The Game [Blu-ray]
Original price was: £14.98.£8.24Current price is: £8.24.

Price: $14.98 - $8.24
(as of Sep 20, 2025 02:04:18 UTC – Details)
There are no rules in The Game…which will make life very difficult for Nicholas Van Orton (Michael Douglas), a successful San Francisco businessman who is always in control. Van Orton lives a wellordered, wealthy lifestyle until an unexpected birthday gift from his wayward brother Conrad (Sean Penn) threatens to destroy it all. Against his will, Nicholas has been enrolled in a game—a strange and “profound life experience” that begins quietly, but soon erupts into a domino effect of devastating events. Van Orton has to win this deadly, live-action game before it consumes his entire life.
Bonus Content:
- Theatrical Teaser
- Theatrical Trailer
Aspect Ratio : 2.40:1
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 1.69 ounces
Item model number : 61127530
Director : David Fincher
Media Format : Blu-ray, Widescreen
Run time : 2 hours and 9 minutes
Release date : July 14, 2015
Actors : Deborah Kara Unger, James Rebhorn, Michael Douglas, Peter Donat, Sean Penn
Producers : Cean Chaffin, Steve Golin
Language : English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1), French (DTS 5.1)
Studio : Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
ASIN : B00WGUWDXO
Number of discs : 1
Best Sellers Rank: #2,027 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV) #283 in Drama Blu-ray Discs
Customer Reviews: 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 6,101 ratings var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });
Customers say
Customers find this movie to be a great Michael Douglas film with many twists and turns, describing it as an electrifying psychological thriller that keeps them engaged throughout. The acting receives high praise, particularly Michael Douglas’s riveting performance, and the movie maintains a good pace throughout. Customers consider it worth the price and appreciate its production quality.
12 reviews for The Game [Blu-ray]
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Original price was: £14.98.£8.24Current price is: £8.24.

Keith Mirenberg –
THE GAME-This couldn’t happen in real life, could it?
THE GAME is another wonderful Michael Douglas film and I rate it at 5 stars. This film will really be appreciated by fans that enjoy dissecting a complex plot. The story, although hard to swallow and farfetched, was exceptionally engaging and kept my interest from start to finish. I thought on my first viewing that this film would have a sequel, but was proven wrong by events.THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION COULD RUIN ENJOYMENT OF THE PLOT:Nicholas Van Orton played by Michael Douglas is a wealthy banker, but a loner who even spends his birthday away from people. In the year of his 48th birthday (the age his father committed suicide and on the verge of classic mid-life crisis) his distant brother gives Nicholas a card giving him entry to unusual entertainment provided by something called Consumer Recreation Services (CRS). Giving in to curiosity, Nicholas visits CRS and all kinds of weird things start to happen to him. Prior to admitting him to participate he is required to take a series of mental and physical tests which were apparently run to determine his strengths, weaknesses, and perhaps map out some sort of efficient “game plan” tailored just for him. One statement I remember CRS telling him is that if you don’t go to THE GAME, it will come to you.He receives a phone call telling him that he failed the tests and is rejected by the organization. He forgets about CRS, but then overhears several people talking about “the game” and what life-changing opportunities it provides. He notices several such “loud” conversations in public, and goes to the trouble of introducing himself and speaking with a couple of apparently new members of his private club. All they will tell him is they wish they were just starting “the game” and one man quotes the bible saying “where I was once blind I now can see”. Once he is certain he has actually been admitted to THE GAME, he tries to return to the offices of CRS where he received his tests, only to find that no signs of their facilities remain and for all effects, this organization never even “existed”.This initially “mild” form of harassment (i.e., being misinformed of his membership status, having drinks spilled on him in restaurants, strange people banging into him, folks behaving very strangely in rest rooms and other public places, empty toilets overflowing, his attaché case jamming at important business meetings, the pen CRS told him to keep leaking on his shirt, individuals collapsing in the street at his feet, etc.), gradually transitions to increasingly overt and often potentially life-threatening experiences which slowly work on his mental condition. All the more strange is the fact that he is provided the means of barely escaping his next experience by receiving an item or remembering a fact he learned during a prior event. Some examples of these increasingly life threatening events include: his estate being broken into and ransacked, being stranded in a darkened elevator, his cab driver driving his CRS taxi into the river almost drowning him, large crowds of people disappearing in a coordinated way from public places, being drugged, attacked by hooded gun men emerging from a large van marked Cable Repair Services, abducted and ultimately waking up in a crypt and stranded without cash, credit cards or passport in Mexico).The mental harassment is designed at first to merely embarrass or make uncomfortable, mildly inconvenience, then to be serious and painful, and after enough repetition and conditioning for him to associate these strange events, to effectively torture and eventually drive insane. Since almost every detail is staged redundantly there are no correct decisions left for him to make, and no avoiding the sequence of painful situations. He is ultimately like a caged animal walking wall to wall in a classic avoidance-avoidance conflict leading to insanity. The issue of the cost-effectiveness of this game plan is something the film never addresses, but we