Tag: Jim Henson

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 11/13/15: Inside Force

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    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…)

    While there are certainly flashier characters from the original trilogy, like Darth Vader or Boba Fett, the true mark of just how impressive Hot Toys’ handling of the Star Wars license is turning out to be is their eerily pitch-perfect take on Obi-Wan Kenobi (Sideshow/Hot Toys, $219.99). From the perfect likeness of Sir Alec Guinness to the expertly tailored Jedi robes, this is the definitive 1/6-scale version of the venerable master. And because we’re gluttons for more, there’s no need to be content with just the figure itself, because they’ve plussed it with a swappable right arm that includes an in-built LED lightsaber that turns your display up to 11.

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    Pixar. Listen. Why do you want to make me cry? You’re absolutely brutal with the feels, and you know exactly what buttons to push. And you push them all with Inside Out (Walt Disney, Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP). From happy to sad and all the emotions in-between, which is rather fitting, as that’s what this film is all about, showing the interior emotional workings of 11-year-old Riley. And I’m not going to spoil any more of it, because if you haven’t seen it already, you should. Bonus materials include the Lava short, the brand new Riley’s First Date short, featurettes, and more.

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    As a new Pixar film hits theaters, that also means we get a brand new tome chronicling the artistic journey from concept to final picture with The Art Of The Good Dinosaur (Chronicle Books, $40 SRP), featuring loads of artwork and insight. And, in a first, a companion book has been crafted for the short subject that runs before the movie with The Art Of Sanjay’s Super Team (Chronicle Books, $24.95 SRP).

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    And because we’re not quite done with Pixar yet, they’ve helped to craft the perfect gift for budding filmmakers eager to have a journal in which to chart the progress of their own creative project’s journey with The Animator’s Sketchbook (Chronicle Books, $18.95 SRP), which contains discrete sections on Concept, Story, Color Script, Characters, and Worlds with plenty of room to doodle and design with helpful words of encouragement and visuals for inspiration along the way.

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    I’ll admit, I got swept up in the emotional wave of celebrating October 21, 2015 – the “future” date Marty and Doc (and Einstein & Jennifer) traveled to in order to do something about Marty & Jennifer’s kids. So, yes, bring on a brand new Back To The Future: 30th Anniversary Trilogy box set (Universal, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP), which supplements all of the bonus materials from the last release with a brand new bonus disc featuring a Doc Brown short, a documentary on the restoration of the original DeLorean, 2015 commercials for Jaws 19 and hoverboards, and more.

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    The now-yearly specials are certainly building anticipation for a new feature-length adventure while managing to be fun-filled romps in their own right, and that’s certainly what last year’s Toy Story That Time Forgot (Walt Disney, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$14.99 SRP) is, as out heroes are deposited into an 80s action toy world full of delusional peril. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, the animated opening for the fictional cartoon Battlesaurs, featurettes, a karaoke video, deleted scenes, and more.

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    Whenever a new home theater technology arrives on the scene, there comes a home video release of a beloved property that’s meant to be the perfect showcase for said technology. With Dolby’s new Atmos sound technology, designed to make the viewer feel sonically immersed in the world they’re watching, the first television series to embrace it is HBO’s flagship show, Game Of Thrones. So what does that mean? That means we get brand new Atmos versions of Game Of Thrones: The Complete First Season and Game Of Thrones: The Complete Second Season (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.99 SRP each), packaged in lovely new steelbook cases featuring magnetic house sigils for the Starks and the Lannisters. Bonus features carry over from the previous releases.

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    While it seems this is the millionth release of the film on various media, you know in your heart of hearts that you’ll be purchasing Monty Python & The Holy Grail: 40th Anniversary Edition (Sony, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP) because you have always, and will always, purchase another edition of this film whenever the design to lob another one at fans. Which is often. And you know it’s true, and you know they know it. So buck up, and fork over the cash for this new edition, which includes all of the bonus features from the last edition, plus an all-new 30-minute Q&A with the Pythons who aren’t yet dead, hosted by John Oliver.

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    You have a lot of gadgets, gear, and gizmos to be carting around with you as cold descends on the land, so why not face the elements with all of your stuff safely stowed about your person with the SCOTTeVEST Hoodie Microfleece (Thinkgeek, $44.99), a hoodie which packs 10 pockets and a whole lot of warmth.

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    As someone who owns the vintage Making Ghostbusters, which explored the production of the original film, I was waiting for the day when someone would come along and offer up an updated and expanded look at the creation of the franchise as a whole, incorporating both films, the animated series, comics, video games, and more. Ghostbusters: The Ultimate Visual History (Insight Editions, $50 SRP) does just that, while also being one of those books that incorporated reproductions of actual ephemera, including Gozer temple plans, the Ghostbusters’ business card, VFX notes, a Stay-Puft Marshmallows sticker, and much more.

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    You’d think there’d few variations left to mine in going meta on the slasher flick genre, but The Final Girls (Sony, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$30.99 SRP) manages to do it with a wink and heart, as a group of teen friends are mysteriously transported into an 80s cult film, Camp Bloodbath, that starred the late mother of one of the kids. Once inside the film, they must try and survive all of the tropes. Bonus materials include an audio commentaries, alternate endings, deleted scenes, featurettes, and more.

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    Yeah, well, don’t try and make sense of the Terminator timeline. By the time we’ve reached Terminator: Genisys (Paramount, Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$52.99 SRP), the continuity is just a confusing mess of who did what when and for why and how does that huh whatever. So, really, the way to approach the return of an elder Arnold Schwarzenegger to one of his most iconic roles is just to take it at face value and ask, “Is it an enjoyable flick on its own merits?” And it mostly is. In an odd, kitchen sink kind of way. But, that’s fine. Just don’t try to make too much sense of it all. Bonus materials include a batch of behind-the-scenes featurettes.

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    There are a lot of elaborate hoo-has on what is ultimately a straightforward straight shooter, which is ultimately the strength of Nerf’s N-Strike SharpFire Blaster (Nerf, $15.99 SRP) – it’s a Nerf dart pistol that shoots pretty darn accurately. And, when you’re locked in heated backyard conflict, sometimes that’s just what you need.

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    Oh, Jurassic World (Universal, Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP). You are such a goofball of excess. While Jurassic Park took the premise of resurrected dinosaurs somewhat seriously, World decides to go full meta B-movie with the whole affair, in the age of Sharknado. I mean, Chris Pratt has a raptor gang. Which is not to say this isn’t all enjoyable. It’s just that it’s pure popcorn, b-movie enjoyable. Bonus materials include deleted scenes and featurettes.

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    Didier Ghez is a brilliant illuminator of the often unexplored corners of the art and artists behind the Disney films, and he’s brought that the unique and wonderful skill to They Drew As They Pleased: The Hidden Art Of Disney’s Golden Age (Chronicle Books, $40 SRP), which explores the works of a quartet of Disney’s first concept artists as the company’s horizons broadened rapidly in the 1930s.

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    PBS’s In Their Own Words is a unique spin on the biodoc format, which as the title suggests relies heavily upon quotes from the subjects themselves to guide the narrative, through archive footage and extensive interviews with intimates. Give a trio of cultural luminaries a spin, with episodes focusing on Queen Elizabeth II, Muhammad Ali, and Jim Henson (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP each).

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    I suppose every comic actor should get their chance to stumble into a redeeming dramatic part, and Jason Segel gets his portraying author David Foster Wallace in The End Of The Tour (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), about a road trip during which he’s interviewed by journalist David Lipsky (Jesse Eisenberg). Bonus materials include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, interviews, and featurettes.

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    It got a disastrous blink-and-you-missed-it theatrical release, which is a shame, because Aardman’s Shaun The Sheep Movie (Lionsgate, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) is a lovely, delightful little kid’s film that doesn’t feel like a kid’s film. It’s brill. Bonus materials include a flock of featurettes and more.

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    Sadly, it was our enjoyment of bombastic action flicks like Bad Boys 1 & II (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$26.99 SRP) that fueled the power and enduring pap of Michael Bay, as the seemingly innocuous purveyor of popcorn became the mad blowhard of endless awful pop culture bastardizations. But these two relics of a more innocent age are now packaged together in a 20th anniversary edition, loaded bonus features.

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    There’s nothing like the restoration of a pair of kitschy old-school genre films to make a cinephile go all warm and fuzzy, which is exactly the internal reaction generated by the restoration of the Vincent Price & Agnes Morehead thriller The Bat and Roger Corman’s A Bucket Of Blood (The Film Detective, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$14.99 SRP each).

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    Back when a pair of ideological rivals could have intellectual bareknuckle debates on the airwaves, the two greatest heavyweights were William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal. However intellectual it was, though, their verbal sparring, which began during ABC’s coverage of the 1968 Democratic and Republican Conventions, definitely laid the groundwork for the uncivil cesspit of television discourse we have today. To see exactly what I’m on about, check out the excellent documentary Best Of Enemies: Buckley Vs. Vidal (Magnolia, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP).

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    I would probably have not given a tie-in book to the show Vikings the time of day if I hadn’t discovered it was written by author, historian, and all-around great bloke Justin Pollard, which automatically elevated The World Of Vikings (Chronicle Books, $35 SRP) into a book worth checking out, as it deftly weaves the historical truth behind the drama into its background on the production.

