Brand new factory sealed vhs is Out Of Print (OOP) in all formats and no longer being manufactured. Looks best on old school televisions as the image will fill your square frame. The uncompressed audio sounds better than its digital counterpart, much like vinyl records do.

Bonus: this special edition also contains a behind-the-scenes documentary. As the film opens, in A.D. 3028, Earth has been destroyed by the evil race of Drej, who fear the intelligence of humans. Survivors flee on spaceships, one of them the gigantic "Titan" which carries crucial information on board. That ship was designed by the hero's father, who apparently disappears along with the Titan.

When we first meet Cale (Matt Damon), he's a "colony bum", working in a space dump floating between the stars, where conditions are harsh. He's bitter and indifferant because he believes he has been abadoned by his father. Yet he holds the key to the future of Earth and mankind in the palm of his hand--literally, in the form of a genetically coded map that reveals the hiding place of Titan. Soon he's on a mission to find it with partners including a beautiful girl named Akima (Drew Barrymore), who treasures Earth's heritage and collects artifacts of its past, like baseballs.

The captain of their expedition is the grave, responsible Korso (Bill Pullman); Gune (John Leguizamo) is the navigator. The main story involves their journey to find Titan before the Drej can capture or destroy it. This quest involves high and low comedy, an exciting chase scene, and then one of the most involving hunt sequences I've seen in any movie, animated or not.

One test for a movie is when you forget it's a movie and simply surf along on the narrative. That can happen as easily with animation as live action, and it happens here.