Skip to Main Content Skip to Left Navigation Skip to Product Information Tabs Site information and information for assistive technology users

The Prestige (Blu-ray) Products and Promotions

Target Bullseye

Site Navigation

Target.com Navigation

Christmas Delivered. Free shipping when you spend $50 on 100,000+ select items. 2 Day Sale. Enter the Giftacular Sweepstakes for your chance to win. See Rules.
Quick Info

  • Product Video: The Prestige-Trailer
  • Product Video: The Prestige-Trailer
  • Product Video: The Prestige-Trailer
  • Product Video: The Prestige-Trailer
  • Product Video: Interview: Christian Bale
  • Product Video: Interview: Michael Caine
  • Product Video: Interview: Scarlett Johansson
  • Product Video: Clip: A Real Magician
  • Product Video: Clip: Circle Of Trust
  • Product Video: Featurette
Next Videos Previous Videos

The Prestige (Blu-ray)

Be the first to write a review.

$29.99 List: $34.99Save: $5.00 (14%)

The following promotions apply

    $2.99 shipping/order on Movies Music Books

Prices, promotions, styles and availability may vary by store and online.

Availability:

In Stock

Print this page (opens print dialogue)
Email a Friend

Email this Item

You must be signed in to share this item by email. Sign in now to continue.

Your email address:

The email address you provide in this form will only be used to send this one time email message

Separate multiple recipients with commas

Your message is on its way! Send another email?

Close Email Layer

Items purchased from the Music, Movies + Books category have a standard shipping fee of $2.99 per order. Items in your order purchased from other categories are subject to standard shipping charges.

See offer details. Opens in New Window

Details

Description

    Obsession, jealousy, and deceit define the tense relationship shared between two turn-of-the-century magicians in Memento and Batman Begins director Christopher Nolan's dizzying tale of sleight of hand. Rupert Angier (Hugh Jackman) and Alfred Borden (Christian Bale) are London-based magicians of the highest order, both blessed with spectacular powers of deception and both cursed with unrelenting envy for one another's skills. When Alfred performs an awe-inspiring trick for which there seems no logical explanation, the friendly competition shared between the pair turns to deadly rivalry as the enraged Rupert determines to uncover his rival's deepest secrets. In the world of illusion, however, nothing is ever quite as it seems, and the rules of the physical world simply don't apply. Now, as bitter competition quickly begins to consume the souls of both performers, the firestorm birthed by their anger threatens to consume all who surround them. Michael Caine, Scarlett Johansson, and David Bowie co-star in a feature that finds director/screenwriter Nolan reuniting with brother and Memento story author Jonathan Nolan to adapt author Christopher Priest's original novel. Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Features

Awards

    Nominations: Academy Awards (2)

Additional Information

  • DPCI: 058-32-0065
  • ASIN: B002IGUMF2
  • Catalog #: 11362074
  • Item can not be gift wrapped.

Shipping & Policies

Guest Reviews

There are no reviews for this item.
Have any thoughts you'd like to share?

Be the first to write a review

Expert Reviews

Filmmakers are no strangers to the world of magic and illusions. Both Orson Welles and Woody Allen were talented amateur magicians, and directors sometimes treat editing as little more than an excuse to fool audiences and exert their powers of manipulation. Christopher Nolan and his brother Jonathan Nolan juggle timelines with such ease and dexterity that seeing them tackle the topic of illusionists would seem to be a perfect fit of talent and material. The Prestige is the cinematic equivalent of watching a Penn Teller show. The Nolans, like the comedy magic duo, lay out exactly what they are going to do. The answers to the mysteries are right in front of the viewer for pretty much the entire film, but they surround the simple truths with so much misdirection and showmanship that even the most alert viewer is likely to be taken in by the elaborate ruse. The filmmakers reveal everything about their characters' tricks, including plainly stating the dramatic arc that a good magic trick follows, and still manage to thrill the audience with their skill. The look of Christopher Nolan's films are, for the most part, cold. He has a very cerebral, considered tone to his movies that would be off-putting if not for the fact that he consistently hires actors who are able to get at viewers' emotions. Christian Bale and Hugh Jackman, as the magicians carrying on a lethal feud, carry the weight of The Prestige, each playing deeply flawed characters whose drive and ambition make them inherently interesting. In lesser hands, The Prestige could have become an empty exercise where the twists and turns might seem at best arbitrary or, at worst, manipulative. Thankfully, the editing and imagemaking is so precise, and the screenplay so beautifully layered, that the finished result tickles the audience with anticipation and bewilderment. The Nolans and their talented cast never play the viewers for suckers, even when fooling them right in front of their eyes. Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide