June 2006

New on DVD

We’re here to let you know what’s out there for your entertainment dollar.  Every week a new batch of DVD’s gets shipped out and thrown onto the shelves.  This week we’ve got the last (and funniest) film of my best of 2005 list to finally get released, Steve Martin on the trail of the Pink Panther, teenagers finding a mermaid, Neil Young playing that rock ‘n roll, a special edition of an inconceivably good film about a princess a pirate and an giant, and season sets of Cheers, Coach, Dharma & Greg and more.  Take a peek inside for the full list.

N/A

Here’s what is getting released today on DVD:

Film:

Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang – Aaron had a lukewarm reaction to writer/director Shane Black’s pulp detective murder mystery but I fell in love with it from the opening credits (read my original review) and still stand by the film that found its way into my best of 2005 list.  The DVD contains commentary with stars Val Kilmer and Robert Downey Jr and Shane Black.

16 Blocks – Bruce Willis is a New York cop (no, not that movie) who takes custody of a criminal (Mos Def) and must transport him to the courthouse to testify against cops who will do whatever they can to make sure he never takes the stand.  The DVD includes an alternate ending and deleted scenes.  Read the original review here.

A Good Woman – Screen version of Oscar Wilde’s play “Lady Windermere’s Fan” casting Helen Hunt as the seductive older woman, Scarlett Johansson as the young Mrs. Windemere, and Mark Umbers as her husband.  Read the original review here.

Documentary:

Neil Young – Heart of Gold – A little bit documentary and large part concert film of the music legend performing work from his new album and past hits.  The DVD contains rehearsal diaries, six featurettes and a performance by Young in 1971 on The Johnny Cash ShowRead the original review here.

Dave Chapelle’s Block Party – Speaking of concert films…  Dave Chapelle’s huge Brooklyn bash includes comedy, stand-up, and some darn good music.  The DVD is available in both original and unrated versions and includes a making of the film featurette and extended musical and comedy acts.

Special Editions:

The Princess Bride (Dread Pirate/Buttercup Edition) – What!  You’ve already bought this film on DVD and now they’ve put out a special edition!  Inconceivable!  Rob Reiner has never been better than here telling the story of young Buttercup (Robin Wright in her first film) and her Wesley (Cary Elwes).  The 2 disc DVD contains commentary tracks from Reiner and screenwriter William Goldman, featurettes on the making of the film and Miracle Max, a mockumentary on the Dread Pirate Roberts, behind the scenes footage, trivia game and more.

The Pink Panther (Special Edition) – Forgettable 2006 Remake that casts Steve Martin as the bumbling Inspector Jacques Clouseau.  Extras include deleted scenes, Beyonce music videos, an alternate opening sequence, commentary by director Shawn Levy, a documentary, and featurettes on the making of the film.  Available in the Dred Pirate Edition with Elwes on the front or the Buttercup Edition with both lovers on the cover.

Valley of the Dolls (Special Edition) – 1967 film about sex and show business gets the special edition treatment with commentary by Barbara Parkins and Ted Casablanca, a new documentary on the film, featurettes on the film and its stars, still galleries, a trivia game, and original screen tests.

Family/Animated:

This is America, Charlie Brown – All eight episodes of the CBS run of the blockhead and gang visiting important events in human history including the Mayflower’s voyage, the Wright Brothers flight, and the signing of the Constitution.

Aquamarine– Think Splash for teenage girls.  Extras include commentary by director Elizabeth Allen, deleted scenes, and featurettes.

TV:

Walker, Texas RangerThe Complete First Season – All 26 first season episodes of Chuck Norris dispensing Texas justice.

The Rockford FilesSeason Two – All 22 episodes from the second season with James Garner as the ex-con turned private eye.

Cheers The Complete Eighth Season – All 26 episodes from season eight in the Boston bar where everybody knows your name.

CoachThe First Season – All 13 episodes from the first season of Craig T. Nelson as the football coach of the Minnesota State Screaming Eagles.

