The DVD of Snatch is loaded with hidden content. Not just one or two either — there are several Easter eggs spread across both discs, and some of them are easy to miss.
Here’s how to find them.
How to access the Easter eggs
Disc 2 – Making of Snatch (Ringtone Easter Egg)
- Go to Making of Snatch
- Press Up once (the cursor will disappear)
- Press Up again
- A musical note will appear
- Press Enter
This unlocks instructions showing how to program your phone ringtone to sound like Doug’s. Very early 2000s.
Disc 2 – Spot Fine Board
- Go to Making of Snatch
- Press Up three times
- A dollar sign will appear
- Press Enter
This brings up the film’s “spot fine” board. It lists all the on-set fines — and there are a lot of them. It’s surprisingly detailed.
Disc 2 – B-Roll Easter Egg (Swearing Compilation)
- Go to the second page of the main menu
- Highlight B-Roll
- Press Up twice
- An exclamation mark will appear
- Press Enter
This plays a compilation of swearing and gunshots from the film. Exactly what you’d expect from Snatch.
Disc 2 – Hidden Scenes
- Stay on the B-Roll option
- Press Up three times
- The number 1 will appear
- Press Enter
This unlocks additional scenes from the film.
Disc 1 – Pikey Subtitles
- Insert Disc 1
- From the main menu, press Up
- A pig icon will highlight
- Press Enter
This enables “Pikey Subtitles,” which display whenever Mickey speaks.
Different time, different decisions.
What you’ll see
This is one of those DVDs where the hidden content actually feels worth finding. You get a mix of:
- Genuinely obscure extras
- Production details you wouldn’t normally see
- Fun, era-specific features like custom ringtones
- Classic Snatch humour in the hidden clips
The “spot fine” board is probably the most interesting — it gives a weirdly detailed look at what was happening behind the scenes.
My take
This is exactly what DVD Easter eggs should be.
They’re not just throwaway clips — there’s a bit of effort behind them, and they’re spread across the menus in a way that actually makes you explore the disc.
The ringtone one is very of its time, but that’s part of the appeal. The swearing compilation and extra scenes feel much more in line with what you’d want from a film like Snatch.
And the subtitles option… yeah. That one definitely wouldn’t be added today.
If you’re collecting DVDs with hidden content, Snatch is a solid one to pick up. Plenty to dig through, and none of it feels like filler.