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    Very few sitcoms have gotten the high definition treatment, and particularly not one that goes back over 10 years, but now you can snag That 70s Show: The Complete Series (Mill Creek, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$149.98 SRP) looks pretty darn good, even more so because it’s presented in anamorphic widescreen. Certainly worth checking out, , as it’s also loaded with bonus materials, including new-to-Blu-Ray featurettes, in addition to the materials from the original DVD releases. Groovy.

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    A powerful look at an all-too-brief life, Matt Shepard Is A Friend Of Mine (Virgil Films, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP) is a documentary that revisits the events of the tragic hate crime that took his life, but more importantly uses photos and rare footage to celebrate his life.

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    Starting in a small Pudding Lane bakery and eventually engulfing the city of London, the disastrous events beginning September 2, 1666 are dramatized in The Great Fire (PBS, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), a star-studded affair that brings the events to life, from the actions and reactions of the common man right up to King Charles II.

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    The main problem with the modern quasi-sequel Vacation (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$44.95 SRP) is that it has a mighty big family truckster to fill, and never quite manages to make enough of an impression that you’re not constantly thinking back fondly on the original, when Chevy Chase was at the height of his power and all of the creative powers behind the scenes were pure brilliance. So, yeah, while this is an affable trip down holiday road with Rusty Griswold and family, it just further reinforces how remarkable the original was. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    Listen to a rocking set as Martha Davis & The Motels celebrate the legendary LA club’s 50th anniversary with The Motels Live At The Whiskey A Go Go (Vesuvio, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP), featuring almost 20 tunes plus a clutch of bonus features.

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    SwaySway and Buhdeuce fly their rocket van from their Nickelodeon animated series into brand new comic book adventures in Breadwinners #1: Journey to the Bottom of the Seats (Papercutz, $7.99 SRP), which is just as bonkers as the show itself.

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    This weekend’s turn off your brain and hop on the rollercoaster low-budget action flick is Operator (Alchemy, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), as a city devolves into chaos, sparked by the kidnapping of a 911 operator’s daughter and estranged police officer husband. And it also has Ving Rhames in it. Because Ving Rhames.

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    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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  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Brian Jay Jones

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with biographer Brian Jay Jones about Jim Henson, Muppets, choreography of the unseen, Washington Irving, and Daily Show mugs.

    Be sure to pick up his wonderful new biography of Jim Henson titles, appropriately, JIM HENSON: THE BIOGRAPHY.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Brian Jay Jones“:

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    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

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    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 10/4/13: Bein’ Green

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    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’s somewhat hard to believe that it’s taken this long – 23 years after his untimely passing – that we’ve gotten a proper biography of Jim Henson. Well, not so odd when knows that an attempt was made in the 90s that was scuttled by the Henson family – but now, finally, author Brian Jay Jones has managed to pull together Jim Henson: The Biography (Ballantine Books, $35.00), which is as insightful, candid, and comprehensive an overview of both Jim’s personal life and career as we’re possibly going to get, warts and all. Highly recommended.

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    Last week, I sang the praises of the wicked malevolence disturbingly captured in Sideshow Collectibles’ Premium Format Joker. They’ve taken everything that was so perfectly captured in that large scale version of the psychotic crown prince of crime and its rather iconic Brian Bolland feel and shrunk it down for their Sixth-Scale Joker ($189.99). As with the premium format version, the tailoring of the suit is perfect, including the optional overcoat, and you get to choose which head sculpt you’d like to display – either with or sans hat, each with its own specific version of the madman’s iconic grin. As you’ve come to expect, there are plenty of swappable hands (joy buzzer!) and accessories (playing cards, dynamite, straight razor, gun with “BANG!” flag), while the Sideshow exclusive edition also comes with a pair of the Joker’s as-yet-un-patented Joker Fish. Here’s hoping he’ll have a Batman figure to go up against in the near future.

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    Sure, the 3D conversion remains more of a gimmick than an artistic contribution to the film, but the effect works nicely in the high definition debut of The Little Mermaid (Walt Disney, Rated G, 3D Blu-Ray-$34.96 SRP) – but not nearly as nice as the restoration and high definition mastering, which makes the almost 25-year-old film look and sound sparkling and new. In addition to all of the bonus materials from the original Platinum DVD release, this release adds in a never-before-seen deleted sequence, a far-too-brief edit of a lecture that the late Howard Ashman delivered at the studio early in the film’s production process, a featurette on modern Disney animators, and more. Now bring on Aladdin! Quick!

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    Where most Star Wars material leaves me unfazed post-The Great Depression (The Prequels), I’ve looked forward to J.W. Rinzler’s exhaustive “Making Of” books for the depth of their information, but more so for their remarkable candor. And now the classic trilogy comes to an end with the entry that had perhaps the most fascinating development process, all of which is fully explored in The Making Of Return Of The Jedi (Del Rey, $85.00 SRP). Throughout this massive tome, you get a strong sense of Lucas being trapped by the overwhelming success of his creation and the expectations born of that success, and wanting nothing more to end it all and move on to something more personal.

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    Sometimes, it’s hard to believe that South Park (Comedy Central, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.99 SRP) has been going for sixteen seasons – and going quite strong for most of them. The early seasons are nothing like what the show has become, lacking in the satire that’s become such a hallmark of recent years, and is still just as fresh and piercing in this latest outing. Bonus materials in the 2-disc set contain Matt Stone & Trey Parker’s patented mini-commentaries, plus deleted scenes.

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    Awkwardly split in two and never really building a head of steam, the seventh season of Doctor Who (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$89.98 SRP) feels like a show in desperate need of a rethink and a shake-up – which is on the way courtesy of a new Doctor in the near future. Until then, there’s the departure of the Ponds, the arrival of Clara, and the cliffhanger revelation of a mysterious Doctor to contend with here. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, prequels, and specials.

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    As a longtime fan, I was pleasantly surprised to hear that Dave Foley had begun doing standup. I’m even happier that his first special, Dave Foley: Relatively Well (New Wave Dynamics, Not Rated, DVD-$9.47 SRP), is legitimately funny… Which, honestly, makes everything right with the world. And the Uma Thurman story alone is worth the price of admission. And for your mobile convenience, an audio CD version ($12.98 SRP) is also available.

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    After the overall “meh” of Iron Man 2, Iron Man 3 (Marvel, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$44.99 SRP) managed to restore the goodwill of the iron Avenger’s first big screen adventure with only the occasional stumble. It also featured more new toys than you can shake a marketing maven at, plus an aerial rescue sequence that’s just this side of exquisite in its execution. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted/extended scenes, a gag reel, and a brand new Marvel short film focusing on Agent Carter.

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    In years past, TV shows would rarely consider the afterlife of their run beyond a sale into syndication. The idea of a home video market for popular shows? Unheard of. With that in mind, music licensing deals were only ever made short term, which has left many a show in quite the deep financial pickle when the idea of bringing them to home video with their music intact. Years ago, the music was just changed to far cheaper tunes – leading to fan backlash. Eventually, though, companies decided to try and clear the hurdles – the first most famous example was Shout Factory’s Herculean handling of Freaks & Geeks. And now, the gents a Time Life have actually undertaken their own Herculean task and succeeded in clearing nearly all of the vintage songs (Dylan, Hendrix, Stevie Wonder, and more) contained in the beloved Vietnam War drama China Beach (Time Life, Not Rated, DVD-$22.95 SRP), whose first season is now available independently of the massive complete series collection released a few months back. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, interviews, and featurettes.

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    The heroes on the half shell return with a dozen new-to-DVD adventures in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Ultimate Showdown (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP), featuring baddies like Rat King and Baxter Stockman, plus bonus features including a quartet of shorts and animated comics.

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    Every time you turn around there seems to be another edition, but we may finally have arrived at a definitive version with the 35th anniversary high definition release of John Carpenter’s Halloween (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), featuring a brand new audio commentary with Carpenter and star Jamie Lee Curtis, a new featurette, TV version footage, TV & radio spots, the trailer, and a 25th anniversary featurette on the film’s location.

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    Like most Dreamworks films save for How To Train Your Dragon, The Croods (Dreamworks, Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$48.99 SRP) follows the typical formula of being much more of an enjoyable romp than a deeper character piece like we’ve generally gotten from their distinguished competition over at Pixar, and that’s fine – Who doesn’t want to set out into a weird and wild 3D landscape featuring plenty of gags and relatively sharp writing for 90 minutes? Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes.

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    There are those that rail on the ability to watch 3D right in our homes as some kind of gimmick, and they’re right – it is a gimmick. But you know what? It’s still a nifty gimmick, and its presence in the home allows studios like Warner Bros. to release true-3D versions of classic 50’s films like the Vincent Price horror flick House Of Wax (Warner Bros., Not Rated, 3D Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) as they were originally seen in theaters… And for a film fan like me, that makes the gimmick worth it. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, a featurette, a vintage newsreel, the trailer, and the 1933 feature Mystery Of The Wax Museum.

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    And while we’re talking vintage catalogue releases from Warners now available in high definition, also making its debut is King Vidor’s incredibly moving silent war film The Big Parade (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$27.98 SRP). Featuring a 4k restoration from the recently found original negative, it’s a still-powerful view of the ordinary foot soldier during the First World War. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, a vintage short, and the theatrical trailer.

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    You know the merger between Marvel and Disney has been fully cemented when you finally get a mighty meeting like Phineas & Ferb: Mission Marvel (Walt Disney, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP), which brings together superheroes like Spider-Man, Thor, Iron Man & The Hulk in an adventure with Phineas Ferb to take on the diabolical machinations of Dr. Doofenshmirtz and a cadre of supervillains.

