Touched by an Angel - Back to School: Lessons From An Angel (1994) Review

Touched by an Angel - Back to School: Lessons From An Angel  (1994)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
For someone who was the most hyped person ever to come out of the U.K., Charlotte Church's performance here had to be one of the worst ever on the small screen. She looked frightened all of the time and looked as if she were reading her lines from a prompter. According to one TV columinst, when she had to be corrected on the screen by Della Reese, that was not in the script but was left there due to time constraints and made to appear to be part of the show. Fortunately, for this episode, they limited Charlotte's screen time to about 1/4 of the show.
The episode itself is not too bad and was well written. In any case, this may be the only chance you will ever get to see Charlotte Church on any screen. After failing the screen test for Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter movie, she is reported to be limiting her future entertainment activity to singing. For curiosity seekers only.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Touched by an Angel - Back to School: Lessons From An Angel (1994)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Touched by an Angel - Back to School: Lessons From An Angel (1994)

Read More...

Donnie Darko: The Director's Cut (Two-Disc Special Edition) (2005) Review

Donnie Darko: The Director's Cut (Two-Disc Special Edition) (2005)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
My rating and the following refers specifically to the Director's Cut. I would rate the original theatrical release five stars.
This director's cut brought to mind William Faulkner's line about writers often having to "kill their darlings" in order to meet the demands of a work's wholeness and integrity. Evidently, Richard Kelly was forced to kill his darlings with the theatrical release, and the result was close to perfection, if not perfection itself. The film's emotional force was stunning; its mysteries challenging; its pace so good that hitting pause to get more popcorn was impossible to do; its soundtrack (to my mind) a tour de force. It worked terrifically as a film experience, being a beautiful "whole" work of art. Extras that included Roberta Sparrow's book were great ... who really wanted to read the book during the movie anyways? (Which we can now do in the DC.)
Which does not mean a director's cut had no hope of working. Or even, maybe, revisions to the soundtrack (although I really think that was touchy business better left untouched). There were some good scenes deleted from the original, mainly between family members, and they didn't seem major pace-cutters. Fortunately, we do get those scenes here, but we also get the overwhelming force of the director's enthusiasm ... and WAY too much embedded detail of his personal vision.
On the upside, there's a nifty freedom to that enthusiasm which translates well into the Darko world IF you are also enthusiastic and into "playing" with Darko. In other words, if you love Donnie Darko already, you may find this cut a lot of fun. The pacing's completely blown, and the ending comes across flat compared to the original. (Kelly gets too detailed and baroque at the end, thus the impact of the "Mad World" music montage--don't want to include spoilers--and last scene is severely undermined.) Yet it's great to have more Darko, however we have to get it. And I don't regret buying this.
But if you've never seen the original DVD release, I cannot recommend this DVD set to you over that one. You will probably wonder why a cult ever built up around this film ... what anyone saw in it. You'll be missing that visceral power and compelling wonder that makes movies great and leaves you wanting to see a movie again ... immediately, if possible.
Donnie Darko was a little miracle of a film that cast a huge shadow. The director's cut joins many other films that try for bigness and achieve little ... unless, of course, in Darko's case, you've already seen the light and are into shadow-play.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Donnie Darko: The Director's Cut (Two-Disc Special Edition) (2005)

During the presidential election of 1988, a teenager named Donnie Darko sleepwalks out of his house one night, and sees a giant, demonic-looking rabbit named Frank, who tells him the world will end in 28 days, 6 hours, 42 minutes, and 12 seconds. He returns home the next morning to find that a jet engine has crashed through his bedroom. As he tries to figure out why he survived and tries to deal with people in his town, like the school bully, his conservative health teacher, and a self-help guru, Frank continues to turn up in Donnie's mind, causing him to commit acts of vandalism and worse. The new Director?s Cut includes a production diary of the film (with optional commentary by Director of Photography Steven Poster), a story-board to screen featurette, the Director?s cut theatrical trailer, They Made Me Do It Too ? The Cult of Donnie Darko and the #1 Fan: A Darkomentary.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Donnie Darko: The Director's Cut (Two-Disc Special Edition) (2005)

Read More...

