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The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy (2 Disc Steelbook Collector's Edition) [DVD] [2005]
 
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The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy (2 Disc Steelbook Collector's Edition) [DVD] [2005]

DVD ~ Martin Freeman
2.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Customers buy this item with The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy [DVD] [1981] DVD ~ Simon Jones

The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy (2 Disc Steelbook Collector's Edition) [DVD] [2005] + The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy [DVD] [1981]
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The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy (2 Disc Steelbook Collector's Edition) [DVD] [2005]
60% buy the item featured on this page:
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy (2 Disc Steelbook Collector's Edition) [DVD] [2005] 2.5 out of 5 stars (2)
£13.57
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy [DVD] [1981]
17% buy
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy [DVD] [1981] 4.7 out of 5 stars (39)
£4.98
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy [DVD] [2005]
13% buy
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy [DVD] [2005] 3.0 out of 5 stars (2)
£3.98
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (2 Disc Edition) [DVD] [2005]
9% buy
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (2 Disc Edition) [DVD] [2005] 2.9 out of 5 stars (147)

Product details

  • Actors: Martin Freeman, Mos Def, Sam Rockwell, Zooey Deschanel, Stephen Fry
  • Directors: Garth Jennings
  • Format: PAL
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainm
  • DVD Release Date: 9 Jun 2008
  • Run Time: 104 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0015RAT0S
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 30,781 in DVD (See Bestsellers in DVD)

    Popular in this category:

    #83 in  DVD > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Cult Series

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk
After twenty years stuck in development (a mere blink compared to how long it takes to find the answer to life, the universe, and everything), The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy has finally been turned into a movie. Following the radio play, TV series, commemorative towel, and books, this latest installment in the sci-fi-comedy franchise is based on the screenplay and detailed notes by Douglas Adams.

For those unfamiliar with the story, everyman Arthur Dent (Martin Freeman)wakes up one morning to discover that his house is set to be demolished to make room for a bypass. Little does he know the entire planet Earth is also set to be destroyed for an interplanetary bypass by the Vogons, a hideous and bureaucratic race of aliens realized in the film by Jim Henson's Creature Shop. Whisked off the planet by his best friend, alien-in-disguise Ford Prefect (Mos Def), Dent embarks on a goofy jaunt across the galaxy accompanied by his trusty Hitchhiker's Guide, which looks like a really fancy PDA.

The guide itself provides some of the funniest bits of the movie, little animated shorts that explain the ludicrous life forms and extraterrestrial phenomena our heroes encounter. Along the way Arthur meets the two-headed party animal/president of the galaxy Zaphod Beeblebrox (Sam Rockwell) and develops an unrequited crush on fellow earthling Trillian (Zooey Deschanel). The creatures and sets are inspired and answer to the sci-fi fan's primal need to see lots and lots of cool stuff. In particular, there's John Malkovich's creepy, CGI-enhanced Humma Kavula. He's a guru leading a religion that worships the gigantic nose that allegedly sneezed the universe into existence (naturally all their prayers end not with "Amen" but with "Bless you.") The aliens the team encounters are inspired creations, eminently worthy of action figure-ification, and the sets belie an attention to detail worthy of freeze-framing. Fans of the other Hitchhiker... manifestations, namely the British TV series, will be amused by a number of in-jokes sprinkled throughout the movie.

Where the story stumbles is in the telling--as books, the Hitchhiker's Guide... was foremost about goofy and brilliant ideas that raised questions about our place in the universe while getting a laugh. The cast seems at times bewildered, at least when Sam Rockwell isn't picking pieces of scenery out of his teeth, perhaps a natural reaction to an adaptation of a book with no traditional plot. The movie has enough trouble figuring out how to get the characters from one fantastical location to the next that Adams's funniest concepts often feel left in the dust. While the reverence the filmmakers felt toward Adams's legacy is apparent, one wonders what we could have expected had the creator of this science fiction universe lived to see it with his own eyes. --Ryan Boudinot



Synopsis
The long-awaited film version of Douglas Adams' The Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy, based on his five-book series, is a funny, wacky, highly creative ride through a bizarre universe. Martin Freeman (Tim from The Office) stars as Arthur Dent, a British everyman suddenly thrust into intergalactic intrigue when the earth is destroyed by the Vogons to make room for an interspatial highway. Arthur travels the skyways with good friend Ford Prefect (Mos Def), an alien writer for an electronic encyclopedia called The Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Things get downright dangerous--and absolutely hysterical--when Arthur and Ford thumb a ride with the president of the universe, two-headed Zaphod Beeblebrox (a wild and crazy Sam Rockwell); earthling Tricia McMillan (Zooey Deschanel), whom Arthur once had a thing for back in England; and a perpetually depressed robot named Marvin (voiced by Alan Rickman, played by Warwick Davis). With much of the galaxy after them, the motley crew makes its way toward a super-computer that just might be able to provide them with the ultimate question; they already know the answer. Based on a second-draft script written by Adams himself, who died shortly thereafter, The Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a winning film that rightfully earns its place in the storied Hitchiker's... lore. And for an extra little bonus, make sure to sit through all of the credits.


