Film: The Mask (1994), starring Jim Carrey; originally released to theaters 1994; home-video DVD releases followed later.
"DVD RIP" implies a digital copy sourced from a DVD disc, typically preserving DVD-era resolution (usually 720×480 NTSC or 720×576 PAL) with VOB-to-container extraction and re-encoding.
"EN-FR" indicates bilingual English and French audio tracks (and possibly subtitles).
Violence & Action:
Cartoonish Violence: The movie is famous for its "live-action Looney Tunes" style. Most violence is exaggerated and unrealistic. Characters are flattened like pancakes, eyes pop out on springs, and people are hit with mallets, but they usually recover instantly.
Gunplay: There are several scenes with real firearms.
In the climax, the villain (Dorian Tyrell) shoots the Mask character repeatedly. The Mask reacts comically (swallowing the bullet or spitting it out), but the intent is lethal.
A character is threatened with a gun to the head.
Several gangsters are shot and killed off-screen or implied during the final confrontation.
Hand-to-Hand Combat: There are street fights involving punches and kicks.
Death: One villain is flushed down a giant drain (implied death). Another character is "erased" by the Mask using a pencil.
Memorable Moments (Still Wild After 30 Years)
Stanley’s first transformation and the “Ssssmokin’!” reveal.
The nightclub dance sequence – pure Carrey physical comedy.
Milo the dog becoming The Mask’s canine sidekick.
“Somebody stop me!” – a line that defined a decade.
The surprisingly heartfelt ending that suggests confidence, not magic, is the real superpower.