are too engrossed to think about this during the movie.One thing is certain, these people do not want to publicly kill him or leave any permanent record of injury due to anything other than a random event. The purpose of THE GAME seems not to be simple murder, but to professionally destroy, discredit and cause a very gradual physical and mental breakdown which will result in his being either jailed because of acting out displaced aggressions, hospitalized or institutionalized where he can “die” or be subjected to something while well out of public scrutiny.In his former professional life he could certainly have made enemies, and what better means could they use to destroy him with impunity? While his financial and mental conditions still enable him to investigate CRS, he believes he acquires “evidence” that one of the office workers at CRS was a hired professional actor, more likely to have been provided by Actors Equity than some private detective or intelligence agency (CIA?). As the story unfolds this evidence was probably “fed” to him as part of the plot which is just full of strange twists and complications, all leading him no place.His entire personality changes as he undergoes transformation from a strong business-world predator to the cowering subject of physical and mental harassment. It is sad but interesting to watch his gradual disintegration as forces outside of his control consume him. The ending was a bit strange and is the reason I thought there would be a sequel.IF THE ABOVE MATERIAL CAN RUIN THE ENDING THE FOLLOWING IS WORSE:The film can only be said to have a rediculous ending when Van Orton confronts his brother who he now believes is in on the game plan on the roof of the CRS building. At the end of the story after Van Orton believes he has shot his brother he actually jumps off the roof of the high rise CRS building intent on suicide because of his grief. He is surprised to learn after smashing through the break away glass of a fake skylight, that he safely lands on a huge airbag carefully placed to break his tremendous fall. He then sees his resurrected brother and all the other people dressed up in black tie to celebrate his birthday. It was, after all, just a “harmless” gag.At the end of the story there are no hard feelings and all gracious smiles as he is presented with the check for the elaborate hoaxes that CRS has staged for his “entertainment”. Even though he has probably aged over 30 years as a result of continuous mental trauma in just a number of days, he goes from table to table thanking the guests for making it a very special party. He even asks out the very beautiful and treacherous lady who slipped him a mickey during the ordeal. Well, the film was too entertaining for that very weak and silly ending to ruin it, but it did erode what I thought was (up until then) a very well done and thought out thriller.
Colorado counselor and self-help supporter –
underrated classic as relevant as when it first hit screens decades ago
An underrated classic, touching on themes of ‘awakening’, conditioning, trauma, woundedness, environment as a foundational aspect of our beliefs and behavior, and just a great flow of action and surprising twists you don’t see coming. I first watched this years ago and rented it again recently and it was just as powerful, relatable and touching.
PJ –
Intense, intriguing and enthralling. An awesome movie that is well worth watching.
Truly, this is one of Michael Douglas’s best movie. The movie is well conceived, well directed and well acted. An awesome cast. Thumbs way up.ðð¾
ABrown –
Just as described
Very Good Item, Very Good Packaging ~ Will buy again from this seller.
Yolanda D. Logan –
“Lick Your Wounds & Move Forward”
It has been a while since I watched the thriller movie entitled, âThe Gameâ starring Michael Douglas and Sean Penn. On those rare occasions, that I’ve gained an opportunity to view it on television, I always seem to gather a new perspective and/or enlarge my vision regarding life. Essentially, after Douglas’s character survived various challenging levels of the rather annoying, and later death defying game, thereâs one crucial scene that provided clarity, an affirmation, and a subsequent pause. At some point in the movie, he decided to place his faith in an appealing, perplexing, but mysterious woman. Normally, he would not entertain such a woman, but heâs compelled to do so, in an effort to retrieve information about his undesirable dilemma. Eventually, she drugs him, and when he abruptly awakes, he realizes that he was left for dead in a flimsy grave, which he was compelled to utilize some physical force, in order to escape.As he promptly walks out of a smoky cemetery (something nearby was burning), located in an unknown shanty town in Mexico. What followed was the most thought-provoking scene in the movie. Despite being rich, successful, handsome, he comes to realizes that heâs been betrayed. More importantly, heâs sitting in front of a small dirty shop, bungalow, who knows?? However, one thing is for certain, heâs lost, bleeding, penniless, filthy, grubby, and for a vulnerable moment, he begins to cry. At this point, I could only imagined that he thought, âI lived my entire life with such precision, how could I be in this predicament??After briefly licking his wounds, noticeably, Douglas facial expression does a 180. His entire attitude changed from â âWoe is meâ to âLetâs get to stepping.â At this very moment, I thought, thank GOD for the spirit of determination and perseverance. Thereafter, he promptly stood up, and started walking in hopes of finding a way out, which he did. He indeed became the hero in his own life. Thus, I determined that however long it takes a person to lick their wounds (i.e. one minute, one month, five years, etc.), after an unfortunate and/or unpleasant experience, is considered a defining moment. Needless to say, I canât truthfully say that Iâve relished every single movie that Michael Douglas has starred in, but for those who need to witness how to properly lick your wounds, move forward, and become the hero that youâve been waiting for, then watch this consummate, exemplary, and season actor show you how itâs done.
