Current Sales Rank: 1973 All-Time Sales Rank: 2979
| Overall Rating:    4.25 out of 5, including 1 review Be the first customer to comment on this Title. |
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There'sia new kind of hero onitheistreets!
Max Julien is The Mack, a sharp, smooth-talking hustler, who's back on the streets after five years in prison. He's joined by his street-wise sidekick Slim (comic legend Richard Pryor, Stir Crazy, Silver Streak) and tough-talkin' brother (Roger E Mosley, A Thin Line Between Love and Hate, TV's Magmum P.I.). They've got the brains, the muscle and the cool to take on the takers and push out the pushers. It takes a street fighter to clean up the streets. It takes The Mack and his pack to do it right!
Filled with raw power, The Mack is an uncompromising look at urban survival with sharp-edged insight and non-stop action!
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Features:
| Feature-Length Audio Commentary with Star Max Julien, Director Michael Campus, Producer Harvey Bernhard, actors Dick Anthony Williams, Annazette Chase, Don Gordon and George Murdok
Original Documentary: Mackin' Ain't Easy
Theatrical Trailer
Interactive Menus
| Video:
| | Widescreen 1.85:1 Color | | Audio: (more info) | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Surround [CC]
ENGLISH: DTS Surround [CC]
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| Studio: New Line Home Entertainment Production Year: 1973 Release Date: 2/10/2004
Length: 110 mins Rating: R Chapters: 24
| Includes: Audio Commentary
Packaging: Keep Case Number of Discs: 1 Disc: SS-DL Item Code: N5566 UPC Code: 794043556623
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Overall Rating:    4.25 out of 5, including 1 review Be the first customer to comment on this Title. |
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Empire Review
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My pimp hand is strong - 4.25 out of 5 (9/9/2002)
One of the titles that I remember getting endless requests for from my VHS
days was THE MACK. I also remember a New York friend of mine telling me that
the movie still packed the house after ten years and that he couldn't keep
the movie in stock.
The odd thing was that despite his recommendation, I never could find a
copy here in the mean streets of Pittsburgh, so I just assumed that the
movie was a good example of the era and I left it at that.
Now, after just watching the New Line
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