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    I used to really like the show, but there’s something about the 4th season of Modern Family (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.99 SRP) that just feels strained. It’s almost as if the show has become a caricature of itself, slipping into the same goofy slapstick that undermined shows like Scrubs and The Office. A true shame. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    Scholastic is back with a bit of a treat for kids with their latest Storybook Treasures collection – The Halloween Stories (Scholastic, Not Rated, DVD-$24.95 SRP), which contains 14 spooky tales, including The Day Of The Dead, Dem Bones, and Teeny-Tiny And The Witch-Woman.

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    The Second World War is over but the Cold War looms in Foyle’s War: Set 7 (Acorn, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP), in which DCS Christopher Foyle transitions from police work and into Britain’s secret intelligence service in a world now brimming with spies and deadly secrets. Bonus materials include introductions, featurettes, and a photo gallery.

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    Yes, Zooey Deschanel is still delightfully quirky in the second season of New Girl (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), and the show has finally caught up to her and gelled into a delightfully quirky sitcom worth checking out if the first season didn’t strike your fancy. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, an extended episode, deleted scenes, a featurette, and a gag reel.

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    Nothing quite makes me miss the sublime farce of 3rd Rock From The Sun than a pale imitator like The Neighbors (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$ SRP), a suburban comedy that places a city family in the burbs next to a decidedly odd family living in the house next door. Guess what? THEY’RE ALIENS. Comedy, right? Bonus materials include deleted scenes and a gag reel.

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    Nickelodeon makes holiday gift-giving even easier with their new “Holiday Gifts From Nickelodeon” sets – a trio of releases featuring DVDs of It’s A Spongebob Christmas, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Rise Of The Turtles, and Dora’s Christmas Carol Adventure (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP each) plus coloring books, crayons, stickers, and a poster. In other words, the perfect stocking stuffer.

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    It’s never been much of a quality show, but it was always a consistent lowbrow laugher that had a shaky transitional year during its 9th season. But all is back on a somewhat even (for it) keel now that Ashton Kutcher cut his hair for the 10th season of Two And A Half Men (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$44.98 SRP), even as the titular half man, Angus T. Jones, had an off-air meltdown and was largely unseen on air. Still – we’ll always have Jon Cryer. Always. Bonus materials include a featurette and a gag reel.

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    If you ever wondered just what it would be like if a stoner got lost in a thought and decided to make a documentary about it, look no further than Room 237 (IFC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP), in which filmmaker Kevin McLeod assembles a group of “deep” nobodies with the intent on delving in and pontificating on the “deeper meaning” of Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining, because what’s more fun than listening to rambling nonsense for an eternity? Bonus materials include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, featurettes, and trailers.

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    While the actual film was an unfortunate mess, one of the few highlights of DC’s latest direct-to-video animated feature was the score to Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox (LaLaLand Records, $19.98 SRP), composed by Frederik Wiedman. So skip the film and just get this.

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    And hey, how about a soundtrack round-up? This week, we’ve got Greg Edmonson’s score for Bounty Killer (Lakeshore, $9.99 SRP), Icon’s Dawning Promises (Icon, $9.99), Marcelo Zarvos’ score to Enough Said (Fox Music, $9.99), Christopher Beck’s Runner Runner (Lakeshore Records, $17.77), Lorne Balfe’s score to Skylanders: Swap Force (Activision, $9.49), and Carter Burwell’s score to The Fifth Estate (Lakeshore Records, $16.91).

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    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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  • FROM THE VAULT: Dave Goelz Interview

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    Conducted ~1/1999

    After my interview with Muppeteer Jerry Nelson, Jerry was kind enough to provide access for to the set of Muppets From Space, and vouched for me to his fellow Muppeteers.

    What followed was over a month of me just hanging around the set in the increasingly cold January of 1999, part of which was spent chatting with and ultimately interviewing Muppeteers. Also, getting my hair cut by the production’s hairdresser… just because. Well, my hair was getting too long. She cut it with a razor. I felt like a movie star.

    Anyway.

    One of the Muppeteers I met was Dave Goelz. Goelz, if you’re not familiar, is the Muppeteer responsible for Gonzo, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Boober Fraggle, Zoot, Beauregard, Uncle Travelling Matt, and many, many more.

    And he’s a pretty nice guy, to boot. Below, you’ll find our conversation…

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    KEN PLUME: First of all, tell me a little bit about your background…

    DAVE GOELZ: I have always enjoyed puppets, but at two times during my childhood puppetry became a hobby. When I was five I became a huge fan of Howdy Doody, and when I saw a Howdy dummy at the local toy store, I got very excited. My folks said that if I saved half the money, they would match my funds and I could get the dummy, which I believe cost either $3.95 or $7.95. I saved every penny of my 25 cents per week allowance, and in no time my parents were surprised that I was ready to make the purchase. The next Christmas my parents gave me a Howdy Doody marionette. During this period I was also interested in the original Time for Beany puppet show, starring Stan Freberg and Bob Clampett. I had Beany and Dishonest John hand puppets made by Ideal Toys, but was disappointed by the official rubbery Cecil the Seasick Sea Serpent puppet. My mother made a beautiful Cecil for me completely from scratch. She was a big influence; she showed that you could make whatever you needed.

    When I was thirteen, I became interested in marionettes. In junior high school I had become fascinated by the theater, with its curtains and colored lighting. My father built a marionette stage for me, and I equipped it with three strings of our Christmas lights; one whole string in blue, one in red, and the other in yellow. That way we could plug in different strings to make a range of colors. My friend Eddie Paul and I wrote scripts and put on marionette shows for our family and friends. I had a little printing press and we made tickets for the shows, for which we charged ten cents. We made well over a dollar in less than a month. Easy money.

    After high school I studied to be an industrial designer, and entered the profession. After a couple of years I started watching Sesame Street on Saturday mornings and just got hooked. I had been a Muppet fan for many years, but now I started getting fascinated with the design process that went into what I was seeing on the screen. Who were these people who created the puppets, costumes and performances that were so evocative? I got very curious.

    One day, I read in a newspaper and read that Frank Oz was to appear nearby at a puppetry festival, so I took a day of vacation time and went to see him. I was just blown away by the two shows Frank did at Mills College in Oakland. During the first show, I was like an assassin. I was in a window above and to the side of the stage with a telephoto lens and a couple of rolls of film. It was fascinating to see Frank working. During the second show – they had to give two shows since so many people came – I sat out in the audience. I could feel the love for those characters all around me. After the show, I got up to go back home and back to my job of designing these boxes for scientific instruments. As I trudged to the car amidst a buzzing crowd, I had a strong feeling that I should be doing puppetry, but I had no idea how I could make a living at it. I didn’t think there was any potential at all, so I was just sad. Within about a month of that day I was asked to make a business trip, which was a very rare event. Not only that, it took me to Pennsylvania. At the end of my work, I took a week of vacation time and went to New York and visited Sesame Street. How odd that my whole career grew out of six days of vacation time. I went to Sesame Street every day and just watched them work.

    PLUME: Was the set more open then as opposed to now?

    GOELZ: At that time Sesame Street was shot at Teletape Studios at 81st & Broadway. I had pre-arranged with Frank Oz to visit the set. This was the fall of 1972. I watched them shoot for the entire week and they were all very kind to me. I had brought some puppets with me that I had made, and the Muppet people there said, “You should show these to Bonnie Erickson, head of the Muppet Workshop,” .

    So I phoned Bonnie and went across town to visit her. When I showed her my puppets, she said, “Oh, that’s great! You can build puppets. You should meet Jim, but he’s in France right now.” About a month after that, I was sitting at my desk in California and the phone rang and this voice said, “Hi there. This is Jim Henson.” I went, “WHAA?!?” He sounded like Ernie! I jumped up and looked over the partitions around the lab. Everyone was just working normally, and I had Jim Henson on the phone! I couldn’t believe it. He suggested that we meet in Los Angeles the following week when he was scheduled to appear on a Perry Como special. So we met in Los Angeles, and I showed him my portfolio. It was an industrial design portfolio that covered my career. It went something like this: John Deere tractor, American Airlines interior, Hewlett Packard laser interferometer — puppet. I told him my objective was to illustrate how my background was perfect for becoming a puppet designer. In fact, it was.

    We agreed to stay in touch. I planned to borrow some video equipment and start performing in my own videotapes. In about a month or two I got another call from Jim saying, “I’m coming to San Francisco – would you like to get together?” So I booked a hotel for him in Los Gatos. I took him out to dinner and when I picked him up he was waiting outside; a tall, gaunt figure standing in the rain. He looked frail and vulnerable. Later I would learn just how strong he really was. After dinner I showed him the tapes that I had just completed. This was around February of 1973, and he was contemplating doing a Broadway stage play that utilized many forms of puppetry. He asked me if I would be interested in being involved both as a designer and a performer. We stayed in touch and by June we worked out a deal where I came to work for six months on the designing and building phase of that project. During my stint, Muppets got a series pilot with ABC, so we put the stage play aside and worked on the pilot. Jim asked me to perform three characters in the show, so I stayed an extra couple of weeks for the shoot. Jim invited me to join the company, but I didn’t feel at home in New York, so I went back to California.