Crisis - Behind a Presidential Commitment (1963) Review

Crisis - Behind a Presidential Commitment (1963)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Famed pioneering filmmaker Robert Drew produced and directed this film in June 1963, his third project working with John F. Kennedy, following "Primary" in 1960 and "Adventures On The New Frontier" in 1961.
Drew's "Primary" was a first-of-its-kind "live" as-it's-happening type of film that followed two candidates for the U.S. Presidency (JFK and Hubert Humphrey) around the streets of Wisconsin during the 1960 Presidential Primary there.
In this 53-minute documentary film, made three years after "Primary", Drew and associates spent two days filming footage inside JFK's White House during the tense days when Jack Kennedy and brother Bobby, the U.S. Attorney General, were struggling against Alabama Governor George Wallace over the integration of the University Of Alabama.
Ultimately, despite Wallace's famous "door-blocking standoff" with authorities, the college was finally desegregated, and two young black students were allowed to become the first African-Americans ever to enroll for classes at the University Of Alabama.
Drew's camera puts the viewer squarely in the middle of the debate, as we see the President in the Oval Office trying to decide on a course of action that will cause the least amount of disruption and violence.
Utilizing multiple camera crews, Robert Drew also follows Bobby Kennedy and George Wallace during the course of "Crisis". In fact, RFK is on screen more here than the President, because he was given the responsibility for coming up with a plan on how to most effectively deal with the Alabama crisis at hand. We see both Robert Kennedy and Wallace at their homes, and we get a candid look at Bobby having breakfast with some of his huge and ever-growing clan of offspring at his McLean, Virginia, residence. Several scenes also show RFK dealing with the crisis in his office at the Justice Department. Interesting stuff.
There's one especially candid and charming moment that takes place in Bobby Kennedy's office, when one of Bob's big brood of children, 3-year-old Kerry, moves into view as RFK is on the telephone talking with his Deputy Attorney General, Nicholas Katzenbach. Kerry takes the phone from her father and speaks to Katzenbach for a moment, easing the growing tensions of the impending crisis a tad bit it seemed. Bobby's attempts to re-acquire the phone from his young daughter, who doesn't seem to want to relinquish the receiver, provides an additional cute, light-hearted moment during the film. Kerry, 29 years later, married New York Governor Mario Cuomo's son.
During the documentary, we also see and hear from the two college students, Vivian Malone and James Hood, who are firmly anchored in the middle of the racial struggle.
This film coincides exactly with one of President Kennedy's most famous speeches to the nation. For it was right after this crisis in Alabama had been resolved, and just hours after Mr. Drew's cameras had filmed the confrontation at the University's doorway, that JFK gave his powerful and stirring 13-minute "Civil Rights Address" that very same evening of Tuesday, June 11, 1963. A portion of that dramatic speech is presented in this film.
This DVD, part of a series of films under the "Docurama" label, has some good Special Features in addition to the main feature. .... Included among the bonuses is an Audio Commentary Track with filmmaker Robert Drew (who was 79 years of age at the time) and cameraman Richard Leacock.
There's also a text biography on Director/Producer Bob Drew, plus informational notes by Drew on his conversations with President Kennedy, revealing how the idea for "Crisis" was born, and ultimately filmed.
Information on the extensive catalog of other "Docurama" titles is also included on this disc, along with some pretty good Trailers for many of the various films.
And saving the best Bonus Feature for last --- there's the inclusion of another Robert Drew film on this DVD, "Faces Of November", which was shot by Drew just days after President Kennedy was assassinated. The majority of this brief 12-minute film depicts up-close shots of people's faces in Washington, D.C., on November 24 and 25, 1963. We can see and feel the grief that is being displayed in the faces of these mourners, whose popular President had been taken from them by an insane act of violence just days before.
"Faces Of November" contains no music score, and likewise no narration. The film's "soundtrack" is filled not with an orchestra's musical notes, but rather with the real-life sounds as recorded by Mr. Drew's microphone -- the muffled drums, the bagpipes, the sound of flags at half-mast being whipped by the November wind, the 21-gun salute, and the wrenching "one-note-askew" version of "taps" at JFK's gravesite.
Some of the more recognizable faces we see in this moving film are that of Jacqueline Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Caroline Kennedy, Edward Kennedy, and Peter Lawford. The rest of the faces are just ordinary folk, who came to Washington, D.C., to pay their respects to their fallen leader. Some waited in line for many hours for their chance to pass by the President's flag-draped casket in the Rotunda of the Capitol Building. As many of them slowly paraded by the casket, the emotions began to flow. And Robert Drew captured some of that heart-felt emotion through his camera's lens. This rare and hard-to-find short film is truly a touching tribute to the memory of President John F. Kennedy; and I'm grateful to the makers of this DVD that they saw fit to include it on this disc. In my opinion, it's worth the price of the DVD all by itself.Additional information regarding this DVD ...............................................
Video -- Full Frame (1.33:1 aspect ratio).
Audio -- Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo (Re-mixed from original Mono). English only.
Running Times -- Main Feature ("Crisis") = 52:41.
Bonus Film ("Faces Of November") = 11:55.
Color or B&W -- B&W.
Subtitles -- None.
Menus -- Static (non-animated).
Scene Selections For Main Feature? -- Yes (12 total chapters/scenes).
------------------------------------
"Crisis", like "Primary" which came before it, is a documentary film that was quite unique for its day. A film that throws us, the viewer, right into the center of the action as the situation is unfolding LIVE. Very few, if any, filmmakers had tried this "as-it-is-happening" approach to movie-making prior to Mr. Robert Drew. His roster of films gives viewers a fascinating, and fresh, perspective on many different topics -- and his two major films featuring John F. Kennedy are certainly two of the best, IMO.
So if you want to watch a variation of NBC-TV's "The West Wing" -- only for REAL -- pick up this first-rate DVD of "Crisis: Behind A Presidential Commitment". And don't forget about the bonus film, "Faces Of November". Its presence here elevates this DVD to "Must Have" status.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Crisis - Behind a Presidential Commitment (1963)

