
The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…
(Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)
It hasn’t always been a fun ride being a Harry Nilsson fan. For many years, much of his catalogue remained unavailable on CD, save staple albums like Nilsson Schmilsson and Son Of Schmilsson. Then, starting in the UK and Japan, more of his remaining albums began to see the light of day, often accompanied by the stray, very tantalizing bonus track of an unreleased tune, alternate take, or demo. I recall many long years of desperately hunting these rarities and scraps amongst other likeminded fans on the interwebs, & the accompanying joy of each new discovery… And then wondering why more people weren’t familiar with this wonderful artist. Better late than never, the fine folks at Sony Legacy, with Andrew Sandoval and Rob Santos, have put together the definitive box set of Harry’s 10-year tenure at RCA – Nilsson: The RCA Albums Collection (Sony Legacy, $99.29 SRP). Containing 14 fully remastered albums – Pandemonium Shadow Show, Aerial Ballet, Harry, Nilsson Sings Newman, The Point!, Aerial Pandemonium Ballet, Nilsson Schmilsson, Son Of Schmilsson, A Little Touch Of Schmilsson In The Night, Pussy Cats, Duit On Mon Dei, Sandman, That’s The Way It Is, Knnillssonn – plus a trio of fully packed “Sessions” discs of unreleased tunes, demos, takes, and more, this is the set I dreamed would one day be a reality… And now it is. At its best, Harry Nilsson’s music is an open wound – A raw glimpse at life. It’s both the deep pain and glorious rapture of being alive. This set should be in your collection. Right now. And you’ll hear why I’m well and truly correct in my assessment of his genius.
And, if you’re keen to find out more about Harry, look no further than the newly released biography Nilsson: The Life of a Singer-Songwriter (Oxford University Press, $27.95 SRP). Author Alyn Shipton utilizes candid interviews as well as Harry’s own notes for his unfinished autobiography to assemble a fascinating portrait of a supremely gifted yet regrettably human artist.
Another few months have gone by, which means fans are spoiled by yet another wonderful collection from the fine folks at Shout Factory with Mystery Science Theater Volume XXVII (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$59.97 SRP), containing another clutch of episodes which fans thought might never see the light of DVD. This go round, we stretch back to the first season with The Slime People, then season 2’s Rocket Attack USA, season 4’s Village Of The Giants, and season 7’s The Deadly Mantis. Add on the regular clutch of wonderful featurettes, and you have another nifty treat for MiSTies.
Last month brought the high definition debut of the first two seasons of Adventure Time, and now another Cartoon Network insta-classic gets to make its snazzy high-def splash with the release of Regular Show: The Complete First & Second Season (Cartoon Network, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP). Bonus features include audio commentaries on all 40 episodes, the unaired pilot, animatics, pencil & CG tests, shorts, karaoke, interviews, commercials, and more.
Hot on the heels of the formal reveal of the upcoming theatrical sequel to How To Train Your Dragon comes the first pair of releases featuring the story links that set up that sequel – Dragons: Riders Of Berk: Part 1 & Dragons: Riders Of Berk: Part 2 (Dreamworks, Not Rated, DVD-$12.96 SRP each). While not as brilliant as the original film, they’re a fun romp with most of the voice cast intact.
It usually takes quite a well crafted movie to get me to watch a film about sports, and that’s certainly the case with 42 (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) – the recent biopic about the groundbreaking major league signing of Jackie Robinson to the Brooklyn Dodgers. The biggest surprise of all? Harrison Ford’s ace performance as Dodgers owner Branch Rickey. Bonus materials include a trio of historic and behind-the-scenes featurettes.
After witnessing the suicide of a woman who looks exactly like her, orphan Sarah decides to assume the dead woman’s identity and life – but finds a much deeper mystery in the first season of Orphan Black (BBC, Not Rated Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP). Bonus materials include a clutch of behind-the-scenes featurettes.
The Infamous Five have been trading powers as we open Misfits: Season 3 (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP), but it remains to be seen if they’ve gotten anything worthwhile to fight an onslaught of baddies and zombies, with a little time travel thrown in for good measure. Bonus materials include webisodes and featurettes.