    I had been on a leave of absence from my electronics job, and during the extra two weeks that I stayed in New York, I was replaced. I realized this was a good thing, because I had been afraid that I’d go back to work, get comfortable and secure and never pursue this work that I was passionate about. After a few weeks I started my own business doing industrial advertising and videotape work using puppets. Soon I had a couple of clients and was doing good business. After about 8 months, Jim made me an offer that I couldn’t really refuse. Jim proposed that I keep my main industrial client, come to the Muppet Workshop as a designer/builder, and perform occasionally in specials. It gave me the Muppet work that I was passionate about, and included several escapes to California each year. This was an example of Jim’s business genius. He knew I didn’t like New York, so he conceived of a deal whereby I would get to leave frequently to service my client. How could I say no? So I did it.

    Continued below…

  • FROM THE VAULT: Jerry Nelson Interview

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    Conducted ~12/1998

    While trying to come up with the best term that describes Jerry Nelson, one’s mind turns inevitably to the words multi-talented and multi-faceted. Both contain the prefix “multi,” meaning many, and they illustrate the numerous talents – and characters – contained within him. From his humble roots in Oklahoma to his literal hand in creating cultural icons (The Count von Count, Floyd Pepper, Gobo Fraggle, Robin, Emmet Otter, Lew Zealand, Crazy Harry, Herry Monster… The list goes on and on…), Jerry has accomplished much in his long and distinguished career. Although you don’t ever see him, you know and appreciate it when he’s there.

    I’ve long been a fan of the Muppets, and being the inquisitive person I am, I researched exactly who the people were that worked to bring the Muppets to life – those wild men and women known collectively as Muppeteers.

    Through the still-newish medium of the internet, I had begun a correspondence with longtime Muppeteer Jerry Nelson, and when the back-to-back filming of Elmo In Grouchland and Muppets From Space brought him to my backyard, I arranged to have a lengthy sit-down interview with him.

    It was also through Jerry that I was able to hang around the set for months on end (effectively sacrificing my college career – an anecdote for another time) and befriend many a Muppeteer.

    Jerry has become a good friend over the years (we also share a birthday, which led to me helping pull off a big surprise party for his 65th – gulp! – 10 years ago), and his life’s work has contributed nothing but joy to both children and adults for generations. I hope you’ll understand why doing this interview was so important to me, and I hope you get a kick out of it as well…

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    KEN PLUME: Tell me a little bit about your background…

    JERRY NELSON: I was born in Oklahoma in 1934. I lived there with my mom until I was about 6, then we moved to Washington, D. C. and I grew up in that area.

    PLUME: Was it a job related move?

    NELSON: Yeah, as a kid it was my job to go to school. It was during the war. My mom and dad were divorced, and she took a job with the Navy Department, so we moved there for that. I spent summers with my grandparents in Tulsa, and the rest of the time I lived in D.C.

    PLUME: So you were 6 when you moved to Washington…

    NELSON: Well, I was probably 7 or 8. I know I was already in school. I remember about three schools in Oklahoma. One would have been a kindergarten, one would have been a first grade, and the other one would probably have also been first grade or the beginning of second grade. I know when I started school in Washington I was in the second grade. The reason I remember one of the places in Oklahoma was because is was a one-room schoolhouse. I was in a class room with all age kids and the teacher would move around, kind of like an arena. That was a good learning experience early on.

    PLUME: Going to Washington schools must have been quite a shock after that…

    NELSON: Yeah, going to Washington was a big change in my life. It was a big school. The first school I went to in Washington, I had to wait after school because my cousin went to the high school next door, and I used to wait in the playground so we could go home together. We had to go by public transit that involved a streetcar and a transfer to a bus. It was fairly complicated travel for a second grader.

    During those days we’d listen to radio. That’s probably where I became fascinated by voices and accents. I would hear names and think, “Oh, that’s the same guy that does this other voice on that other show.” That was probably where I became interested in the fact that you could regulate your voice and do different characters.

    PLUME: How cliché was it that families would gather around the radio and listen, whereas today you have every member of the family going to their rooms to watch their own TVs…

    NELSON: Radio was more of a family thing, although in my family when we watched TV we would do that together as well. I suppose today everyone has their own TV or computer or whatever they’re interested in and it certainly seems more fragmented. Society is more fragmented. People, rather than staying with their nuclear family, tend to adopt families who are more in tune with them.

    One of the major things that Jim saw with puppets, and Bill Baird also, was that they weren’t just a children’s entertainment, that they could also entertain and educate adults as well. Jim was the one who really connected in this struggle with The Muppet Show, but it took the success of a children’s show to enable that. People who had never seen The Muppet Show used to ask me, “What is that?” and I used to say it was an entertainment program for children of all ages. That’s the way I always thought of it, because there were different levels that appeal to different intellects, different age groups. The jokes were there for very young minds, but the jokes were also there for the older audience. That’s the interesting thing about Sesame Street. Young children would watch it over and over again and they’d watch the same show at the end of the week. When they first started, at the end of the week, they’d run the full week’s programs and children would watch them all over again. Nowadays, kids will do that with videos so that they know it by heart. They have minds that are busy looking at other things. They’ll watch the storyline, then they’ll watch a character, then they’ll watch the background. Eventually life comes along to distract us.

    PLUME: Sesame Street is on what, its third generation now?

    NELSON: At least. That was the interesting part. When kids were 6 or 7, they’d go, “Aw, I don’t watch that stuff anymore. I’m too old for that. That’s a children’s show.” Then somewhere in their teens they’d start watching it again, and then in college they’d start watching it again. It has a perennial quality to it.

    PLUME: Nothing is really too dated, either.

    NELSON: No, not really. You can look at some of the haircuts, maybe that would date it, but not the themes or the humor.

    PLUME: What were your interests in school?

    NELSON: By the time I got to high school, I was interested in country music and at some point in school, I don’t know how it happened, I got involved in a school play. It was fascinating and a lot of fun. As a youngster, my mom had put me in some group that traveled and did shows for Jaycees and Lions Clubs called Juvenile Review that a guy had put together. We did shows like Tom Sawyer and Hellzapoppin, Jr., which was basically tried-and-true vaudeville routines. We also sang on the radio in the Washington area. After that, I didn’t do much until the play in high school, and I thought, “I find this interesting.” I stayed with the idea of being an actor after that. For a while I thought radio and television were good. Throughout high school my musical tastes developed… I still like country, but now I like jazz and classical music as well. I realize music has shades for various moods and you’re not restricted. I stopped playing guitar when I was focused on jazz and thought, “Well, I can’t play jazz.” At some point, maybe in the 60’s movement came about, I started playing again because I thought, “Oh, I can play that.” In terms of acting, that was put on hold when I went into the Army. I was in the Army for two years and went to Japan.

    PLUME: Was this right after high school?

    NELSON: About a year afterwards. This was at the tail end of the Korean conflict, so I got the GI Bill and was able to go to school. I went to school for about a year and a half and thought, “Well, I’m not really doing anything here. If it’s acting I want to do, I should be in New York studying acting.” I felt like the thing to do was forget about school and pursue acting.

    PLUME: When year was this around?

    NELSON: I got back from the military in ’56 and went to school from ’56-’57, moved to New York in ’58, and stayed there for a couple of years.

    Continued below…

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 4/26/13: Beachosaurus

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    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…)

    In years past, TV shows would rarely consider the afterlife of their run beyond a sale into syndication. The idea of a home video market for popular shows? Unheard of. With that in mind, music licensing deals were only ever made short term, which has left many a show in quite the deep financial pickle when the idea of bringing them to home video with their music intact. Years ago, the music was just changed to far cheaper tunes – leading to fan backlash. Eventually, though, companies decided to try and clear the hurdles – the first most famous example was Shout Factory’s Herculean handling of Freaks & Geeks. And now, the gents a Time Life have actually undertaken their own Herculean task and succeeded in clearing nearly all of the vintage songs (Dylan, Hendrix, Stevie Wonder, and more) contained in the beloved Vietnam War drama China Beach (Time Life, $199.95), which means that after years of fan requests, the complete series – all 62 episodes – is now available in a 21-disc set containing over 10 hours of new commentaries, interviews, and featurettes.

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    It’s a rare gift to peer into the mind of a genius, but that’s exactly the gift that Imagination Illustrated: The Jim Henson Journal (Chronicle Books, $29.95 SRP) presents. Using as its base the journal Henson kept for over 20 years, it illustrates his entries with design artwork, photos, and more. A wonderful, wondrous tome.

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    Hard to believe, but with the release of The Complete Peanuts: 1987-1988 (Fantagraphics, $28.99 SRP), we’re only about 6 volumes away from having, for the first time ever, the complete 50-year run of Charles Schulz’s comics masterpiece, presented in a truly beautiful collection courtesy of the fine folks at Fantagraphics. For this volume, the introduction is provided by none other than Garry Trudeau.

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    It’s an iffy proposition when a beloved classic gets a latter-day 3D treatment, but the team behind the multi-dimensional re-do of Jurassic Park (Universal, Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP) manage to pull it off, making the process seem organic and the experience a fun ride rather than a wince-fest. The movie is still as fun a romp as it ever was, and you can still experience it in 2D if you so choose. As far as bonus features, in addition to everything on the previous Blu-Ray featurette, there’s also a new 3D featurette.

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    Rather surprising – pleasantly so – that the recent Art Of The Hobbit book has been followed up with a companion volume of sorts, in the form of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey Chronicles – Creatures & Characters (Harper Collins, $39.99 SRP). As you’d expect from the title, focuses specifically on the art & artistry used to bring the denizens of Middle Earth to life – from hobbits and dwarves to wizards and goblins. Here’s hoping there’s many more volumes to come.