CRISIS:BEHIND PRESIDENTAL COMMITMENT - DVD Movie

Buy NowGet 13% OFF

Click here for more information about Crisis - Behind a Presidential Commitment (1963)

Read More...

Touched By an Angel: Amazing Grace (1994) Review

Touched By an Angel: Amazing Grace  (1994)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This episode of "TBAA" was so touching. For most of the show, Monica was not able to see and she had to see with her heart. I think I was crying for most of the episode. I thought it was very moving when the whole town decided to help clean the place up and Monica was then able to see. I was balling at that point! This was probably the best episode that I have ever seen.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Touched By an Angel: Amazing Grace (1994)



Buy NowGet 87% OFF

Click here for more information about Touched By an Angel: Amazing Grace (1994)

Read More...

Donnie Darko (2007) Review

Donnie Darko (2007)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
First I would like to say that this review is more targeted at the Blu-Ray transfer of this movie. When I first found out this movie was available on Blu-Ray I had to have it since it's one of my favorite movies. I already owned the DVD, and was happy with the quality of the video on my up-converting DVD player. I figured the Blu-Ray would have to look better since it advertised as HD 1080p. Unfortunately that was not the case; in fact the DVD looks better up-converted than the Blu-Ray does. How does that happen? It appears the studio did very little to prepare this film for Blu-Ray. If anything they made it worse by trying to doctor it up rather than spend the money to re-master it properly. The movie has a lot of dark scenes which are almost all grainy and not very detailed. The light scenes are not as noticeable but you can still see it unless you're sitting a good distance from your TV. I guess the point I'm trying to make would be to hang on to your DVD until they fix the Blu-Ray transfer. At the new price it's worth buying if you don't already have the DVD, but don't "up grade" to this from your DVD.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Donnie Darko (2007)

In the tradition of Urban Legends and Final Destination, Donnie Darko is an edgy, psychological thriller about a suburban teen coming face-to-face wit his dark destiny.Jake Gyllenhaal leads a star-filled cast (including Drew Barrymore, Noah Wyle, Jena Malone, Patrick Swayze and Mary McDonnell) as a delusional high-school student visited by a demonic rabbit with eerie visions of the past - and deadly predictions for the future. This "excitingly original" (Entertainment Weekly) nail-biter will keep you on the edge of your seat until the mind-bending climax.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Donnie Darko (2007)

Read More...

Touched By an Angel: Liberty Moon (1994) Review

Touched By an Angel: Liberty Moon  (1994)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I bought this tape for our fifth-year wedding aniversary, this past March 18, 1999. My wife and I watched it that same night, since both of us are loyal fans of the TBAA series here in Puerto Rico. Excellent! Roma Downey really lived out this episode, since I noticed she cried in many scenes, really feeling what was happening. The scene where she takes the beatings for Jean really is a testimony for the way God many times protects us.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Touched By an Angel: Liberty Moon (1994)



Buy NowGet 87% OFF

Click here for more information about Touched By an Angel: Liberty Moon (1994)

Read More...

Schizopolis (The Criterion Collection) (1997) Review

Schizopolis (The Criterion Collection) (1997)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is far and away the most unique and original movie I have ever seen. There is no close second place. Steven Soderbergh wrote, starred in, and directed this little-known masterpiece, and I am now a loyal fan. The caution on the box perhaps best summarizes the film: "Warning: All attempts at synopsizing the film have ended in failure and hospitalization." This is truth in advertising if I have ever seen it. Think of "Schizopolis" as a narcissistic, paranoid blend of equal parts "Head," "1984," "Monty Python's Flying Circus," and "Unarius."
The film is absolutely impossible to categorize. It occurs in three principal acts, but they are all circular and the plots entangle themselves in the end in an almost Seinfeldesque manner. Steven Soderbergh stars as both Fletcher Munson and Dr. Jeffrey Korchek. Munson is a curiously self-absorbed speechwriter for New Age guru (and founder of "Eventualism") T. Azimuth Schwitters, while Korchek, a dentist with a Muzak fixation dominates act two by having an affair with Munson's disenchanted wife from act one. Throughout all this, local exterminator (and celebrity) Elmo Oxygen uses very unconventional pillow talk to seduce housewives while plotting against Schwitters. Eddie Jemison, noteworthy as "Nameless Numberhead Man," is the perfect comic foil for Munson.
Although you will need to watch this movie several times to even scratch the surface of the nuances it contains, several themes are apparent, most notably the satirical approach to contemporary society which is infused throughout the film in many ways, most notably in the dialogue. When Munson greets his wife after work he says "Generic greeting," to which she replies "Generic greeting returned." Later in the film several other dialogue issues occur with Soderbergh's characters speaking in Japanese, French, and Italian seemingly at random and to great comic effect.
From the outset, this film is highly segmented (much like an episode of "Monty Python's Flying Circus") and confrontational. There is even an explicit warning in the beginning which says "If you don't understand this film, it's your fault and not ours." This type of in-your-face humor is very uncommon and I simply loved it. The film is extremely difficult to follow if you are approaching it like a conventional movie with a well developed plot and characters, but if you can deal with the exceptional stream-of-consciousness, non sequitur humor that Soderbergh uses here, "Schizopolis" will become one of your favorites, too.
I highly recommend this film.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Schizopolis (The Criterion Collection) (1997)