Dharma & GregSeason One – Opposites attract as hippie yoga instructor Dharma (Jenna Elfman) meets and marries conservative lawyer Greg (Thomas Gibson).  All 23 first season episodes are included along with commentary for select episodes by Elfman, Mimi Kennedy and Alan Rachins, featurettes, and an interactive game.

New on DVD Read More »

This Week

So what’s out there this week.  Well today we’ll take a look at the films scheduled to be released this Friday which include a reunion for Speed stars Sandra Bullock and Keanu Reeves, sequels to Garfield and The Fast and the Furious, a collection of independent and foreign films in limited release and (finally!) the wide release of Al Gore’s fascinating documentary on Global Warming – An Inconvenient Truth.  Read on…

N/A

Here’s what’s scheduled to hit theaters this week.  Want to know more, just click on the title for film info including a full cast list.  Want a closer look, just click on the poster to watch the trailer.

An Inconvenient Truth

In this documentary former VP Al Gore asks audiences to take a hard look at Global Warming.  The film focuses on presenting facts and scientific evidence and cautions and calls for the need for serious change in the United States and the world.  It’s been playing in limited release for the past few weeks and has already stirred up some controversy (did you see what happened when it was mentioned on our sister site Transbuddha?).  We’ll take a look at Gore’s new book on Wednesday (of the same name) and have our reviews for the film on Friday.

The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift

The third film in the series; this time without both stars (Vin Diesel, Paul Walker) moves to Tokyo as a hot shot American street racer (Lucas Black) finds himself caught up in the underground world of drift racing.  Diesel wisely left after the first film and Walker passed on the franchise’s third (almost always a sign of bad things to come – see Superman III) to make movies such as Into the Blue and Running Scared.  The director behind the camera this time is Justin Lin (Annapolis).  Also starring in the film are Little Bow Wow, Nikki Griffin, Lynda Boyd, Leonardo Nam, and Zachary Ty Bryan.

The Lake House

Speed co-stars Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock reunite for this bizarre love story.  The premise involves two single people staying in a lake house two years apart who can communicate to each other through movie magic and begin to fall in love but attempts to meet in real life always end in failure.  The film is a remake of the 2000 South Korean film Siworae.  If you can wrap your brain around the premise (which just might need to include some alcoholic beverages to do so) then it might be interesting to see how these two work together after so long.  Alejando Argresti (Valentin, Modern Crimes) directs.  Check back Friday for our review.

Nacho Libre

Jack Black plays a priest who dons wrestling attire and enters a luchador tournament in order to win the money to save the orphanage and win the heart of Sister Encarnacion (Ana de la Reguera).  The film teams Black up with writer/director Jared Hess (Napoleon Dynamite) and reunites him with co-writer Mike White (School of Rock).  In what is a rather lackluster summer this one could become a big hit.  I was all hyped-up to see it until I started watching the trailers which bare a striking resemblance to a number of Robin Williams’ early career mis-steps (Popeye, The Survivors).  Check back Friday for our review.

Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties

Sequel to the 2004 film returns Brekin Meyer as Jon Arbuckle and Bill Murray as the voice of his lazy lasagna loving feline Garfield.  The plot this time involves Jon and Garfield traveling to the UK and a case of mistaken identity which leaves Garfield ruling his own castle.  Co-stars include Jennifer Love Hewitt, Roger Rees, Lucy Davis, Greg Ellis, Bob Hoskins, Tim Curry, and Billy Connolly as the nefarious Lord Dargis.  Writers from the first film Alec Sockollow and Joel Cohen returned to pen this script and director Tim Hill (Max Keeble’s Big Movie) takes his turn behind the camera.

The Mostly Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green (limited release)

Based on the gay comic strip the film follows the life of professional assistant Ethan Green (Daniel Letterle) and his misadventures with his mother (Meredith Baxter) who employs herself as a gay wedding planner, and a jealous ex-lover who schemes to sell Ethan’s house out from under him.  First timers abound here in writer David Vernon and in director George Bamber (who worked as an assistant director on films like Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story, Hope Floats and Phenomenon).  The film has played in several small, mostly gay, film festivals and the response has been mixed.  Some love it and many hate it.