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    For a book to get a foreword from David Letterman, you know it’s got to be special – and Bob And Ray: Keener Than Most Persons (Applause, $27.99 SRP) is special, as its subject is the legendary comedy duo of Bob Elliott and Ray Goulding. How can you not be interested in learning more about a double act whose fans include not only Letterman, but also Dick Cavett, Bob Newhart, Carl Reiner, and Norman Lear?

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    Mill Creek’s catalogue distribution deal with Sony continues to pay dividends for anyone in the market for a whole clutch of titles at rock-bottom prices, as they release both 8 Movie Collection: Madcap Comedies & 8 Movie Collection: Top Action Stars (Mill Creek, $19.98 SRP each). Madcap Comedies includes Hero, Life Without Dick, Saving Silverman, Hexed, Little Black Book, The Slugger’s Wife, I’ll Do Anything, and Crazy In Alabama. The Top Action Stars collection sports Attack Force, Into The Sun, The Russian Specialist, Conspiracy, Universal Soldier: The Return, Knock Off, Hard Corps, and Second In Command.

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    This week’s soundtrack round-up brings Lorne Balfe’s score for the videogame Assassin’s Creed 3: The Tyranny Of King Washington (Ubisoft Music, $8.99 SRP), Jordan Shapiro’s Americana (Lakeshore, $8.99 SRP) – featuring music from the film Wish You Were Here – James Venable’s score for Scary Movie 5 (Lakeshore, $8.99 SRP), and songs from Tyler Perry’s Peeples (Lakeshore, $8.99 SRP).

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    In celebration of Doctor Who‘s 50th anniversary – and, one would think, because the original releases of these are so hard to come by – the folks at Underground Toys have decided to re-release 50 years worth of Dalek styles with souped-up electronics as Sound FX Daleks (Underground Toys, $29.99 SRP each). This week, we’re spotlighting a pair found in the Jon Pertwee 2nd Doctor adventures “Death To The Daleks” and “Planet Of The Daleks” – both of which sport 70’s era speech and sound FX.

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    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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  • My Favourite Things – May 2011

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    May

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    My name is Aaron Poole. Some of you may remember me as the boring one from the FRED podcast Cabin Fever. Other’s may remember me making fun of their band with my Musical Myspace Tour. But most of you don’t care so let’s just get on with this.

    In an attempt to send off the month of May the way it deserves I’m going to present you with a list of the things I’ve enjoyed in the past month. I’m hoping that we can share a common love or, if you missed it, I can show you something you might enjoy. Of course, if you hated anything on the list and think I’m a doo-doo head… well that’s what the comment section is for.

    1) American Idol / Paul F. Tompkins

    Listen, you don’t have to enjoy the show to know that it’s watched by the majority of people. I have a penchant for singing competitions (and judging people from the comfort of my armchair) so Idol ticks a lot of boxes for me. I don’t expect the winners to go on and be legitimate musicians. In fact, I don’t expect to ever hear from these people again once the show is over. But for the 3 months or so that the show is on, I dig it.

    I get emotionally invested in geeky beardy kids like Casey Abrams. I get reminded by my girlfriend that I shouldn’t look at Haley Reinhart that way because she’s 8 years younger than me. Yes, I got shocked by Pia getting eliminated so early and yes I got shocked that Jacob is that camp. I’m a sucker for it all.

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    Haley and Casey talking about how much they like me too.

    In addition to the show was the wonderful Paul F. Tompkins recaps done for nymag.com. Or is it techincally vulture.com? I can’t tell anymore. MAKE SENSE INTERNET! Anyhoo… Paul would give a run down on his opinion of each show and cut through all the bull to ask the serious questions. Like, who does Randy really believe was in it to win it? And will Steven like any of the performances?

    I laughed, I cried. I mostly read. Now that the show is over I would highly recommend reading his recap of his recaps which offers a nice run down on his thoughts on American Idol in general and the task of writing about it twice a week. But if you want to go back over his run and share in the laughs through hindsight just click this dang link here.

    2) Jonathan Hickman on War Rocket Ajax

    Jonathan Hickman is one of the best comic writers working today. There, I said it. Too controversial a statement? Let’s say that he’s one of my favourites then. But secretly I’ll know I’m right and that he’s one of the best. Whatever gets you through the day, reader person. His Marvel comics S.H.I.E.L.D., Secret Warriors and Fantastic Four are all great reads and considering I’ve never cared about the FF books before his run, that’s saying something.

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    “Bring me the head of Johnny Storm”

    He recently guested on the podcast War Rocket Ajax which is hosted by big time blogger Chris Sims and Matt Wilson. Hickman talks openly about his work at Marvel and behind the scenes info about what he’s currently working on. It’s a fascinating conversation especially for anyone interested in working in the comic industry as he’s quite frank about what it’s like to create them.

    You can listen to the show by clicking this fandabidoozy link. It would be rude of me to say that you can skip to his interview about two thirds of the way into the show so I won’t say anything like that.

    3) Jim Henson

    May saw the 21st anniversary of Jim Henson’s death. Jim was a man of unending heart and his creations influenced millions of children (and grown ups) around the world. The Muppets and Sesame Street still survive to this day and if you haven’t seen Labyrinth yet then for the love of god GO! DO IT NOW!

    Upon hearing of the anniversary I decided to look for some video footage of Jim’s memorial service. I remembered hearing that there were some nice things said and done. Well, I had heard right and I ended up crying like a baby.

    Here is a video of Jim’s long time collaborator and friend Frank Oz describing a story highlighting Jim’s crazy sense of humour.

    And here are a number of Muppeteers singing a medley of Jim’s favourite songs.

    If you’re not wiping away a tear at this point you’re a monster with no soul. FACT.

    4) Jesse Lonergan

    I discovered Jesse’s blog a couple of months ago and dug it instantly. He is a comic writer/artist who has been noted for his range of dancing Star Wars characters and Superheroes. But I personally enjoy his strips a lot more.

    To give you an idea, his About Me page is littered with comics about him and his wry sense of humour is clear.

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    But specifically in May he began regularly updating his blog with sketches from a moleskin notebook that he draws in everyday. About nothing in particular, they are a neat look into the daily life of a stranger to me.

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    So to check out more of the above head on over to http://jesselonergan.blogspot.com/

    5) Barack O’Bama

    Regardless of what you think of the man politically, it can’t be denied that the current President of the United States is a wonderful orator. He recently visited my home town of Dublin and gave a speech to 20,000 Irish men and women on the streets.

    It was great fun for everyone involved and the speech itself is a nice comment on the relationship between my tiny island and America over the years. At the very least he got a good giggle from me by stating “I’m Barack Obama, of the Moneygall Obamas. I’ve come home to find the apostrophe we lost somewhere along the way.”

    Try to ignore the guy talking at the very start. He’s our current head of state.
    Click this linkymabob to watch.

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    And that’s it! My favourite things of the last month.

    Aaron Poole is the creator of the “hustle” dance craze. He is also more acurately an editor for FRED and rarely leaves the house. If you like what you read here check out his blog http://aaronfever.blogspot.com

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 8/13/10: Kick-Ass

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    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…)

    I really could have done without the over-the-top violence, because I actually found the story behind Kick-Ass (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) to be pretty damn good, adapted from the comic book of the same name that envisions what it might be like for a real-life teen to decide to become a superhero-styled vigilante. What elevates it, though, is an impressive cast – including Nic Cage in the first flick in ages where I’ve actually enjoyed his presence. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, a marketing archive, gallery, and a bonus standard DVD.

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    In these dark, depressing, overheated days, there’s one thing that can still manage to bring a smile to even the most jaded countenance. I bet you’re wondering what I’m talking about. Why, I’m talking about Star Trek Interactive Tribbles ($14.99-$19.99), which vibrate and make all of the noises that Tribbles do, available in both a large and small size.

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    It’s not often that you find a smart, funny kiddie comedy that’s just as enjoyable for the adults, and Diary Of A Wimpy Kid (Fox, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) manages to achieve placement in that rarified air with a classic outsider tale that plays like a modern day Christmas Story. Bonus materials include featurettes and deleted diary pages.

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    While The Nightmare Before Christmas gets all of the attention, director Henry Selick’s stop-motion follow-up adaptation of Roald Dahl’s James and the Giant Peach (Walt Disney, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) finally gets its time in the sun with a beautiful high definition transfer special edition, with a behind-the-scenes featurette and a music video.

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    Very rapidly, now, studios are cranking up their catalogue high definition conversions, which leads us to this week’s trio of releases from MGM – Kalifornia, Bull Durham, & the long-awaited Escape From New York (MGM, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP each). Both Escape & Kalifornia are featureless, but Bull Durham comes with commentaries and a clutch of featurettes. All 3 releases come bundled with the standard definition DVD disc as well.

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    He made a lot of movies, but the most memorable ones are includes in the high definition Elvis: Blu-Ray Collection (Warner Bros., Rated G, Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP). Not only does it include Jailhouse Rock and Viva Las Vegas, but also the concert film Elvis On Tour. As far as bonus materials go, both films contain making-of featurettes.

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    It’s slight and really doesn’t maintain itself very well, but Date Night (Fox, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) does have the benefit of Steve Carrell and Tina Fey as its leads, as a humdrum married couple whose attempt at a night out goes quickly into action-packed farce mode after they impulsively grab another couple’s dinner reservation. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, PSAs, and a gag reel.

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    It’s not the films you generally think of when you hear his name, but there’s a nice look at the kind of films that sustained his career in the TCM Spotlight Errol Flynn Adventures collection (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP). Included in the set are Desperate Journey, Edge Of Darkness, Northern Pursuit, Uncertain Glory, & Objective, Burma!. Bonus features include short subjects, newsreels, and trailers.

