Seconds
Paramount Pictures (1966)
Mystery, Science Fiction, Thriller
In Collection
#240
0*
Seen ItYes
097361569147
100 mins USA / English
DVD  Region 1   R (Restricted)
Wesley Addy John
Richard Anderson Doctor Innes
Robert Brubaker Mayberry
Frank Campanella Man in Station
Thom Conroy Dayroom Attendant
Jeff Corey Mr. Ruby
Khigh Dhiegh Davalo
Elisabeth Fraser Plump Blonde
Will Geer Old Man
Murray Hamilton Charlie
Dodie Heath Sue Bushman
Rock Hudson Antiochus Wilson
Salome Jens Norma Marcus
John Lawrence Texan
Aaron Magidow Meat Man
Director
John Frankenheimer
Producer John Frankenheimer
Edward Lewis
Writer Lewis John Carlino

There is a very secret organization that offers wealthy people a second chance at life; the customer picks out someone they want to be and the organization surgically alters the customer to look like the intended person, stages the customer's death, gets rid of the intended person and the customer has a new life. There's only one thing they didn't count on..... Written by ShowBob {showbob@geocities.com}

What if someone offered you the chance to begin again, with a new life that was organized to be exactly what you wanted it to be? That's what the organization offers some wealthy people. They find a life that is what their clients would have wanted, artist, writer, politician, kill the person who is to be replaced and surgically alter their clients to take their places. We follow a new client from first contact, through his staged death, to surgery, recovery and replacement. Of course thats when things become complicated. Written by John Vogel {jlvogel@comcast.net}
Edition Details
Edition Special Edition
Release Date 1/8/2002
Packaging Keep Case
Screen Ratio Fullscreen (4:3, Letterboxed)
Widescreen (1.85:1)
Subtitles English; English (Closed Captioned)
Audio Tracks Dolby Digital Mono [English]
Dolby Digital Mono [French]
Dolby Digital Stereo [English]
Dolby Digital Stereo [French]
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 1

Features
Interactive Menus Scene Selection Theatrical Trailer Commentary By Director John Frankenheimer