Wordplay (New York and Los Angeles)

This new documentary by first time director Patrick Creadon focuses on the word of crossword puzzles.  The film has two main subjects: the first is The New York Times crossword puzzle editor Will Shortz and long time fans of his work which include Jon Stewart, Bill Clinton, Bob Dole, Ken Burns, and Yankees pitcher Mike Mussina who all appear in the film; the second subject of the film is an examination of the 28th Annual American Crossword Puzzle Tournament in Stanford, CT where people compete in both speed and accuracy to be crowned the crossword champ of the year.  Check back on Friday for our review.

Loverboy (New York and Los Angeles)

Kevin Bacon directs and stars in this film about Emily (Kyra Sedgwick) a possessive single mother determination to raise her young son (Dominic Scott Kay) and to be a better parent than her own (Marisa Tomei and Kevin Bacon who appear in flashbacks with Bacon’s real life daughter playing the younger Emily) who obviously screwed this girl up pretty bad.  The film also co-stars Matt Dillon, Oliver Platt, Campbell Scott, and Jessica Stone.  This marks only Bacon’s second stint behind the camera and his first for a full length theatrical film.  The film was adapated from the Victoria Redel novel by Hannah Shakespeare (Paperlily).

Cidade Baixa [Lost City] (New York and Los Angeles)

A life long friendship is put to the test when Deco (Lazaro Ramos) and Naldinho (Wagner Moura) steam down the Brazilian coast and decide to pick-up a young prostitute (Alice Braga) who offers sexual favors for a ride down the coast.  The film also stars Jose Dumont, Felipe Ferreira, Leno Sacramento, and Andrea Elia.  The Brazilian film won the Award of Youth for director Sergio Machado (3 Historias da Bahia, Onde a Terra Acaba) in 2005 at the Cannes Film Festival.  The film is presented in Portuguese with English subtitles.

This Week Read More »

A Prairie Home Companion

I don’t know exactly what I was expecting the result of the merging of Robert Altman and Garrison Keillor to be, but A Prairie Home Companion didn’t quite meet my expectations.  That’s not to say the film isn’t good (it is very good) but with these two men and a cast of stars like Meryl Streep, Virginia Madsen, Kevin Kline, Lily Tomlin, Tommy Lee Jones, Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly I expected something more than just mildly diverting.

A Prairie Home Companion
3 & 1/2 Stars

Garrison Keillor and Robert Altman do a very good job of showing the final day of the small radio show before the curtain is pulled down for good.  However when the film leaves the story for subplots involving an angel or the corporate hatchet man, it losses the feel and warmth that is so integal to making the rest of the film work.  The end result is a very good film that had it been handled a little different could have been great.

The film centers on an old time radio show that continues to broadcast in present day oblivious to the fact that time may well have past them by.  The performers are like a large dysfunctional but loving family that on this night, the final night the show will be broadcast, say goodbye.

G.K. (Garrison Keillor) is the host of the show a consummate professional often lost in nostalgia if at times unable to express his feelings to others.  Also part of the show are the Johnson sisters Yolanda (Meryl Streep) and Rhonda (Lily Tomlin) who have brough along Yolanda’s moody and death obsessed teenage daughter Lola (Lindsay Lohan) for the final show.  Then there are the two singing cowboys with their off-color jokes and good humor (Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly).  Rounding out the group are the pregnant stage manager (Maya Rudolph) and the head of security for the theater who alone seems stuck in cheesy pulp magazine Guy Noir (Kevin Kline).

There are many things that work well in the film.  Keillor is amazing and gives the film its center.  Harrelson and Reilly give strong supporting nods and prove they both have some vocal range.  In fact in many ways the two out perform Streep and Tomlin who work well together but have put on better performances than this this.  The scenes that work best in the film are the cast together performing one last time and celebrating and reminiscing times long gone by.  These moments work so well that when we are taken away from them for other subplots the film loses its focus.