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    Want to know a lot about a certain subject in a fast, easy, and entertaining way? Well, the folks at The History Channel have marshaled their massive library into a new initiative of single-disc “Instant Expert” releases, each of which focuses on a single topic. The first batch to come down the pike include Ben Franklin, The Story Of Oil, Egypt, The Mayflower, The French Revolution, and Beowulf (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$14.95 SRP each).

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    David Starkey dives deep into the history of Britain’s ruling class in the documentary series Monarchy (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$79.99 SRP), taking viewers on a 1,500-year journey through power, blood, and battle.

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    Film criticism has been condensed down to its purest form in the collected release of Four Word Film Reviews (Adams Media, $9.95 SRP), in which Benj Clews and Michael Onesi summarize the likes of Jurassic Park with “Visitors feed the animals.” and Jaws with “Eat ship and die.”

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    Having recently acquired the rights to release Roy Budd’s scores, Silva Screen launches right in with a sparkling release of Budd’s score to the original Get Carter (Silva Screen Records, $12.98 SRP). Fans of the film and score aficionados alike will want to snap this up ASAP.

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    Long a favorite of tape-trading fans, the very lovely, little-seen 1984 documentary Henson’s Place (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP) arrives on DVD and is worth a look by anyone who fancies themselves a Muppets fan. The disc also include a look at the 1885/86 Jim Henson Company Yearbook, with an introduction by Michael Frith.

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    It seems awfully soon after the Brit-centric, Frank Oz-helmed remake of just a few years ago, but the American audience got its own version of Death At A Funeral (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.95 SRP) which at least makes the smart decision of keeping Peter Dinklage on in what still amounts to a frothy, if slight, farce. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    So two volumes simply weren’t enough? Well, perhaps you’ll finally get your fill with Saturday Night Live: The Best Of Will Ferrell Volume 3 (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP), which is two more volumes than any of the original cast. Think about that for a moment.

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    It’s schlock of the utmost caliber, as Joe Dante rips off Jaws in the Roger Corman produced Piranha (Shout Factory, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$26.97 SRP), and it’s even goofier when you view it in high definition. Bonus features an audio commentary, featurettes, bloopers, radio/TV spots, trailers, and more.

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    Did you know that Hawaii Five-O ran for 12 seasons? I mean, by the time you get to Hawaii Five-O: Season 9 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP), it’s pretty much running on autopilot as Chin Ho, Danno, and Detective Steve McGarrett track down criminals on the Big Island of Oahu. The 6-disc set contains all 23 episodes.

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    Thanks to Charlie Brooker’s brilliant deconstruction of this soap opera dramatization on the loves and lives of the 19th century painters in question, I can’t really take Desperate Romantics (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) too seriously. Perhaps you can. The 2-disc set contains a pair of featurettes.

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    While it makes me feel achingly old to see it’s the 25th anniversary edition, it is nice that John Hughes’ The Breakfast Club (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$26.98 SRP) has arrived in high definition, featuring an audio commentary, documentary, and a featurette on the origins of “The Brat Pack”.

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    Watch a once-promising show completely collapse under its own mismanagement and limp to a perfunctory demise via the 4th and final season of Heroes (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP). The 5-disc set contains all 18 episodes, plus audio commentaries, deleted/extended scenes, and featurettes. A Blu-Ray edition ($79.98 SRP) is also available, with the same bonus materials plus an exclusive featurette.

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    Proving that Sesame Street is all about following trends instead of setting them nowadays, their latest DVD release features Abby Cadabby in Sesame Street: P Is For Princess (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), which at least features Paul Rudd as a prince.

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    Oh, The 80’s. You gifted us with so much pop culture detritus that clogs every nook and cranny of the brains that lived through you. Included in that clutter is the short-lived TV series Max Headroom (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$49.97 SRP), whose 14 episodes are included in this new collector’s edition set. Bonus features include retrospective featurettes and a cast roundtable discussion.

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    Calling back to the likes of Voltron, Robotech, and Battle Of The Planets, Adult Swim’s Titan Maximum (Adult Swim, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP) is a stop-motion riff on that big robot pop culture well. Unfortunately, it doesn’t quite live up to the previous series from its creators, Robot Chicken. We’ll see if it gets its sea legs should it move forward. The disc contains 9 episodes, animatics, commentaries, featurettes, a table read, and more.

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    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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  • FROM THE VAULT: An Interview with Gary Kurtz

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    The wonderful sci-fi geek site i09.com recently linked out to an LA Times interview with producer Gary Kurtz, and i09 believed it to be the first time that Kurtz had spoken in-depth, on the record, about the creation of Star Wars and the issues he had with George Lucas during the making of The Empire Strikes Back that led to a massive falling out between the two creative partners.

    Well, not so.

    I’d done a massive interview with Kurtz back in 2002, which goes into a lot more detail about the falling out, plus Kurtz’s other work on American Graffiti and with Jim Henson on The Dark Crystal.

    Here is that interview…

    -Ken Plume

    ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 11, 2002

    In many projects, there are “unsung heroes”… people whose contributions are extensive, but have been overshadowed by the passage of time (or the bluster of others).

    One of those “unsung heroes” is producer Gary Kurtz, whose credits include American Graffiti, Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, Dark Crystal, and Return to Oz.

    I’m not going to try and explain Kurtz’s importance to Star Wars in this introduction – the interview will accomplish that.

    Without further ado, my in-depth interview with Gary Kurtz…

    KEN PLUME: I’d like to go back to the very beginning and ask about your introduction to the film industry.

    GARY KURTZ: Well, I went to film school at USC in Los Angeles. Actually, to go back even further than that, I was a music major, really, in high school in the southern California area and actually went to USC on a music scholarship to begin with. At that time, I was looking to major in composition and conducting with a possibility of maybe teaching music. But, it was a bit vague and in the first year one of the requirements of music scholarships is that you have to play in every group that’s available – so I was playing in the concert band, the symphony orchestra, the opera orchestra, the wind and other small ensembles in the classical music side, as well as the jazz band and a couple of other jazz groups that were organized at the school.

    PLUME: Was that just meant to give you versatility as far as that curriculum?

    KURTZ: Well, that was part of it, and also they always desperately needed members to play in the various groups and so they felt that music experience and performance – a lot of composition majors didn’t know how to play anything but the piano, so one of the important things was to get orchestral experience playing an orchestra instrument other than the piano. I didn’t have that problem. I played reeds primarily and then oboe and English horn, and dabbled in most of the rest of the instruments except for the heavy brass. I never tried to play anything other than a bit of the clarinet.

    In that first year at USC I did the music for three or four student films. It didn’t necessarily mean composing music, because the time deadlines were unbelievably short, so it meant mostly to assemble music from a variety of sources. Since they were student films, it didn’t really matter where they came from – there were no rights problems. In doing that, though, I became more and more interested in the films. I had had previous experience in high school at shooting 8mm and 16mm film footage, both documentary and sort of dramatic type materials, so it wasn’t a new thing to me. And I had been a keen still photographer for years, so moving to a cinema major wasn’t really that big a jump.

    PLUME: … and this would have been what, the mid-’60s?

    KURTZ: No, no … I went to USC first in 1959, so it was in the early ’60s. Very early ’60s.

    PLUME: So you were a part of that initial group of classes in the film department.

    KURTZ: No, the film department at USC had been going on since the 1920s, since the silent days … I guess it was the oldest film school in existence, because it started so early … It wasn’t really until the mid-’60s, after I’d finished and was gone, that the popularity of studying cinema became magnified 100 percent or more, because when I was there, it was very difficult to find enough students to make up film crews. As a matter of fact … in the first senior project year that I was in in that term, I was doing advanced camera, as well as sound and production management and other things, and I had to work on four of the seven projects. Normally, you’re only supposed to work on one! But everybody in the class that I was in worked on four or five projects, because there weren’t enough people.

    Then the next term, when I directed, I had a really hard time getting together enough of a crew. I had to actually do a lot of my own camera work – there wasn’t a cameraperson available. Film school wasn’t particularly popular at that time. It wasn’t until George Lucas and his group, John Milius and those guys, who went to USC also – they didn’t start until ’66 – by then it seemed to be much more popular. And certainly by the end of the ’60s, it was incredibly popular and they had to create all kinds of devices to wheedle out a lot of people by requiring a lot of portfolio work and films made in high school – all kinds of pre-requirements, just to get it down to a usable number of students that they could cope with.

    PLUME: During the time you were there, was it rather open?

    KURTZ: Oh, it was completely open. If you had projects – either written or film projects – they would look at early film projects or just written material, scripts and proposals for projects, for acceptance. But it wasn’t too definitive, because they were interested in having enough students to make up the program.

    PLUME: And at the time you were going, how respected was the film program by the industry?

    KURTZ: Oh, it was quite well respected. There were a lot of people that had graduated out of the program in the post-war period – the late ’40s, ’50s – that had become fixtures in the industry of one kind or another – studio executives or agents or television producers or a few film directors – but … it wasn’t a straight line to the creative heart, because the other big factor was the fact that the unions in the late ’50s and ’60s were very strong, and you couldn’t work in the industry unless you were a union member, as far as the crafts were concerned, and you couldn’t get into the unions because they were closed. A closed-shop kind of system. So the experience that I got while I was a film student was working on Roger Corman kind of low-budget exploitation films, and I worked on a lot of those – 40 or 50 over a three or four year period.