The pulpy guilty pleasure returns with the second season of Femme Fatales (E1, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP). Packed with guest stars like Robert Picardo and Vivica A. Fox, it’s like a film noir Love Boat. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, and more.
The BBC’s nature documentary division returns with another pair of must-see releases, this time in the aquatic predator realm – Hammerhead (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP) and Great White Shark: A Living Legend (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP), the latter of which is presented in stunningly beautiful high definition.
If you drain most of the campy fun (its one redeeming hallmark) and just keep the ridiculously over-the-top gore, then you get the recent remake of Evil Dead (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP). Oh, and no Bruce Campbell. Big, big loss. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and a clutch of featurettes.
If you’re of a mood for a brainless action piece starring the increasingly leathery Sylvester Stallone as a New Orleans hitman bent on revenge, then queue up Bullet To The Head (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), because it certainly ticks all of those boxes. Bonus materials include a making-of featurette.
How about some kid-centric release? Nickelodeon has a pair with Nickelodeon: Let’s Learn Colors (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP) and the Nickelodeon Double Pack of Dora The Explorer: Musical School Days/Blue’s Clues: Blue’s Big Musical Movie (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP).
While the last season was a bit shaky, the final season of Damages (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$45.99 SRP) manages to reassert the legal thriller we all fell in love with as Patty Hewes (Glenn Close) and her ex-protégé Ellen Parsons (Rose Byrne) reach showdown point. Bonus materials include deleted scenes and outtakes.
So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…
-Ken Plume
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It hasn’t always been a fun ride being a Harry Nilsson fan. For many years, much of his catalogue remained unavailable on CD, save staple albums like Nilsson Schmilsson and Son Of Schmilsson. Then, starting in the UK and Japan, more of his remaining albums began to see the light of day, often accompanied by the stray, very tantalizing bonus track of an unreleased tune, alternate take, or demo. I recall many long years of desperately hunting these rarities and scraps amongst other likeminded fans on the interwebs, & the accompanying joy of each new discovery… And then wondering why more people weren’t familiar with this wonderful artist. Better late than never, the fine folks at Sony Legacy, with Andrew Sandoval and Rob Santos, have put together the definitive box set of Harry’s 10-year tenure at RCA – 
And, if you’re keen to find out more about Harry, look no further than the newly released biography
Another few months have gone by, which means fans are spoiled by yet another wonderful collection from the fine folks at Shout Factory with
Last month brought the high definition debut of the first two seasons of Adventure Time, and now another Cartoon Network insta-classic gets to make its snazzy high-def splash with the release of
Hot on the heels of the formal reveal of the upcoming theatrical sequel to How To Train Your Dragon comes the first pair of releases featuring the story links that set up that sequel –
It usually takes quite a well crafted movie to get me to watch a film about sports, and that’s certainly the case with
After witnessing the suicide of a woman who looks exactly like her, orphan Sarah decides to assume the dead woman’s identity and life – but finds a much deeper mystery in the first season of
The Infamous Five have been trading powers as we open
The pulpy guilty pleasure returns with the second season of
The BBC’s nature documentary division returns with another pair of must-see releases, this time in the aquatic predator realm –
If you drain most of the campy fun (its one redeeming hallmark) and just keep the ridiculously over-the-top gore, then you get the recent remake of
If you’re of a mood for a brainless action piece starring the increasingly leathery Sylvester Stallone as a New Orleans hitman bent on revenge, then queue up
How about some kid-centric release? Nickelodeon has a pair with
While the last season was a bit shaky, the final season of
I would be lying if I said I wasn’t the least bit worried that George RR. Martin might be unable to keep all of the plates of his sprawling Song Of Ice & Fire series spinning with the arrival of the long-awaited 5th installment, 
If you’re not comfortable with the whole touch-activated thing and desire a measure of accuracy, then you might want to try the 
You know, it says it’s from Nickelodeon studios, but I find it hard to believe that