Fletcher Munson has a doppelgänger in dentist Dr. Jeffrey Korchek. In his only starring performance to date, acclaimed director Steven Soderbergh (Erin Brockovich, Traffic, Ocean's Eleven) inhabits both roles: Munson, onanistic corporate drone and speechwriter for New Age guru T. Azimuth Schwitters, and the swinging Korchek, Muzak enthusiast and lover to Munson's disenchanted wife. Meanwhile, mad exterminator and part-time celebrity prima donna Elmo Oxygen seduces local housewives in secret code and plots against Schwitters. Placing the onus squarely on the viewer ("If you don't understand this film, it's your fault and not ours"), writer/director/editor/cameraman Soderbergh presents a deranged comedy of confused identity, doublespeak, and white-knuckled corporate intrigue, confirming his status as one of America's most daring and unpredictable filmmakers.

Buy NowGet 25% OFF

Click here for more information about Schizopolis (The Criterion Collection) (1997)

Read More...

The United States of Leland Review

The United States of Leland
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The premise is rather simple. A teenager, awkward, introvert and burdened with a sensibility that sears his heart to numbness, commits an inexplicable murder. An atrocious one at that. The victim is his girlfriend's brother, Bryan, who is an 11 year old severely autistic nonentity. The main role of Leland Fitzgerald is interpreted by Ryan Gosling with such compelling anguish that it magnifies the complexity of a fragile spirit to such a degree we cannot psychologize the troubled youth because we are disoriented as we observe the indomitable suffering Leland attempts to silence. Likewise we are given a stark visual of the two sets of parents, the questions that harrow them and the way the tragedy unravels what seemed to be a world pulling at the seams of every thread.
The emotionally detached Leland retraces his steps thanks to the invasive insistance of his juvenile hall educator Pearl Madison, admirably played by Don Cheadle, who is undergoing moral dilemmas of his own. Pearl's feigned confidence is contrasted with confounding and disarming depth to Leland's innocent aloofness. The emotional texture of the movie is further enriched by strands of a narrative that follows Bryan's other sister who is unsettled and dejected, an 18 year old who is not allowed to search and delve within her own turbulance. She breaks up with her boyfriend, he too a timid soul reaching for a stability that teeters on the brink of injected scrupolousness. If you then add the torpor and emotional sterility that Leland's dad, an accomplished bestselling author whose fame rests on his descriptive novels that indemnify suburbia, you have in focus a portrait of such a philosophical, psychological and ethical intensity undeniably impressive, expressive and teeming with the brute force that sterilizes our lives as it designates its shallow characteristics. Much more may well be added in terms of the narrative, for it deploys innumerable details that trace a perspective that becomes dissolved just when it seems to have become solidified most. The director, Matthew Ryan Hoge, frames the movie in such a way as to mesmerize the viewer through the autopsy of a society that in the wake of a murder discovers how much everything else is dead within. The motion-sickness tremble of the photographic ambiance of these quivering soulscapes, given full force, reaches a climactic burst when things seem to make sense again and our code of ethics reinstated with trust. It is in that precise moment that a second murder makes the depth of the movie's conscience become too vast for imperatives of psychology or social commentary. The movie stirs, moves, and shocks, but best of all it illuminates the pain of lives gone numb and that dorment force that craves reawakening.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The United States of Leland

The United States of Leland isn't a whodunit. The opening scenes of Matthew Ryan Hoge's unusual murder mystery make it clear that Leland P. Fitzgerald ("The Believer"'s Ryan Gosling) is the killer. But why did he kill? Now that the deed is done, Leland is staying in a detention center. Everybody, but especially new teacher Pearl Madison (Don Cheadle), wants to know why he killed the mentally challenged brother of girlfriend Becky (Jena Malone). After all, Leland seemed to genuinely like the kid. Leland is just as confused (and can't remember committing the act), but he reveals more and more clues as he gradually opens up to Pearl. His estranged novelist father Albert (Kevin Spacey), meanwhile, just wants to spin another bestseller out of his son's story. Writer-director Hoge doesn't provide any easy answers in this compelling, complicated look at teenage depression. Featuring music by the Fire Theft's Jeremy Enigk. "--Kathleen C. Fennessy"

Buy Now

Click here for more information about The United States of Leland

Read More...

