
Blockbuster rental copy of "36 Hours to Die" on VHS, a 1999 release on a tight-budget Canadian thriller that quietly found its audience on the rental shelf. The case is intact with full Blockbuster rental housing: the hard plastic clamshell, the labeled spine, and the store-tracking infrastructure are all still present. This is what a Friday night pick looked like before streaming made the trip irrelevant.
Blockbuster Video at its 1999 peak was running somewhere north of 7,700 locations across the United States. The San Leandro, California store label on this copy places it in the East Bay, Alameda County, a market where the chain had multiple outposts competing against local independents that were already feeling the pressure. The $2.99 overnight rental price sticker is accurate to the period: Blockbuster had been standardizing pricing across markets through the late 1990s, and the sub-three-dollar new-release rate was the going number before they shifted to four-day rentals and revised the pricing model in response to DVD pressure. "36 Hours to Die" itself starred Treat Williams in a thriller about a businessman drawn into a mob standoff, the kind of genre-solid rental that filled the New Release wall without necessarily making the newspaper review section. It came out in a year when Blockbuster was at maximum physical footprint, right before the curve started dropping.
The only way to watch it is to own the tape or find someone who did.
This copy carries the full rental label stack: Blockbuster store sticker on the spine, the San Leandro location identifier, rental barcode, and the $2.99 price point still readable. The clamshell housing is the standard Blockbuster hard case, not a paper sleeve conversion, which means the tape has been protected in the format it left the store in. Condition on the case exterior reads as expected for a circulated rental: light shelf wear on the corners, label adhesion intact. The cassette's tape housing is the thing to check when you have it in hand. Ribbon should sit flat with no visible slack or bunching against the clear plastic panel.
OWNER VERIFY: Confirm the San Leandro, CA store label text and the $2.99 price sticker are both present and legible on the physical copy.
The Rental Counter
Before streaming flattened the difference between movies, VHS was a physical act. Rentals, buybacks, Blockbuster sleeves, promo tapes, ex-rentals with security stickers still on the side. 90s tapes outlived the stores they came from. We keep them in their original cases where possible and note every sticker, sun-fade, and sleeve crease in the photography.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
Inspected in Las Vegas on May 2026. Each piece is a single unit, sold as inspected.
KEEP IT CLASSIC
This 36 hours to die blockbuster case vhs originates from the 90s era[01], represents VHS[02]'s output, . Each piece in the shop is a single unit, inspected by hand in Las Vegas before listing. The data manifest to the right records the fields on file for this lot; where a field is empty it has been omitted rather than guessed.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
- VENDOR
- VHS
- ERA
- 90s
Wow. how fast has this year gone?! It’s been unreal. What a year for us personally and for Rock And Roll Collectibles. From selling some of the greatest figures on the market, to being at FTLOW, to traveling all the way to WrestleMania in Las Vegas and meeting some incredible peo
14 days from delivery. Buyer pays return shipping. In-store purchases are exchange or credit only.
Every piece in the shop is a single unit. Once it is gone, it is gone.
707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, ground floor, east side of Downtown Container Park.