I usually find Robot Chicken an uneven affair, but they always seem to bring their A-game to their Star Wars specials. While
Oh, great that these classic Doctor Who releases are coming so fast, as we get the terribly unappreciated William Hartnell old west adventure
As the cinematic Harry Potter-verse draws to a close, there’s a lot of products both official and unofficial that are being released to capitalize on all of the wizardry hubbub, but one of the most fun unofficial items has to be
It doesn’t seem that long since the last series, but the spooks at
After 15 seasons,
Oh, Russell Brand. I really do like you as a performer, and was a fan long before the rest of the US even knew who you were, but this remake of
A consummate lawyer who works out of the back seat of his car, Matthew McConaughey finds himself in a violent predicament when he takes on the defense of a young man accused of rape and murder in the entirely watchable thriller
The third season of
Shout Factory has cranked up their high definition genre releases with a pair of must-have cheese flicks – Roger Corman’s Star Wars pastiche
Regardless of which side you fall on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the film
If you’ve got a big, beautiful high definition television, there’s nothing like kicking back and just drinking in the beauty of the IMAX films
Are you behind on picking up the DVD releases of Nickelodeon’s most popular preschool shows? Well, now you can catch up with
I know there are plenty of fans, but I’ve never been able to make it through an episode of
Overlooked at the box office, I will declare here and now that Ricky Gervais’s
You may not know this about me, but you certainly will now. “What is it? What is this secret?” you ask, breathlessly. C’mere, and I’ll tell you…. Closer… Closer… Okay. I like playing with magnets. I think they’re cool. I’ve thought magnets were cool ever since I was a kid. I also like money. Sadly, US coinage is non-magnetic, so I was never able to combine my two loves, Reese’s style. Until now. The
I never thought I’d see the day when
Michael Adams took a bullet for us all when he decided to sit down for a year and watch some of the worst movies ever made, and provide not only a chronicle of that feat, but also analyses and perhaps even an appreciation for crappy filmmaking. Of course, perhaps he didn’t take the bullet too soon, as I’ve seen many of the flicks in
For anyone that came out of the tepid Funny People hoping that they had instead been able to see more of Aziz Ansari, your prayers have been answered with the DVD arrival of his debut stand-up special –
It’s mindless action, yes, but it’s a shame to see Gerard Butler and Michael C. Hall slumming it in the B-movie actioner
Glaringly absent from the high definition catalogue up until now, you can put a check mark beside a pair of much-requested Paul Thomas Anderson flicks –
Shot as he was covering his final murder trial for Vanity Fair – that of Phil Spector –
The first two Bourne films arrive in high-definition as the inaugural entries in Universal’s new line of flipper single-disc Blu-Ray/DVD combos. I loathe flipper discs with a passion, so even though I understand the cost-cutting thought behind it, I can’t get behind the concept. Looking at the Blu-Ray side,
If fans of English costume drama were to do a dream casting session, they probably would arrive at the cast that was assembled for Cranford – Judi Dench, Michael Gambon, Eileen Atkins, and Imelda Staunton. Cranford revolves around the ruling ladies of the titular town in 1842, for whom etiquette and custom reign supreme but are a thin veneer over secrets and change. Think a corseted Desperate Housewives. Your best bet is to pick
It was like a poor man’s Guy Ritchie (which is odd, since he’s already filled that role himself in recent years), but there was a sliver of fun to have from
Instead of abandoning release of the shows in mid-stream due to sales issue for niche fan-favorites, Shout! Factory has taken the welcome step of making new season sets of the shows in question available directly from their website. This makes the economy feasible and fans happy – especially since the discs are identical in quality to their store-bought predecessors. The first sets to get the direct-purchase treatment are
And in this weeks soundtrack round-up, we’ve got John Murphy’s score to
The disc-on-demand Warner Archive continues to live up to its name and promise by releasing a little-seen TV movie, adapted by Richard Matheson from his short story –
Nancy Botwin is full ensconced with her business south of the border in the 5th season of
A co-ed crew exploring the solar system gets up to sudsy scientific exploration in the first season of
The 12th season of
It dips into melodrama occasionally, but for the most part
Using none of the original voices and sub-par animation, there’s nothing much about
It’s not something I would have made a night out for, but watching
There was a constant fear it might stumble in its first season, and there’s always fear of a sophomore season fail, but