    PLUME: Generally doing what type of work?

    KURTZ: Well, everything really. I started out being a grip and an electrician and a sound boom operator, and on some of the later ones I was the director of photography and film editor or production supervisor.

    PLUME: So, basically, a jack-of-all-trades.

    KURTZ: Yes, yes, a little of everything. On some projects, there was so few crew that they were very much like student films. I remember one picture where I was production manager and the assistant director, as well as the editor and one of the cameramen – and the second unit director as well.

    PLUME: Now …in film school at that time, what were the aspirations for afterwards? I mean, when you talk to film students now, everyone wants to be a director right out of the gate.

    KURTZ: Yes, that wasn’t quite as strong then … there was a general feeling, in the very early ’60s, that people wanted to sort of break down the barriers of Hollywood and go into ALL of the various things. There were a lot of students who wanted to become editors, and there were a lot who wanted to become cameramen. There were quite a few who wanted to be directors as well, but it didn’t seem to be the only thing.

    PLUME: It hadn’t quite been placed on the pedestal it got placed on later, had it?

    KURTZ: No, no … the auteur theory really came out of the French new wave writings in the late ’50s/early ’60s, and we were reading all that stuff from Cahiers du Cinema and talking about it at school, I remember, and I think most of the students thought the concept intellectually was valid, but practically was rubbish because there’re so many accidents that happen on a film. The chemistry of the group that you’ve gotten together makes a huge difference, and yes, picking the right people is important. But it’s really difficult for a director – unless you’re Stanley Kubrick – to have the final say on every single little minute detail, so all the films are pretty much a group effort. It can be pretty much assumed that most of the aspiring directors felt that way – they had no illusions about the fact that they could become like French directors were.

    PLUME: Sometimes having absolute final say is one of the worst things that can happen if you have wrong instincts.

    KURTZ: Yes, absolutely. I mean, the whole point of having a group effort is that your crew becomes a sounding board.

    PLUME: I never understood the auteur theory when so much of a film is a matter of checks and balances.

    KURTZ: Well, I think that intellectually the auteur theory came out of the idea of looking at a body of work – like Hitchcock’s work or Hawks’s work or John Ford’s work – and trying to see common threads. Well, that’s perfectly acceptable as an analysis of the whole career of a filmmaker, because there are going to be tying threads there. A director’s not going to pick a project to do unless it has some meaning to them. You are going to find that it’s just the idea of the director being the only creative entity on a picture was the aspect that I think most people felt was a bit far-fetched.

    PLUME: And do you think that that trend has become detrimental over time?

    KURTZ: Yes, I do. Definitely. I especially think, since I’ve focused mostly on my career on producing and working with a lot of first time directors, I’ve felt that what’s happened is that the working producer’s job – basically, of being the director’s partner and being his mirror and sounding bound – has disappeared and the producer’s job has primarily turned to deal making. Most of the people whose names you see up on the screen don’t have anything to do with the making of the film, which is a shame, really, because it leaves the director kind of totally on his own – and it means also that there’s no one to say “Wait a minute, that’s terrible, don’t do that!”

    PLUME: There’re no ‘no-men’ anymore.

    KURTZ: There’re no ‘no-men’. Yes, exactly.

    PLUME: Do you think that leads to the working producer now being more of a traveling man than they were in the past? You used to be able to see that certain directors worked hand-in-hand with producers over ten films. Now you’ll be lucky if they work past two films, if one of those is a success.

    KURTZ: Yes, I think that’s a result of most of those relationships having risen out of the deals. Sometimes the producer’s relationship with the director and the writer on a project is only because either they own the property in the first place or they’re the one that pulled the money together, so that there is no actual working relationship. The legwork that the producer should be doing is shared out amongst the production staff, some of it being done by the production supervisor and others, and the rest being absorbed by the director. I mean, I’ve never felt that it’s fair to a director, in a way, to saddle him with having to deal with all that stuff. I’ve always felt that a good producer should insulate the director completely from having to deal with the studio and any outside influences, to allow him to get on with working with the actors and putting the film together.

    PLUME: Do you think that film schools today – and to a large extent apocryphal evidence that filters down – have made directors nowadays believe that any and all producers should be seen as enemies to whatever the vision of the director may – or may not – be?

    KURTZ: I’m sure they do, because that’s probably the case. The producer is looked upon as pretty much the same as a studio executive, who may not have any idea about the project. Whereas if you go back to the ’60s, ’70s and even before … even of the big studios days, prior to the studios losing their real power in the ’60s… the producers that were working – the Arthur Freeds of the world, and David O. Selnicks – they had the power. The directors were their hired hands. That’s not necessarily great either, but those kinds of producers from the ’30s and ’40s seemed to have a fairly grand vision of what they wanted to see on the screen. The directors that they hired went along with them – and that was part of the studio system anyway, when they all were employees of the studio. So it isn’t fair to try to compare that with what’s going on today.

    PLUME: The irony is that a good deal of major directors nowadays have become those type of producers as well, bringing on other directors as hired hands.

    KURTZ: Yes, exactly… Because they had the power to do that. But there’re so few good movies made today, it’s difficult for me to believe that it’s all because the directors don’t have any vision in what they want to see. I think it’s primarily due to the fact that the studios are now all owned by big conglomerates who are interested in making money to the exclusion of everything else. Now, the studios always wanted to make money – that was one of their reasons for being in existence – but the men who ran the studios, no matter how difficult they were, they had some sense of what being a showman was like.

    They were willing to take chances on oddball projects, and you don’t see that as much anymore. There are smaller companies who will, but there’s so many stories about projects floating around the last ten years that couldn’t get made because the elements weren’t right. When you just look at the list of the elements that the studios wanted, you know it wouldn’t work that way. But it’s a security blanket to have it be a Tom Cruise picture, or a Jack Nicholson picture, or whoever. Whether they’re right for the project or not, the studio executive is not going to get fired if the picture fails if they have A-list talent.

    PLUME: Right – and then they complain about the audience, for not accepting it.

    KURTZ: Yes.

    PLUME: I’m interested… when you talk about the Golden Age of Hollywood, as opposed to now, there seemed to be a better balance between “Okay, these are our A pictures, and then these are our B pictures, the experimental ones that we’ll toss money towards, but … we’re going to bank on the A ones, if the B ones hit – fine.” Now it seems that everything has to be a blockbuster.

    KURTZ: Yes, that’s exactly right. I mean, I was part of the program at Universal Studios in the early ’70s – the low-budget program that was run by Ned Tanen which produced twelve or thirteen pictures, all under a million dollars at that time. Anything under a million dollars was considered bare bones movies. The most famous film that came out of that group was, of course, American Graffiti – and it made the most money – but all the films that were made under that program were interesting, quirky films that at least made their money back. If you count video and things over the long run, they all made money … it’s not Jaws business, but American Graffiti even wasn’t Jaws business. American Graffiti was a very, very small picture that went on to do reasonably well. I think it eventually did $60 million in America, which wasn’t big box office even in the early ’70s. But, based on the cost of the picture, it was pretty phenomenal. The other pictures in that program – Doug Trumbull’s Silent Running and John Cassavetes’s Minnie and Moskowitz and Milos Forman’s Taking Off and Peter Fonda’s The Hired Hand and the other one that I helped produce, Monte Hellman’s Two-Lane Blacktop – all of those films are interesting films and they’re worth seeing today.

    PLUME: They hold up very well.

    KURTZ: They do hold up very well, and because they cost so little money, the studio didn’t worry about them. But no one seems to be willing to experiment with a program like that today – at all. They’re not willing to make small films, or if they do, they make them by – well, they don’t make them, actually. They have a classics division of some kind or another like Fox Searchlight or Miramax that seek out odd projects, and they get made independently and then just released by the studio. The studio doesn’t instigate the making of those projects.

    PLUME: So they have no initial costs…

    KURTZ: No, they do have costs. They wait for the filmmakers to come to them with a developed script.

    PLUME: Or, in some cases, a completely filmed project…

    KURTZ: Well, yes, that happens, too.

    PLUME: It seems like the industry depends solely upon initiative, nowadays, rather than taking any risks.

    KURTZ: At the time we were doing American Graffiti at Universal – which was not a picture made on the lot, although we had an office there – it was made in San Francisco, and we were very rarely at the studio. But some of the times when I was at the studio for meetings and various things, I realized in talking to some of the story department people that they had probably 100 projects in various stages of development – script development – that they were paying someone to develop. They don’t do much of that anymore at all. I suppose the idea is now that the scripts will somehow be generated. Either the independent producers or the writers themselves will spend the time and energy to develop them to the point where they can be seen. I think one of the reasons that there’re so few good movies is that that process has been truncated so much. Too many films go into production before they’re ready.

    (continued below…)

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 7/16/10: Rock Climbing!

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    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…)

    Shout Factory has settled into a pleasantly clockwork schedule of releasing new sets, but I still greet Mystery Science Theater 3000: Volume XVIII (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$59.97 SRP) with delight, because it means more episodes have made it out. This go round, we get Lost Continent, Crash Of The Moons, The Beast Of Yucca Flats, and Jack Frost. Bonus materials include new intros from Kevin Murphy & Frank Conniff, a spotlight on Coleman Francis, and MST Hour wraparounds.

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    When I was a kid, I always wanted the 5 transformable lions that would join to form the mighty battle robot Voltron. Sadly, I never did wind up getting it back then. As an adult, however, I have gotten the 25th Anniversary Voltron ($69.99) in all its 1:197-scale glory. Yeah, it’s cool.

