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Posts Tagged ‘DVD Reviews’


DVD Review: ‘Roger Corman’s Cult Classics: Vampires, Mummies, & Monsters’

by Matt Blackwood, Mar 26 2012 // 9:00 AM

If you love old B-movies, you can’t miss Shout Factory’s line of “Roger Corman’s Cult Classics” DVD collections. Horror, fantasy, science fiction, grindhouse- all are represented in these neat 3- and 4-film multi-packs.

The Vampires, Mummies, and Monsters collection is kind of a B-movie potluck. The four films on two discs created over a span of 17 years have incredibly different looks, tones, and yes, monsters.

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Posted in: DVD · DVD Reviews · Horror · Horror Reviews · News · Sci-Fi
Tagged: B Movies, DVD, DVD Reviews, Monsters, MST3K, Mummy, Roger Corman, Vampires


DVD Review: ‘Beautiful Boy’

by Matt Blackwood, Feb 28 2012 // 1:30 PM

There are many reasons a film might be hard to watch: unbelievable performances, sloppy writing, unskilled direction. Some movies offend with tasteless portrayals of strong sexual content or graphic violence.

Beautiful Boy doesn’t have any of these problems. The film is beautifully acted and well made. Its one sex scene is very thoughtfully done. Beautiful Boy is hard to watch because of the sheer intensity of the subject matter it covers.

Bill and Kate are emotionally distant and muted until they receive the worst news two parents could possibly get. Not only has their only son been killed in a campus shooting, but it turns out he was the shooter.

The couple must deal with their own loss while trying to weather the varied opinions of family, neighbors, and media. This also gives them more time than they wanted to examine how they feel about one another.

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Posted in: Anchor Bay · Drama · DVD · DVD Reviews · Movies
Tagged: DVD, DVD Reviews, Maria Bello, Michael Sheen


DVD Review: ‘Cyrus: Mind of a Serial Killer’

by Matt Blackwood, Feb 21 2012 // 10:30 AM

As technology gets smaller and cheaper, making films is getting easier and easier. But in a market lousy with low-budget indies, it’s not always easy to score well known actors. This wasn’t a problem for Mark Vadik.

The writer/director of Cyrus: Mind of a Serial Killer somehow managed to wrangle several seasoned actors for parts of various size, including Brian Krause (Charmed), Danielle Harris (multiple Halloween films), Doug Jones (Hellboy), and the irreplaceable Lance Henriksen. As you watch the film, the obvious question that comes to mind is, How?

Cyrus is a frame story in which TV journalist Maria Sanchez, looking for fodder for her tabloid news show, interviews a man who claims to know the identity of a local serial killer. He tells her and her cameraman the sad tale of Cyrus, a former soldier who, when his marriage and business fell apart, turned to murder and cannibalism.

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Posted in: Anchor Bay · Drama · DVD · DVD Reviews · Horror · Horror Reviews · Movies · News
Tagged: Brian Krause, Cyrus, Danielle Harris, Doug Jones, DVD, DVD Reviews, Horror Reviews, Lance Henriksen, Movies, Slasher


Blu-Ray Review: ‘In Time’

by Matt Blackwood, Jan 31 2012 // 12:00 PM

In case you missed it in theatres (and chances are you did), the sci-fi thriller In Time, starring Justin Timberlake and Amanda Seyfried, comes to Blu-Ray and DVD* today.

The first thing you might notice about In Time is how good-looking it is. Of course, being an Andrew Niccol (Gattaca, Lord of War) joint, the film is stylish and immaculate, but that’s not what I mean. I am referring to the film’s entire cast being comprised of gorgeous young actors. With the exception of two young children, every character in the film is 25 years old.

No matter how many years they have behind them, everyone from grandmothers to mob heavies are played by actors in their mid-twenties to early-thirties. Combine that with Hollywood’s natural trend towards beauty, and the effect creates what can only be described as a “model” future.

You see, in In Time‘s vision of the future, genetics have been altered to give everyone’s life a predetermined length. At 25 years old, bodies stop aging but start counting down. Everyone gets a year, but time can be earned, traded, gambled, or stolen. It is, in fact, the only currency humanity has left.

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Posted in: 20th Century Fox · Action · Blu-Ray · DVD · DVD Reviews · Movies · News · Sci-Fi
Tagged: Amanda Seyfried, Andrew Niccol, Cillian Murphy, DVD, DVD Reviews, In Time, Justin TImberlake, Vincent Kartheiser


DVD Review: ‘The Simpsons: The Fourteenth Season’

by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Jan 3 2012 // 3:00 PM

The Simpsons are the kings of prime time animation. Lasting an astounding twenty-three seasons and counting, The Simpsons is an institution that has spanned generations. So the collecting of these episodes is something that fans have enjoyed since the earliest days of TV on DVD. Fox has been releasing these sets for over a decade now and we find ourselves in an interesting era of the show.

Most people consider these early and mid 2000s seasons of the show to be the worst era during the impressive run. The show seemingly was stale and the spark was missing. At the end of the day the show survived and has since rebounded to become a relevant, often hilarious show.

One of the things I was most excited about when I dug into this set was the plethora of special features. The Simpsons sets have always set the standard for insightful and worthwhile special features, anchored by the amazing cast and crew commentaries that have accompanied every single episode since season one, making over 300 episodes worth of anecdotes, insights and inside knowledge of the creation of an institution.

