Product details

  • Aspect Ratio : 16:9 - 2.35:1
  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
  • Language : English
  • Product Dimensions : 19 x 13.5 x 1.4 cm; 83.16 Grams
  • Manufacturer reference : 7321900142021
  • Director : Chuck Russell
  • Media Format : PAL, Subtitled
  • Run time : 1 hour and 47 minutes
  • Release date : 29 Mar. 1999
  • Actors : Arnold Schwarzenegger, Vanessa Williams, James Caan, James Coburn, Robert Pastorelli
  • Subtitles: : English, Arabic
  • Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Studio : Warner Home Video
  • Producers : Anne Kopelson, Arnold Kopelson, Caroline Pham, Chuck Russell
  • Writers : Michael S. Chernuchin, Tony Puryear, Walon Green
  • Number of discs : 1

Product Description

Federal Marshal John Kruger (Arnold Schwarzenegger) is assigned to look after people as part of the Federal Witness Protection System. His latest charge is Lee Cullen (Vanessa L. Williams), a key witness in a case against her employers, the Cyrez Corporation, who are secretly selling their hi-tech weapons to the Russian Mafia. Her safe passage to the courtroom is endangered by corruption within the ranks of Kruger's bosses, which leads to him being framed and thrown off the force.

From Amazon.co.uk

If you're going to submit yourself to a dazzling example of mainstream action, this thriller is as good a choice as any. Eraser is a live-action cartoon, the kind of movie in which Arnold Schwarzenegger can survive nail bombs, hails of bullets, an attack by voracious alligators ("You're luggage," he says, after killing one of the beasts), and still emerge from the mayhem relatively intact. Arnold plays an "eraser" from the Federal Witness Protection Program, so named because he can virtually erase the existence of anyone he's been assigned to protect. His latest beneficiary is an FBI employee (Vanessa Williams) who stumbled across a secret government group involved in the sale and export of an advanced weapon capable of shooting rounds at nearly the speed of light. Fantastic action sequences are handled with flair by director Charles Russell (The Mask), so it's easy to forgive the fact that this movie is almost completely ridiculous. --Jeff Shannon