Rock Hudson Screen Legend Collection (The Golden Blade / Has Anybody Seen My Gal? / The Last Sunset / The Spiral Road / A Very Special Favor) (1965) Review

Rock Hudson Screen Legend Collection (The Golden Blade / Has Anybody Seen My Gal / The Last Sunset / The Spiral Road / A Very Special Favor) (1965)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
It is great to see Universal release more of Rock Hudson's films to dvd. And thankfully the three discs in this collection are single sided. I thoroughly enjoyed The Spiral Road - a very good drama set in and around Borneo in 1936 and which also stars Burl Ives. Both are doctors and surprised I had never heard of it until now. By the way, three of the films, including Spiral Road, are presented in their OAR of 1:85 ( widescreen )and are Anamorphic. The label on the dvd incorrectly lists Spiral Road as 2:35. If you are a fan of Rock Hudson don't hesistate to pick up a copy.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Rock Hudson Screen Legend Collection (The Golden Blade / Has Anybody Seen My Gal / The Last Sunset / The Spiral Road / A Very Special Favor) (1965)

INCLUDED IN THIS COLLECTION ARE HAS ANYBODY SEEN MY GAL?, A VERY SPECIAL FAVOR, THE GOLDEN BLADE, THE LAST SUNSET AND THE SPIRAL ROAD.

Buy NowGet 26% OFF

Click here for more information about Rock Hudson Screen Legend Collection (The Golden Blade / Has Anybody Seen My Gal / The Last Sunset / The Spiral Road / A Very Special Favor) (1965)

Read More...

Tarnished Angels ~ Rock Hudson - Dorothy Malone (Import-NTSC All Regions) Review

Tarnished Angels ~ Rock Hudson - Dorothy Malone (Import-NTSC All Regions)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This black and white film is surprising. The action takes place in the early 1930s, prohibition still going on, but even so the film is strangely nostalgic of a time that has fully disappeared at the time the film was made. What makes Douglas Sirk so nostalgic about that past he was so fascinated by? Of course it is planes, and flying, and doing all kinds of silly things with these flying machines to dare the devil and to challenge death as if it were possible to challenge that devilish reaper. The second thing that attracts Sirk is the hero this pilot is, a war hero who has reformed himself and retrained himself into being a pilot for fun, a pilot to entertain crowds by taking risks and flying them in mid air, till one day the plane breaks down and the choice is between a simple crash on the funfair next door and a crash into the sea. That's the kind if choice that only dying people, people doomed to die can face and a hero is the one ... but you know the answer to that, and rare are those who can do the right thing at such a moment. The third thing that attracts Sirk is the little boy who follows his father the daredevil that flies planes for the fun of others and his mother, the flying acrobat in the air with no net, no string to catch her, just her know how and courage to do what is to be done not to crash on the ground when she loses - on purpose of course - her parachute. The next thing that attracts Sirk is that immeasurable love between these two persons and the devotion a third person, an outsider, a man from the side feels and makes him play the gallant man not to break that couple but to serve the woman in that final drama of hers and to help the child cope with death and death and death again. A beautiful film with the end of a woman who finds the proper footing she needs to be up to raising her son in a treacherous world but in the memory of his father the flying hero.
Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne, University Paris 8 Saint Denis, University Paris 12 Créteil, CEGID


Click Here to see more reviews about: Tarnished Angels ~ Rock Hudson - Dorothy Malone (Import-NTSC All Regions)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Tarnished Angels ~ Rock Hudson - Dorothy Malone (Import-NTSC All Regions)

Read More...

