The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified.
In Cold Blood Sony Playstation Game
PRODUCT DETAILS
UPC:031719268436
Condition:Used
Genre:Action & Adventure
Platform:Playstation 1
Region:NTSC (N. America)
ESRB:Teen
SKU:PS1_IN_COLD_BLOOD
———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.
rachael willard –
thank you
lawyeraau –
I recently had the opportunity to view this film on the Lifetime cable channel. A remake of the 1967 film of the same name, which was a fairly faithful adaptation of Truman Capote’s sensational non-fiction book, this version does not disappoint the viewer. Although it does not have the gritty, quasi-documentary feel of the black and white 1967 film, which starred Robert Blake and Scott Wilson in the two lead roles, it is compelling in its own right and a fairly faithful adaptation.The film follows the path of two losers, Dick Hickock (Anthony Edwards) and Perry Smith (Eric Roberts), as they careen towards catastrophe for themselves and for the hapless Klutter family of Holcomb, Kansas, upon whom they have set their sights. The pathology inherent in these two protagonists is chilling. It is also scary to think that a simple twist of fate would join them all in the annals of true crime.While Hickock was incarcerated, a fellow inmate, Floyd Wells, who at one time years ago had worked for Herbert Klutter, the patriarch of the Klutter family, told Hickock that Klutter was a wealthy farmer who kept a large store of cash in a safe in the house. Given many details of the family and their house, Hickock fantasizes of making a big score, courtesy of the Klutter family.When Hickock is released, he hooks up with his friend, Perry Smith. Smith, initially the more sympathetic of the two protagonists, is an individual with obvious psychological problems, deeply rooted in his troubled c.
kims stuff –
An oldie but goodie
Nancy Price ([email protected]) –
I loved close to Holcomb, Kansas when the Clutter family was murdered. This video and the original are a must have for me. The remake is much longer than the original movie. I enjoy both videos. I also recommend two other movies — Capote and Infamous. Both are Truman Capote’s association with the murders and the writing of his book. I recommend all four movies to those intrigued by a murder in a small town many years ago.
Paul G. Gentrup –
Another version of this story and I thought it was a good movie. There are many movies out there that have a historical background to them and this tells a gruesome story. I also have the old version.
lawyeraau –
A remake of the 1967 film of the same name, which was a fairly faithful adaptation of Truman Capote’s sensational non-fiction book, this version does not disappoint the viewer. Although it does not have the gritty, quasi-documentary feel of the black and white 1967 film, which starred Robert Blake and Scott Wilson in the two lead roles, it is compelling in its own right and a fairly faithful adaptation.The film follows the path of two losers, Dick Hickock (Anthony Edwards) and Perry Smith (Eric Roberts), as they careen towards catastrophe for themselves and for the hapless Klutter family of Holcomb, Kansas, upon whom they have set their sights. The pathology inherent in these two protagonists is chilling. It is also scary to think that a simple twist of fate would join them all in the annals of true crime.While Hickock was incarcerated, a fellow inmate, Floyd Wells, who at one time years ago had worked for Herbert Klutter, the patriarch of the Klutter family, told Hickock that Klutter was a wealthy farmer who kept a large store of cash in a safe in the house. Given many details of the family and their house, Hickock fantasizes of making a big score, courtesy of the Klutter family.When Hickock is released, he hooks up with his friend, Perry Smith. Smith, initially the more sympathetic of the two protagonists, is an individual with obvious psychological problems, deeply rooted in his troubled childhood, while Hickock, who seemed to have had a relatively normal childhood, is a t.
Alan Hendry –
How could anyone murder a whole family in such an awful way? It was completely pointlessto tie Mr. Clutter up and then cut his throat with a hunting knife, then shoot him and the others who weretied up, at point blank range with a shotgun blowing each persons head off. It really amounted to torturing thevictims first. Perry said he was getting even for all the “mean things people had done to him”. The motive for thecrime is not clear, whether it was robbery, an effort to rape Nancy, an effort by the two men to impress each other,or an act of revenge against society as a whole. Dick made it clear he felt very important for what he had doneuntil he was caught. There will always be people who find it easier to blame anyone and everyone rather thantaking personal responsibility for their fate in life. All the characters were very real to me in much detail. Perrywould never have gotten along with Mr.Clutter. They were just too essentially different.
Joel M. Wilson –
Most killing movies are just for supposed theatrical quality, (which I do not think is quality), and geared to getting box office revenues. (They generally do not get my money). But consider that this is true; that people can actually be set on such wrong course in life to where their minds are so corrupted that they will kill four unarmed and bounded people for $45! Watch it for the eye-opening of the world around you, and maybe in your own neighborhood that you have never even suspected. Learn what really can and does happen when children and family situations are so corrupting in their environment. This 1965 movie was good, but I do like the 1993 version better.
Justified –
One of those movies that if it wasn’t so darned good there’s no way you could sit through the entire movie at one go’round. Eric Roberts is SUPERB in this one;and it gets a best acting award from me for Anthony Edwards. A VERY good movie – MuST see this one.
D. Landreth –
nice adaptation