSETS! ASSURED QUALITY SERVICE!!! CHECK AMAZON.COM FOR DELIVERY ESTIMATES!
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Amazon.com A wobbly mix of violence and sentiment, iWar, Inc./i takes up where iGrosse Pointe Blank/i left off. A conscience-stricken killer in the previous film, producer/co-writer Cusack now plays an international assassin. In Joshua Seftel's political satire, corporations operate like governments. In the volatile nation of Turaqistan, Cusack's hot sauce-addicted Brand Hauser sets his sights on Omar Sharif--the oil baron, not the actor (it's never clear why this is meant to be funny). As a cover, Hauser passes as the producer for an economic trade show with fellow operative Marsha (Joan Cusack) acting as his assistant. Trained by Southern smoothie Walken (Ben Kingsley) in his CIA days (depicted though flashbacks), Hauser now takes orders from an oily CEO (iGrosse Pointe/i co-star Dan Aykroyd). Offing Sharif, however, turns out to be harder than expected. Hauser's obstacles include left-wing journalist Natalie Hegalhuzen (Marisa Tomei) and foul-mouthed pop tart Yonica Babyyeah (Hilary Duff, erasing innocent images of iLizzy McGuire/i). Cusack and his crew come up with a few clever ideas, but too many crass gags blunt their thesis about military contractors run amok. Pitched somewhere between Stanley Kubrick's iDr. Strangelove/i and Mike Judge's iIdiocracy/i, iWar, Inc./i registers as more of a miss than a hit. On the plus side, Cusack and Tomei have a snappy rapport; it's the more over-the-top performers who look out of place, especially Ms. Cusack and Kingsley, though the latter's deft turn as a boozy hit man in the overlooked iYou Kill Me/i almost makes up for this misfire. i--Kathleen C. Fennessy/i
Product Description A political satire set in turaqistan a country occupied by an american private corporation run by a former us vice-president. In an effort to monopolize the opportunities the war-torn nation offers the corporations ceo hires a troubled hit man to kill a middle east oil minister. Studio: First Look Home Entertain Release Date: 10/14/2008 Starring: John Cusack Marisa Tomei Run time: 107 minutes Rating: R
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| Customer Reviews: Read 33 more reviews...
War, Inc January 9, 2009 John Cusack - Great Actor - bad materialbr /Hilary Duff - Potential there - total wastebr /Marisa Tomei - Great Actress - bad materialbr /Joan Cusack - Great Actress - bad materialbr /Dan Aykroyd - Great Actor - bad materialbr /was hoping it was a spin on Gross Pointe Blank. Not in the same playing field at all. br /sad. Fantastic Talent wasted
Spiritual Sequel to Grosse Point Blank Does Not Disappoint January 9, 2009 This sharp and witty political satire may be remembered as Hilary Duff's finest hour a decade from now, but most viewers will be occupied and intrigued by John Cusak's return to material that was so brilliantly spun in Grosse Point Blank. Though lacking the subtlety of the earlier film this movie has its moments and what priceless moments they are. Don't let anyone spoil this one for you and watch it with as open a mind as possible. Enjoy!