Slayers TRY - Season Three Set Review

Slayers TRY - Season Three Set
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Well, I reviewed seasons 1 & 2 so here goes. "Slayers Try" is typically viewed as the weakest of the three seasons. This is almost certainly true, but it's still Slayers, which is to say it's awesome. If you're a huge Lina Inverse fan then consider this yet another must-buy. If you're not; well, this season won't change your mind. The story is one that spans the entire season rather than being broken up into smaller arcs as previous seasons were and many supporting characters are left in the dust as our primary heroes travel to parts unknown for this adventure, but the goofy character-driven humor and epic world-in-the-balance confrontations that are the series' calling card are here with bells on. It's slightly flawed, but it's still a must in my book.
The storyline this time out begins with the usual fateful meetings of our four heroes; Lina, Amelia, Gourry, and Zelgadis. They are quickly swept up in battle as a dragon attacks the city and wind up stranded at sea. The dragon in question turns out to be the newest member of team Inverse: the dragon priestess Filia, sent to fetch Lina for a task of grave importance. This storyline, while occasionally poorly paced, turns out to be quite deep as Lina and company become pawns in a massive, multi-faction feud that spans dimensions and seems to have no right or wrong side. The primary villain is a demon dragon named Gaav who turns out to be quite the tragic figure out to avenge the genocide of his people. This is some pretty deep fare for an anime that prides itself on characters who behave like savages around food and like to blow stuff up. Xellos makes his return with aplomb, but this time he's no friend to Lina's cause. His status as a demon puts him in direct conflict with Filia as dragons and monsters are natural enemies. The show uses this device amusingly to instigate a potential romance (methinks the lady doth protest too much) between the two mutual antagonists.
"Slayers Try" suffers from a definitive lack of the adorable Sylphiel, but Filia really filled the gap for me. Her prim and proper ways make for comedy gold as she hasn't quite mastered her human form and often sprouts a tail when surprised, thus lifting up her robe and well...you get the picture. This awkwardness is milked for further amusement by giving Lina's newest team member an oversized mace and an equally oversized temper with which to use it. Plus, she can turn into a dragon (the bow on her tail is adorable); just not when anyone's looking because, naturally, she loses her clothes in the process and she's a very shy girl.
As I stated before, there are some pacing problems as will happen with series that don't divide the larger stories into smaller ones. This season is broken up only by a flurry of episodes where the team is fragmented and each have a series of moronic standalone adventures. There is some great stuff there, but the one-offs were spread out more evenly and didn't interfere with the larger plots in past seasons while these just don't fit. Even Lina -always the self-referencing type- at one point observes that maybe it's time to quit with the silly stuff and get down to business. The climax impresses, but is again broken up with some inappropriately-timed and redundant humor which causes Filia this time to admonish the writers..err characters to stop screwing around. This self-aware humor helps save for me what brought "Slayers Try" down a notch for some.
All-in-all, chalk this one up as another winner. This new set, like the others, is priced right and is remastered for your viewing pleasure. That doesn't mean you should double-dip because, personally, I wish they'd just put out a higher quality product to begin with and stop torturing we diehard fans with this re-release nonsense. But this review is for the new Slayers fan and if you don't have this series yet, now is the time. This is among my favorite animated comedy series of all time and I can't recommend all three seasons enough to fantasy anime fans.
4 1/2 stars rounded up to escape the wrath of the great Lina Inverse!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Slayers TRY - Season Three Set

"Slayers is a slice of old school that's worth every penny" -- Play MagazineIn a land far from their own, a band of adventurers stumble into a prophecy and must once again save the world… but at what price? Meet Lina Inverse, a spunky sorceress with a penchant for fire, who enjoys nothing more than liberating the unearned from those less deserving. Teamed up with her not-so-heroic group of friends, this seeker of fame and fortune finds herself the unlikely savior of a story long foretold. To defeat the coming darkness, sacrifice will be asked of them all… And how does one balance the worth of two worlds, when one must be saved at the cost of the other?26 Beautifully Remastered Episodes magically priced for only $39.98!

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Slayers TRY - Season Three Set

Read More...

Creature (Alien) Review

Creature (Alien)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
"Creature" is a 1984 monster-in-space movie with virtually no originality but plenty of terrible dialogue and special effects. The film is extremely derivative in almost every aspect: what recent monster or sci-fi movie doesn't make a guest appearance here? Certainly "Alien" and "Jaws" do, at least in spirit. (The conclusion's homage to "Jaws" is especially eye-rolling.)
The acting and especially dialogue are ghastly, although the actors really do try to work with what's been handed to them as best they can. The film starts with an interesting enough corporate intrigue angle (which unfortunately goes nowhere), and progresses to a guy in a rubber suit chasing the stars around cheesy sets in short order. There are a lot of diversions along the way (e.g. lots of hot soldering action, and Klaus Kinski as a creepy German), but it really boils down to the cast getting decimated by a creature that harkens back to other sci-fi creatures.
The film features special effects that vary from not bad to really appalling, but the content of the film is really the issue here, and it can never overcome its derivative nature and the fact that many other movies have trodden the same turf and have been much more entertaining.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Creature (Alien)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Creature (Alien)

Read More...

Dahmer Vs. Gacy (2011) Review

Dahmer Vs. Gacy (2011)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Dahmer vs. Gacy is an excellent party movie. Lots of laughs. Good performances from Randall Malone, a hilariously bizarre turn by Steven Adler (Guns and Roses), A real legend in Jerry Maren(Wizard Of Oz Lolly pop guild) topped off with an astounding dual role performance by Ford Austin all wrap up into a great way to spend your night laughing with your buddies. You wont regret buying it, but you might need to buy it twice after one of your friends doesn't give it back after you lend it to them.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Dahmer Vs. Gacy (2011)



Buy NowGet 44% OFF

Click here for more information about Dahmer Vs. Gacy (2011)

Read More...