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Posted in: 20th Century Fox · Animation · Comedy · DVD · DVD Reviews · News · Reviews · TV
Tagged: Bart, DVD Reviews, Fox, Homer, Lisa, Maggie, Marge, Matt Groening, Reviews, Season 14, The Simpsons, TV


DVD Reviews: ‘Red vs. Blue: Revelation’ and ‘Red vs. Blue: The Recollection’

by John Carle, Sep 17 2010 // 7:00 AM

It’s hard to talk about video games and not mention the Halo franchise. Constantly breaking records and taking names, Halo is a system selling behemoth of a property for the XBox 360. It was one of the games so popular, that it would go on to spawn multiple Machinima series, animated shorts created using assets from the respective games. These included everything from Phil to Arby ‘n’ The Chief to what may be the most famous Machinima ever, Red vs. Blue.

Smartly coinciding the release of the 8th season of Red vs. Blue entitled Revalation and the Recollection three disc set with the release of Halo: Reach, Rooster Teeth helps provide Halo fanboys with more Halo than they can handle in the biggest week of their gaming year.

The Recollection contains the second full story arc of the Red vs. Blue universe. Not a part of any official Halo canon, Red vs. Blue takes aspects of the game world never explained like the constant fighting in multiplayer of the different Spartans and tries to explain it. Taken with a grain of salt, the story even gets a little meta and makes a viewer step back and wonder how much applies to them. But for the most part, there is just lots of great comedic moments and swearing over a finely animated and even dramatic story.

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Posted in: Animation · DVD · DVD Reviews · Games · Machinima Mondays · Microsoft · News · Video Games · XBLA · Xbox 360
Tagged: DVD, DVD Reviews, Halo, Halo 2, Halo 3, Halo 3: ODST, Halo: Combat Evolved, Halo: Reach, Machinima, Microsoft, Red vs. Blue, Red vs. Blue: Season 6 "Reconstruction", Red vs. Blue: Season 7 "Recreation", Red vs. Blue: Season 8 "Revelation", Rooster Teeth


DVD Review: ‘Halo Legends’ Blu-ray

by John Carle, Feb 23 2010 // 9:00 AM

Anthologies can often be either one of the best ways to explore a concept if executed properly. The idea explored here is Halo and the mythology surrounding it. For the first time, one work tries to take from all other source material like the Halo games, novels and comics in an effort to fully explain the world of Halo. In the process, it also helps actually add new substantial concepts to this much applauded franchise that show that the fight isn’t really over for Master Chief and the Spartans.

As seen before with Batman: Gotham Knight and The Animatrix, Halo Legends is an anthology of seven distinct and separate stories about the characters and ideas of Halo as seen through the eyes of various anime heavyweights. With writers and directors who had worked on everything from Cowboy Bebop to Bubblegum Crisis and MASK to Dragon Ball Z, the spectrum of top talent in this field was pieced together to put together Halo Legends.

The first story, “Origins”, comes in two pieces and may easily be the most important of the seven parts to the greater Halo universe. For the first time in full detail, the audience is given a look at exactly what happened to the Forerunners that caused them to disappear with the creation of the Halo rings. Most interesting about this feature comes from the revelation of what the Forerunners looked like and how they became revered as the gods of the Covenant.

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Posted in: Announcements · Blu-Ray · DVD Reviews · Reviews · Xbox 360
Tagged: Blu-Ray, Bungie, DVD Reviews, Halo, Halo 2, Halo 3, Halo 3: ODST, Halo Legends, Halo: Combat Evolved, Microsoft Games Studio


DVD Review: ‘District 9′

by Douglas Barnett, Dec 23 2009 // 10:00 AM

District-9-DVD-Cover-1Out on DVD and Blu-Ray this week, District 9 is a new sci-fi masterpiece from writer/director Neill Blomkamp and produced by Peter Jackson (The Lord of the Rings). The film is a documentary-style account about a race of aliens marooned on earth who have been quarantined in a shantytown, known by humans as District 9, on the outskirts of Johannesburg, South Africa.

The film has an “apartheid” metaphor in that the aliens (referred derogatorily by humans as “Prawns” because they look like crustaceans) represent an oppressed minority, all while the humans see the aliens as a nuisance and want to be rid of them once and for all. The film mainly focuses on two main characters; a human who was the head of a relocation program for the aliens, and an alien trying to find a way to return home to his planet.

Special features for the disc include a series of interesting deleted scenes that never made it into the final cut.  Director commentary from Neill Blomkamp shows how the concept of District 9 was turned into a reality. In the special feature “Metamorphosis: The Transformation of Wikus”, we see behind the scenes footage of how the F/X team slowly turned actor Sharlto Copley from a human into a “Prawn.” Two other features include a concept design with production planners into creating the world of District 9 and the dazzling special effects that were generated for the film.

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Posted in: Action · DVD · DVD Reviews · Movies · News · Reviews · Sci-Fi
Tagged: Comvie, District 9, DVD, DVD Review, DVD Reviews, Movies, Neil Blomkamp, Peter Jackson, Sci-Fi, Sharlto Copley




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