Remo Castrale –
Good story
Outstanding movie
bamamoma1 –
Amazing to the end
An incredibly nerve-racking movie that kept our interest for the full two hours.
Ruperto –
Ante todo, para evitar confusiones, este comentario es de la edición española en Blu ray (ASIN B0055KOJZC) de “The Game”, lanzada por Universal en versión 1 disco (con lo cual no hay un maldito extra de interés, como de costumbre). Varios idiomas (inglés y castellano incluidos) asà como subtÃtulos (castellano igualmente incluido). Muy buena calidad de imagen, especialmente interesante considerando el gran trabajo del director de fotografÃa Harris Savides que construye un ambiente frÃo, gélido e inquietante pero en escenarios habitualmente en penumbra o nocturnos, con lo cual la diferencia de calidad entre el DVD y el Bluray es notable. El sonido, por contra, aun siendo bueno, no brilla a la misma altura a mi juicio, pero en conjunto el nivel de calidad es alto.En relación a la pelÃcula en sÃ, es el tercer largometraje de Fincher, rodado en 1997 entre dos de sus grandes éxitos, “Seven” y “El Club de la Lucha”. En contraste, el recibimiento de “The Game” fue mucho menos entusiasta, pero con el tiempo la pelÃcula, pese a estar un tanto olvidada, ha demostrado su valÃa. Cuenta como un rico, duro y solitario hombre de negocios (Michael Douglas) recibe un regalo de su hermano (Sean Penn) consistente en la participación en una especie de “juego de rol” sobre el que no le da ninguna pista para mantener la sorpresa. La cosa se complica cuando el juego en cuestión empieza a resultar inquietante y progresivamente angustioso, a medida en que Douglas comienza a sentirse espiado, perseguido y acosado.El problema de “The Game” es que se vende como un thriller de acción, una especie de “Con la Muerte en los Talones” de Hitchcock, y aunque tiene algo de ello, no es eso exactamente. Por eso muchos espectadores se sintieron engañados al comprobar el lento ritmo de la pelÃcula (pasa al menos media hora de metraje hasta que el juego comienza verdaderamente) y el tiempo que emplea en analizar la existencia del protagonista, un triunfador que lo tiene todo a nivel material pero carece de cualquier vÃnculo afectivo real, habiendose endurecido y deshumanizado como consecuencia del suicidio de su padre cuando él era un niño, que le obligó a madurar antes de tiempo. El juego a que se ve sometido pone su ordenada vida de ejecutivo patas arriba y le hace pasar por situaciones angustiosas, pero también le revela lo vacÃa, frágil e insegura que es la posición de hombre poderoso, respetado y rico que él creÃa intocable. La interpretación de Michael Douglas es excelente (en la onda de su personaje de gran financiero de “Wall Street”, solo que aquà obligado por las circunstancias a humanizarse paulatinamente) y sobre todo el trabajo de Fincher y su equipo técnico es excepcional, creando un magnÃfico ambiente de frialdad y amenaza soterrada en callejuelas solitarias, grandes edificios o lujosos despachos que va haciéndose progresivamente inquietante hasta alcanzar la desesperación de un hombre que se siente, a su pesar, convertido en una marioneta sometida a un perverso juego que no controla, sino que le controla a él. El final de la historia (que no voy a contar, claro) también resultó decepcionante para muchos espectadores, pero a mà me parece, aunque algo rebuscado, acorde con el verdadero espÃritu de la pelÃcula. Una pelÃcula que requiere paciencia por parte del espectador en su pausada y minuciosa construcción de la telaraña argumental que envuelve a Douglas poco a poco, pero que, una vez vista y reflexionada adecuadamente, se revela como una de las joyas más infravaloradas de ese gran cineasta que es David Fincher.
kekepanable –
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Gabriel Fuentes Higuera –
No saqué de su envoltura el producto por qué leà antes en la caja sus prestaciones, y no está subtitulada al español, el producto se mantiene nuevo. Califico con 5 estrellas porque es una joya de pelÃcula, la vi hace muchos años! Saludos.
MovieBuff –
This is a mind twisting, suspenseful and on the edge of your seat sort of movie. Loved every minute of it. Loved Michael Douglas and Sean Penn !!
ménart stéphane –
merci a amazon est bpost