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Side #1 --
Play Movie
Special Features
Audio Features
Isolated Music Score
Dolby Digital 5.1
Trailers & TV Spots
Teaser Trailer #1
Teaser Trailer #2
"Ghost" TV Spot #1
"Ghost" TV Spot #2
Teaser Trailer #3
"Hitman" TV Spot
Outtakes
Ghost Dog:The Odyssey
"Cakes: Music Video|||
Cast & Crew
Forest Whitaker
John Tormey
Isaach De Bankolé
Henry Silva
Cliff Gorman
Victor Argo
Tricia Vessey
Camille Winbush
Gene Ruffini
Richard Portnow
Chapters
Side #1 --
0. Scene Index
1. Main Titles [2:31]
2. Ghost Dog [4:45]
3. Understanding All Ways [2:56]
4. A Hit Is Planned [3:35]
5. A Successful Hit [2:41]
6. Message Via Carrier Pigeon [5:13]
7. Condolences [3:14]
8. Vengeance for Handsome Frank [8:15]
9. A Literary Discussion [8:25]
10. The Ice Cream Man [3:18]
11. Hit Men [2:04]
12. "I'm Your Retainer" [8:03]
13. Amazing Boat on the Rooftop [3:03]
14. A Decision Made in Seven Breaths [3:18]
15. "The Poetry of War" [7:10]
16. A New Set of Clothes [2:22]
17. Surveillance [4:42]
18. Dash in Headlong [4:48]
19. Bear Hunting Season [2:04]
20. "You Just Iced a Woman" [3:41]
21. Borrowing a Car [4:20]
22. A Sudden Rainstorm [3:52]
23. "Cold Lampin' with Flavor" [2:24]
24. "Always See Everything" [7:11]
25. The Final Shoot-out Scene [6:03]
26. The End Is Important [:56]
27. End Credits [4:32]
Features
30-minute special feature: "The Odyssey: The Journey into the Life of a Samurai"
Art Director - Mario R. Ventenilla
Casting - Ellen Lewis
Casting - Laura Rosenthal
Cinematographer - Robby Müller
Composer (Music Score) - RZA
Costume Designer - John Dunn
First Assistant Director - Jude Gorjanc
Production Designer - Ted Berner
Sound/Sound Designer - Drew Kunin
From Stranger Than Paradise on, cities in Jim Jarmusch films have been a place where disparate elements and various cultures come into contact, and occasionally into conflict, with one another. Ghost Dog is the director's most explicit examination of this vision, its central character born into one culture, expressing a strong elective affinity toward another, and indentured to yet a third. Where some directors would have used the set up to explore a sense of postmodern confusion, Jarmusch is clearly fascinated with the syncretism at work. It helps that he has an actor as thoughtful and effective as Forest Whitaker in the lead role, conveying a strange mixture of melancholy and professional pride as he goes about his business. In addition to comparing two endagered, honor-bound ways of life -- Mafia and samurai -- Ghost Dog's profession also allows Jarmusch to continue the commentary on American violence initiated in 1995's Dead Man. When Ghost Dog kills, the director portrays the violence unflinchingly, not willing to compromise his vision of the character. Does his life of violence simply echo his environment? Does his philosophical foundation justify his way of life, or does he use it merely to excuse his choices? As usual, Jarmusch's deadpan approach leaves it to viewers to fill in the blanks, and as usual his unwillingness to supply the answers contributes greatly to the impact of the film. ~ Keith Phipps, Rovi