![]() ![]() ![]() I guess I am just amazed that this film didn't cop out. These sections are little more than EPKs to promote this film but I enjoyed buzzing around through them. We find out how the star, director and producer work together, we see how the effects in the film are pulled off, and we also see how they achieved things like the Split-Time Chase. In total there are ten of these and they cover various aspects of this movie. With a run time of 37 minutes this is an assortment of featurettes with titles like The Ferry Explosion, Cameras of Deja Vu, and First Team: Denzel, Tony & Jerry. This isn't as easy as it seems and he soon realizes that once you know the future, it takes a great deal of precision to alter it. It soon becomes clear to Carlin that not only is he going to use this device as a time machine to capture the victim, he's also going to try and save Claire's life. In trying to piece together who pulled the explosion off, Carlin finds himself enamored with Claire (Paula Patton) one of the victim's of the explosion. Once Carlin says "yes" he is shown a device that they have created that allows people to look back four days into the past. After seeing him in action, he is approached by Agent Andrew Pryzwarra (Val Kilmer) and asked to be on his special investigative team. ![]() We don't get inundated with information, and when it seems like we might be overloaded, Washington's Doug Carlin finally starts throwing things in an effort to have the science, and the people describing it to him, make more sense.Ī ferry in New Orleans blows up and Federal Agent Doug Carlin is on the case. Mixing cutting edge technology, theories on time travel and the solid acting chops of Denzel Washington, Deja Vu works because it simply puts across the idea of how time travel might happen. ![]()
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