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not great..., 2 Feb 2009
By ds (Whitby, UK) - See all my reviews
  
The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy was Douglas Adams' epitaph, his best known (but not necessarily his best) work. Anyone interested in this film will probably know about the multifarious versions that have littered countless media and about the almost eternal gestation of the movie of the book of the towel.

It's not bad.

But it's not great either, which given the material, is a bit of a puzzle. And a disappointment.

Firstly, what's good about the film? Well, how it looks, for a start. The visual design is beautiful. Watchers of the rather more ramshackle original TV series will marvel at the care with which visuals and audio have been created. There are lots of loving little nods to previous incarnations of the story everywhere, including lovely little cameos by Simon Jones and the original Marvin, which is nice for a fan to watch. Clearly Stephen Fry is a good choice for the book, on so many levels. The book graphics are also vey well done and support Fry's vocals beautifully.

And, actually, the cast are mostly rather good too. Sam Rockwell did chew scenery rather playing everyone's favourite larcenous Galactic Prez but it's quite hard to play the big Z any other way. And of course, at the centre, Martin Freeman. He manages to pull off a mix of rather weary resignation and utter befuddlement beautifully.

The first time I watched this film I really didn't like Mos Def's take on ford Prefect. However, after multiple watches I'm much more impressed. For those of us used to Susan Sheridan's original Trillian in the radio series, Zooey Deschanel takes a bit of getting used to. It's less jarring if Sandra Dickinson's Trillian from the TV show was your first call. Having said that, she too was generally good and brought some nice touches to a role DNA always described (and regretted) as rather shallowly defined.

However, it wasn't all positive. In order to fit things into the movie, it's clear that things had to be pruned. But some of the decisions are inexplicable. For instance, when Arthur has his confrontation with Prosser, and is informed about the plans for the demolition of his home having been on display in the planning office for a year, the movie sees Arthur's orignial rapidly spiralling tale of trying to find them truncated to a limp, 'they were in a cellar', which pretty much destroys the momentum and the equivalence we are supposed to infer between what both Prosser and the Vogons are doing. This is a common happening throughout the film, with many of the great verbal jokes rather viciously pruned and made ot give way to visuals.

Which brings me on to Humma Kavula: apparently a DNA idea. The premise is pretty good, but the whole Humma Kavula plotline just vanishes off the radar and is left flapping around wondering where to go. In fact, the Point of View Gun riff that goes with it is a great idea, but is left hanging, utterly disappearing at the end of the movie (does anyone actually pick up the gun in the end? Where has it gone?). It seems awfully lazy that this supposedly terrifying weapon is completely forgotten at the denouement, to serve the ends of the last real problem with this film.

For me, the worst problem of all is the inevitable Hollywood-isation of the Arthur-Trillian relationship. One of the joys of the original story is that a lot of surpessed tension exists between them (especially form Arthur's side) and is never quite resolved, not even entirely in book 5 of the novels, Mostly Harmless . Instead, what we get is a typical, 'boy meets girl, girl runs away with alien, boy escapes destroyed planet, boy meets girl again and every one lives happily after' scenario. Once again, it feels just a bit lazy and cliched. It would have been nice to sidestep some of that for a change. But that's big studios for you...

As something of a completist fan, I have bought it; but not without some reservations, I must say.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars What a shame, 4 Mar 2009
By Vitamino (London) - See all my reviews
Watching this film makes me wonder whether it's actually possible to adapt 'The Hitch Hiker's Guide To The Galaxy' for the big screen. Why should it be so hard?

Well, there are probably several ways to do it but this film seems to suffer from certain constraints. The first is a lack of boldness. The first two HHGTG books have a nice narrative flow but lack a 'Hollywood Ending'. The story (like certain Monty Python films), rambles it's way through a series of delightful set pieces that hang from a beautiful plot arc. But this structure doesn't work when you're trying to make a blockbuster type of thing for americans to watch. So concessions have been made and diabolical liberties have been taken with the story.

In fact the story becomes warped and the film mutates into an unhappy mess. After a while there's no trace of Douglas left.

'Hitch Hikers' is also a very British book and a lot of the humour in this film is a dreadful mid-Atlantic compromise. Would 'The Life of Brian' have been any good if Brian got the girl and rode off into the sunset?

The design of the Vogons are great. That's partly because they look just like the ones in the TV version. But other design elements fail dismally. The most obvious is Marvin. He is not a cute dwarf android with sad eyes and a giant head. His character as written doesn't suit this interpretation at all. I really don't hark after the BBC designs for nostalgia's sake, they were just better. In fact the Marvin robot from the TV show appears in the background during one scene (as a knowing nod to the fans), and it makes you want to cheer because the rest of the design is so far off target. The impossibly wonderful 'Heart of Gold' spacecraft looks like a silly golf ball and it soon dawns that the designers were thinking "lets make this quirky".

But the most obvious and immediate fault is the casting. Martin Freeman as Arthur Dent is just too weedy, too useless. I know Dent was written as an ineffectual loser but I found it hard to see him as that pathetic. Sam Rockwell is a class act but he's no Zaphod Beeblebrox and Mos Def? Who in their right mind cast him as Ford Prefect?

This film is such a wasted opportunity. There was so much good material to work from and the potential to make something really special, something that could have outdone the original radio show.

For those who don't know the book this is a rather pointless and messy film. For those who loved the book and the radio series it's an unhappy disaster.

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