Naked City - New York to L.A. (1958) Review

Naked City - New York to L.A. (1958)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
In its earlier half-hour series starring James Franciscus "Naked City" was a pretty conventional cop show, but when it was expanded to an hour's length and recast with Paul Burke it became more like an anthology series, with its famous "eight million stories" taking in the ordinary people and eccentric characters of New York City. Gradually it developed a unique tone and style, mixing action with sentiment, humour, and occasional moments of the surreal - how many other cop shows, then or now, would begin an episode with a voice-over meditating on the meaning of the Talmud? These DVDs feature episodes from the hour series, chosen in seemingly random order, a wise move as many of the best episodes came later. Picture quality is excellent, showing the atmospheric New York locations to great advantage. I've bought all the discs released to date and am keenly looking forward to future volumes.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Naked City - New York to L.A. (1958)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Naked City - New York to L.A. (1958)

Read More...

Bastard out of Carolina (1996) Review

Bastard out of Carolina (1996)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Anjelica Huston's directorial debut is a stunning one. This film, based with loving care on Dorothy Allison's fine novel by screenwriter Anne Meredith, tells the story of a pre-teen girl growing up under horrific family surroundings in the 1950s American South.
Bone Boatwright, played with astounding sensitivity and guts by young actor Jena Malone, is subjected to unconscionable brutality and sexual abuse by her stapfather. Her mother, portrayed here by Jennifer Jason Leigh, is in deep denial of what is happening to her child, unable or unwilling to see what is occuring under her roof -- partly afraid of losing her husband, partly due to psychological trauma she most likely received when she was a child. This pattern of behavior is usually circular in nature -- victims many times become perpetrators or enablers when they become adults. Only intensive counseling and a deep determination on the part of the survivor can break this horrible chain.
Jena Malone turns in the performance of a lifetime -- and from one so young! If she can do this level of work at this age, what will she be capable of as her career continues? The entire cast is well-chosen -- this was a project about which they obviously cared very deeply. The performances they give here attest to that.
Meredith's screenplay is excellent -- very true to Allison's novel. Some parts were necessarily left out for considerations of film length -- the important thing is that Meredith was intelligent and respectful enough of Allison's work that she wisely chose not to add any elements on her own. Too many screenwriters make that mistake -- it's refreshing to see such a quality screenplay for such an important work as this.
Anjelica Huston must have been extremely moved by Allison's novel (an amazing book -- check it out) to have taken on a project such as this, one that she most likely knew would not be a box office smash. She shows great sensitivity to the material here -- there are some scenes that are necessarily brutal in nature, and they are filmed with both truth and dignity. This is an ugly story -- thank God she chose not to show it through rose-colored glasses. The more fine films on this subject are seen, the greater our chances as a people of understanding this shameful problem in our society. The more it is discussed and brought into the light of day, the fewer places there will remain for the perpetrators to hide. Those who don't believe things like this still occur are fooling themselves -- statistics show that over 70% of children in America are sexually abused in some degree. Think about that the next time you pass a school or a playground full of children, who have the right to be leading lives untouched by these predators.
I've read that Ted Turner originally commissioned this film, but when it was done refused to show it on his cable network. Too bad he lacked the courage to do the right thing -- and kudos to Showtime for stepping up to the plate and taking over. This is an outstanding film on a heartbreaking but vital topic -- and one that should be seen by more people. Heartfelt thanks to Anjelica Huston, and to everyone involved in bringing this wonderful novel to the screen.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Bastard out of Carolina (1996)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Bastard out of Carolina (1996)

Read More...

Pride & Prejudice (2005) Review

Pride and Prejudice  (2005)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Okay, I am a rabid Frith and BBC fan of the miniseries, but I was very impressed with this adaption and found it refershing in it's grounded, youthful take on the story.
For starters, there is a very grounded nature to the presentation of the story. Some Austenites got their knickers into a twist because they thought it made the family and their circumstances too drab looking. But I loved it! The Meryton Assembly basically sets the stage for this grounded approach-the dancing looks a little heavy footed, the girls look sweaty, and you can't help but think that someone needs to open a window cause it looks awfully sweaty! But at the same time,it made the story come alive, like you were a fly on the wall, peeking in on Lizzy and Darcy and the rest of the gang.
Lastly, I loved the youthful take on the story. I LOVE Firth and Ehle as the '95 leads. They had this chemistry and sensual tension that was electric! But their take was definitely from a mature standpoint-like the way I'd act now as a 33 year old woman. Whereas Macfadyen and Knightley? Theirs is a more youthful, innocent, first love take that I just took to. Great chemistry, Lizzy's a little less cocksure, Darcy's a bit more unbalanced by this attraction, and it felt right in terms of age and stage of development with the actual characters in the book.
Great adaption, brisk storytelling, and a wonderfully irreverent tone by a fun director who knew it was a good idea to knock the pedestal off from under our Lizzy and Darcy, and let them be seen in a more grounded light. And ps-I thought Macfadyen, even though he doesn't have that big of a part, was a great Darcy!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Pride & Prejudice (2005)