There has been constant hype over the performance of Lindsay Lohan in the picture, which after viewing the film perplexes me.  Yes she’s not nearly as annoying as she has been in other films but that’s a far cry from giving a great performance.  The moody and emotional Lola is played all on one level and there isn’t much there that we haven’t seen in countless other films.  Far from holding her own with Tomlin and Streep, Lohan seems awed and shrunken in her scenes almost having to be led by hand through her movements and dialogue.

My main complaint with the film is the unnecessary subplot (one of many) involving Virgina Madsen (in the credits she is referred to as “Dangerous Woman”) who is a walking angel of mercy/spectre of death throughout the film.  Aside from the fact the subplot distracts from the interesting personal stories of the performers, Madsen herself seems unsure of just who and what her character is – not surprising because the film can’t quite seem to make up its mind either.  Is she etheral?  Is she flesh?  Is she merciful?  Is she vengful?  Nor is her appearance once explained satisfactory.

Also odd is Kline’s comically noir-ish character who seems to be written for a different movie.  It’s through his eyes we first meet the cast but he then becomes a bumbling fool who it seems would lack the understanding and depth to have given his opening narration.  In many ways Noir is to provide the outside eye to the rest of the cast but since he has been part of the family for years his character this doesn’t work; so like many of the smaller supporting cast, including Tommy Lee Jones, he is just taking up space in the film and getting in the way.

There are many reasons to go see this film including clever jokes, good music, a fine cast, and some nice performances.  Still as I left the theater I felt the film never quite achieved its full potential.  I’ll give you an example of one of the small choices that make a difference in a film like this one.  The show ends in the big number with the cast on stage but Altman isn’t ready to end the film yet and so adds a hasty epilogue that takes place weeks later only then returning to the same scene on stage for the closing credits.  In many ways the ending of the film perfectly illustrates the flaws found throughout where the creators of the film weren’t quite ready to trust the characters and emotions themselves and deciding they need to add more ingredients to the soup.  The should have learned what ever good cook understands, sometimes too much extra flavoring can distract from a great dinner and leave it tasting rather ordinary.

A Prairie Home Companion Read More »

Vroom, Vroom

  • Title: Cars
  • IMDB: link

Rarely have I enjoyed myself more than Pixar’s newest film Cars (the last made before the Pixar/Disney merging).  Every once in a long while I see a film that makes me enjoy the art form and gives me a sense of wonder at its accomplishment that I actually feel like a young kid in a candy store. 

Cars is the best animated film to come out since Pixar’s last (The Incredibles) and is a terrific family film that all can enjoy. Pixar is dominating the genre in such a way that if it can continue will rival that of Disney’s golden age (no surprise why Mickey dipped into his deep pockets to bring Pixar under the Disney banner).

Vroom, Vroom Read More »

…and the Bad News

Yeah we knew FF2 was going to get made but Jessica Alba’s interview with MTV makes the sequel sound even worse than the original.  “We’re going to amp up the action, amp up the love interest, amp it all up!”  About her own character Sue Storm Alba added, “I’m the most powerful of the four…I can kind of do everyone else’s powers.”  Scared yet?  Well then how ‘bout what she has say dealing with the plot of the new film which will involve the introduction of my favorite Marvel hero – the Silver Surfer.

The Surfer, created by Jack Kirby, was one of Marvel’s first attempts to add depth and philosophy to comic books in the form of a contemplative, noble, tragic, and poetic hero that Stan Lee fell so in love with for years he would allow no other Marvel writer to create his high minded dialogue which often included the Surfer’s distaste for what humans were doing to their planet and themselves.  So how does the movie version stand-up?  “There’s a little tension between the Silver Surfer and Reed, he’s a little good and a little bad so it’s just a matter of what does Sue Storm bring – the good or the bad – out of that boy.”  Seriously, if Marvel lets a half-wit like Tim Story destroy one of Lee and Kirby’s greatest creations to make a buck at the box office I’m done with the House of Ideas Greed for good.

FF2: Still Craptastic
N/A

…and the Bad News Read More »