War Inc., Prophetic Flick on Corporate Warfare January 4, 2009 Well, John Cusack is in an other kooky flick that's take place in the not-so-distant future in an imaginary country called Turaqistan, of which has recently been defeated by contracted soldiers in the name of corporate greed. Like a reality trade show, Turaqistan is going to become the star of an international show in which it is rebuilt with the help of Tammerlane sponsorship. The protagonist is sent to the country under the cover of a contractor-producer for the major rebuilding show. But really he's an assassin sent to take out an Omar Sharif, the oil minister who attempts to nationalize certain pipe-lines that have yet to be constructed. This assassin, Hauser, is a bitter man, a lonely man, a man who found his wife murdered and his child kidnapped. Only the continuation of corrupt international corporate warfare will pay his bills.br /br /Under his cover job, Hauser mostly chaperoned what was considered the Brittany Spears of Turaqistan. Yonika is a sexually obsessed singer who is future wife of the heir to the Turaqistan throne. Though Hauser is later exposed to her secret obsession with playing acoustic ballads. In English. This is somehow supposed to be more true and native to the woman. I didn't really buy it. Wouldn't she be speaking in her own tongue, using native instruments and styles? Maybe I'm just crazy.br /br /There's also a journalist who protested the war and naturally hates Hauser. For some random reason Hauser grows an infatuation with the woman. Her character only serves as a plot-device to get the three characters into an abandoned manor for an interview with the singer, sponsored by Houser. Here, they are attacked by the fiance's entourage who are now shunned by the government for attempting to digitize Yonika's consummation on DVD. Really though, they were used as fodder by Hauser and Sharif so that the heir to the Turaqi throne remains blameless for such a scandal.br /br /The entourage was a little ticked.br /br /But most end up dead and the hands of Hauser.br /br /There are a few more action scenes that involve the journalist's kidnapping and eventual rescue. Hauser confronting his boss in an almost wacky chase scene along with the revelation of Hauser's daughter. Turns out, she's Yonika. What a twist! This was kind of ridiculous since there is almost no evidence in the beginning or middle scenes that give credit to Yonika's American origin. Other than the fact that she doesn't know who her father is. Whoopdi do. Seems a little extravagant for a kidnapper, who turns out to be Hauser's old boss, to raise a random girl in a Mid-Eastern nation to blossom into sexy pop star and marry heir to the Turaqi throne, just to make things weird for Hauser.br /br /But I digress.br /br /This flick is somewhat witty in an all too frightful satire of American corporate imperialism, but it just doesn't pull off the moral/satirical message that it attempts to convey. The acting and protagonist set-up is so inclined to an older flick that War, Inc. might as well have been called Gross Pointe Blank II: Revenge of Dan Ackroyd. The general plot development seemed so random at times that I wasn't sure if I was watching a movie about victims of a Middle Eastern war or victims of the screenwriter's strike. Then there were the pity scenes. That's right, the scenes given to Joan Cusack because she happens to be related to John Cusack. Again, Joan plays an all too often pissy secretary and over-embellishes everything she says. Cut her off!br /br /Likely Page Breakbr /The overall satire was kind of ironic as well. Obviously it illustrates the growing concern of corporate greed on an international scale and man's obsession with pop culture. But a lot of action scenes are initiated by an entourage of dim-witted Mid-Easterners that must be pulverized by the white anti-hero, Hauser. A little too great white hope symbolism, though I do appreciate the insanity of the American troops out in the battle-field listening to metal as they spray bullets into an already war-torn city. Overall the ratio between exposing the wrongs of American imperialism and fundamentalist terrorism is pretty even.br /br /The end of the movie was definitely something left to be desired. It's like they threw a bunch of annoyingly inconsistent characters into one big happy family after the whole daughter situation is discovered. I'm just glad that I saw a missile chase after their plane at the end. If only Joan Cusack's character was on it.
Kinda Blah January 3, 2009 I loved "Grosse Point Blank" and "High Fidelity" with Cusack and "My Cousin Vinny" with Tomei. Didn't love this movie, though. Although the production quality was really good and the acting was decent, it just didn't work for me. It seemed like it was mixing too many genres and not doing any of them justice.
What a strange smart little movie December 31, 2008 I loved it. Take John Cusack, add 1 part Brazil and pour over Starship Troopers, and you've got a hilariously bizaare commentary on geopolitics and the industrial war machine. br /br /Its dark, and I mean, almost navy. Its only downfall is its heaviness, and sometimes it and the metaphors are jammed down your throat a little too often, but the ensemble cast is actually phenomenal, with Ben Kingsley and even Hillary Duff doing a great job (I can't believe I typed that).br /br /You will laugh, if you have a dark sense of humor and like smart comedy. This movie is very timely, with the rise of the military farming out their work to private security (who are portrayed to be the craziest of all the crazies in the movie). Its small wonder it tanked in the box office, but if you have a proclivity towards movies like Dr. Strangelove, you'll find this to be one of the better movies you watched this year.
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