Academy Award nominee Keira Knightley stars in the greatest love story of all time. When Elizabeth Bennet (Knightley) meets the handsome Mr. Darcy (Matthew Macfadyen), she believes he is the last man on earth she could ever marry. But as their lives become intertwined, she finds herself captivated by the very person she swore to loathe for all eternity. Jane Austen's masterpiece novel comes to the screen in the film critics said 'makes you believe in true love and happily-ever-after" (Stephen Holden, The New York Times).

Buy NowGet 44% OFF

Click here for more information about Pride & Prejudice (2005)

Read More...

Cold Mountain (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) (2003) Review

Cold Mountain (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) (2003)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
"Cold Mountains", one of the best films of the year (it's a crime it wasn't nominated for Best Picture), is beautifully crafted, stirring, poetic tale of love, loss, and the will to survive. Directed and adapted to the screen by the wonderful Anthony Minghella and boasting a stunning cast of Jude Law, Nicole Kidman, Renee Zellweger, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Natalie Portman, Giovanni Ribisi, Jack White, Brendan Gleeson, and Donald Sutherland, this film is truly a force to be reckoned with.
"Cold Mountain" tells the story of Inman (Law), a carpenter working in Cold Mountain, North Carolina in 1861 when the alluring, elegant, and well-educated Ada (Kidman) and her father, Reverend Monroe (Sutherland), move to the Blue Mountains from the city. Inman and Ada, in true Hollywood fashion, are instantly taken by each other and engage in restrained flirtation, Ada's preacher father and their different social classes being the bulwark from romance. Soon the Civil War begins and the entire young male population of Cold Mountain departs in eager anticipation of glorious battle. Inman and Ada engage in one fleeting, hungry kiss before he rushes off to join the departing procession.
During battle, Inman is wounded and, after reading Ada's numerous earnest letters imploring him to return to her, deserts the Confederate army and embarks upon an Odyssey-like journey back home to his true love. Meanwhile, Ada's father has died, leaving her helpless and alone on their 300 acre farm. Soon Ruby (Zellweger) arrives and offers Ada her services in exchange for food and shelter. Realizing that she simply cannot manage on her own, Ada agrees. The rest of this spellbinding film flashes back and forth between Ada, being "all that keeps Inman from sliding into some dark place" and Inman, being Ada's "last thread of courage". Though these two souls barely know each other, they both remarkably become the single thing in each others world worth living for, worth fighting for.
When boiled down to it, "Cold Mountain" is simply a beautiful testament of the human soul's fierce will to survive and, as corny as it sounds, the power of love. If it weren't for their love, neither Ada nor Inman would have found the will and courage to survive after their lives had been shattered by the brutalities of war.
The seamlessly intertwined music plays such a large emotional role in this film. From Gabriel Yard's haunting score to Alison Krauss' tender songs, the music in this films helps to create an absorbing atmosphere that sucks you right into the Civil War. In addition, John Seale's breathtaking cinematography complete with sweeping views of the snow-encrusted Blue Mountains makes this a film you simply must see on the big screen.
This has been a very difficult review for me to write. Upon first seeing "Cold Mountain", I was pleased with the film, but definitely not as taken with it as I soon came to be. That all changed in the weeks following. I simply cannot get this film out of my head. The hope, the sacrifices, the pain, the loss, the love. It really sticks with you. It's hard to put my feelings into words and I sincerely hope that this review has given you the incentive to go see this film, and by doing so, embark upon an unforgettable journey.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Cold Mountain (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) (2003)

Nicole Kidman (Academy Award(R) Winner -- Best Actress, THE HOURS, 2002) stars with Academy Award(R) winner Renée Zellweger (Best Supporting Actress, COLD MOUNTAIN, 2003) and Academy Award® nominee Jude Law (Best Actor, COLD MOUNTAIN). At the dawn of the Civil War, the men of Cold Mountain, North Carolina, rush to join the Confederate army. Ada (Kidman) has vowed to wait for Inman (Law), but as the war drags on and letters go unanswered, she must find the will to survive. At war's end, hearts will be dashed, dreams fulfilled, and the strength of the human spirit tested ... but not broken! Directed by Academy Award® winner Anthony Minghella (Best Director, THE ENGLISH PATIENT, 1996).

Buy NowGet 51% OFF

Click here for more information about Cold Mountain (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) (2003)

Read More...