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    Relive the great legacy of Sesame Street back in the days before the show went down the tubes with the DVD release of 1989’s Sesame Street: 20 Years And Still Counting (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), back when Jim Henson and Richard Hunt were still with us and the show hadn’t become pap-filled Elmo Central. Maybe we can get them to release Don’t Eat The Pictures next…

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    If you’re keen for a massive tome that takes a backstage look at the genius behind the concepts, designs, and implementations of their theme parks, look no further than Walt Disney Imagineering: A Behind The Dreams Look At Making More Magic Real (Disney Editions, $60 SRP), which does exactly that, along with additional ephemera inserts.

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    Tide yourself over for the next season release with Spongebob Squarepants: Triton’s Revenge (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP), which collects another 7 episodes, plus “The Clash of Triton” shorts and a Fanboy & Chum Chum episode.

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    You’ve probably purchased them in the past, so what’s the incentive in buying the new editions of Saturday Night Live: The Best Of Will Ferrell & Saturday Night Live: The Best Of Tracy Morgan (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP each)? Well, in addition to additional sketched, they’ve also added in more outtakes, dress sketches, and TV appearances.

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    It’s hard not to be enthralled by the images on display in World War I In Color (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), as “The Great War” has long been one that exists in modern memory via black & white photos and footage, allowing some emotional distance between the viewer and history. Now, through the discovery and restoration of rare footage, the War suddenly pops in full color, making the events that much more immediate and visceral. Highly recommended.

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    If you’re curious what Reality Bites would look like at middle age, look no further than Greenberg (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP), which finds Ben Stiller as the titular layabout whose rudderless life is presented with options when his brother asks him to housesit in LA. Amiable if not memorable, it’s a decent watch. Bonus materials include a trio of behind-the-scenes featurettes.

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    Warners continues to mine their deep library of noir films with the 5th volume of the Film Noir Classic Collection (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), which contains another 8 flicks – Cornered, Desperate, The Phenix City Story, Dial 1119, Armored Car Robbery, Crime In The Streets, Deadline At Dawn and Backfire.

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    Post-MASH, Robert Altman decided to cash most of the goodwill audiences had in with the bizarre, daft Brewster McCloud (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$24.95 SRP), which stars Bud Cort as… I don’t know what. A dreamer? A failed realist? A fantasist? Give it a spin and see if you can figure it out.

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    In the early days of Nick at Nite, one of the shows I watched night after night was My Three Sons, and I’m not really sure why. Maybe it’s because of star Fred MacMurray, as single parent Steve Douglas (sadly, sans Flubber). Or maybe it was just the lovably crotchety presence of William Frawley. Either way, both the first and second volumes of season 2 are now available (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP each), each containing 18 episodes apiece, plus sponsor spots.

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    Paramount continues to undercut the public domain cheapie market with the welcome release of the complete second season of The Lucy Show (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), which collects all 28 episodes of Lucille Ball’s guest star-studded follow up to I Love Lucy. Bonus materials include vintage openings & closings, interviews, rare clips, cast commercials, The Lucille Ball Comedy Hour special with guest Bob Hope, and more.

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    I was never a fan of Saving Grace (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), as its detective w/ a “real” guardian angel schtick just felt like Colombo meets Highway To Heaven, but I’m sure fans will pick up the 3rd (and final) season set. The 5-disc set contains all 19 episodes.

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    Since you can’t introduce your kids to the superheroes you loved as a kid via comic books anymore (dark, violent aberrations that they’ve become), pick up The Superhero Squad Volume 1: Quest For The Infinity Sword (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$14.93 SRP) for fun, kid-friendly versions of all of your Marvel Comics favorites that are a lot closer to what you remember than what’s in the books now.

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    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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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 6/11/10: I’m Alright

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    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…)

    You wouldn’t think a comedy like Caddyshack (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP) would benefit so much from high definition, but the new Blu-Ray benefits from a crystal clear picture that looks better than it ever has previously. To add even more incentive, there’s a new feature-length 30th anniversary documentary featuring most of the principals (sans Bill Murray and Chevy Chase) reminiscing, as well as the half-hour featurette from the original DVD release. The film is also available via iTunes & Amazon On Demand.

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    Who wouldn’t want a radio controlled robot you can fit in the palm of your hand? I know! Well, the dream you never thought you had has come true with the line of Zbit Mini R/C Robots ($14.99 each). There’s a whole line of the little buggers to choose from, and each one is just as nifty as can be.

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    Launched in the wake of Raiders Of The Lost Ark and clearly playing in the same ’30s adventure sandbox, Tales Of The Gold Monkey (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$49.97 SRP) was TVs attempt to cash in with a pretty damn fun series starring Michael Collins as a young American transporting people on the run in the South Pacific in 1938 via his Grumman Goose seaplane. Felled by high costs after one season, you can now own it all in a set packed with commentaries, featurettes, and more.

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    It’s only in hindsight that you realize the entire season you spent watching Ice Road Truckers (History Channel, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.95 SRP) on the edge of your seat worried about a truck (and trucker) falling through the ice was really just an entire season of watching trucks drive. Back and forth. Because nothing deadly has happened yet. Really, you’re just watching a soap opera. In trucks. On ice. The 3rd season set contains all 13 episodes, plus additional footage.

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    It’s a shame that we can only get it divorced from the Jim Henson Hour, within which it was originally presented, but it’s worth picking up Jim Henson’s Dog City (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP) just to support the release of more Henson specials.

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    While most of the attention went to Christopher Nolan’s The Prestige, the other magician film, The Illusionist (Fox, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), is a fun little love story wrapped up in a mystery, with a cast that includes Ed Norton, Paul Giamatti, Rufus Sewell, and Jessica Biel. The new 2-disc Blu-Ray features the original standard edition DVD, containing the bonus materials.

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    Abandoning the 2-disc half-season sets in favor of the single disc episode collection familiar to fans of Spongebob, iCarly: iSaved Your Life (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP) contains an extended director’s cut of the titular episode, plus a trio of episodes and the movie “iQuit iCarly”. Bonus materials include behind-the-scenes featurettes.

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    Many doubted it would happen, but it turns out that Larry David did return for a 7th season of Curb Your Enthusiasm (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), and he brought with him a holy grail of a storyline for comedy fans – a meta Seinfeld reunion, bringing all of the principals together for a the shooting of a special within season. Bonus materials in the 2-disc set includes interviews and behind-the-scenes featurettes.

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    For those keeping score, the Charlie Chan TCM Spotlight Collection (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), features the final three films starring Sidney Toler as the legendary sleuth who makes solving crimes a family affair. Those three films are Dark Alibi, Dangerous Money, & The Trap, with Roland Winters debut as Chan rounding out the set in The Chinese Ring.

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    Proving once again that their purpose is to really dig into the vaults and release titles that otherwise wouldn’t get a DVD release, the Warner Archive has added the Red Skelton Whistling Collection (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$24.95), which contains a trio of flicks starring Skelton – Whistling In The Dark, Whistling In Dixie, & Whistling In Brooklyn.

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    On the heels of the success of Hercules and Xena, Warners waded into the fray with The New Adventures Of Robin Hood (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$34.95), which aimed for the same kind of tone but never caught on like the others did. For the dedicated fanbase, though, the Warner Archive has made the first season available, which makes me think the rest of the series will be coming in due course.

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    How many of you remember that Family Matters (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) didn’t start out with Urkel? No, the nasally ubernerd was nowhere to be found at the beginning of this spin-off from Perfect Strangers, which began as a simple family sitcom. If only they knew what the were about to be engulfed by in just a few short episodes. The first season set contains all 22 episodes.

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    Tween & teen girls are the intended audience for the extended edition release of the Disney Channel movie Starstruck (Walt Disney, Not Rated, DVD-$28.99 SRP), about a small town girl who hooks up with a pop star after a chance encounter. Bonus features include music videos, an additional song, and the soundtrack CD.

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    Talk about a show that just limped along to the end – you can now own the 6th and final season of Nip/Tuck (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), a guilty pleasure of a show that became guiltier and less pleasurable as things wound on. Bonus materials are limited to a featurette on the psychology of plastic surgery.

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    Featuring over 22 points of articulation, 2 sets of interchangeable posing hands, an openable chest with positive “blue” energy inside, battery-operated illuminated eyes, interchangeable arm cannons, interchangeable rocket boots, and a display base, Hot Toys’ 12-inch Astro Boy figure ($104.99) is not only a fine collectible, but also a great gift for a kid (the ones that take care of their toys, naturally). Unlike their recent vinyl Astro Boy display, this one is fully poseable. Ridiculously so. Get it while you can.

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    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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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 4/16/10: Basil Of Baker Street

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    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…)

    Often overlooked in favor of the The Little Mermaid, I’d say that the Disney animation renaissance began with the still-fun Great Mouse Detective (Disney, Rated G, DVD-$19.98 SRP), which gets a special edition but sadly no Blu-Ray. Still, if you’ve never seen this Victorian adventure of Basil of Baker Street, do so. Bonus features include a making-of featurette and a sing-along.

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    I don’t know about you, but every once In awhile I remember to fear whatever creepy crawly organisms might be living in the bristles of my toothbrush. Or at least I used to fear them, before I got the Bacteria Assassin Ninja Toothbrush Sanitizer ($36.99), which is a nifty little sinktop device (made to look like a ninja) which uses UV light to kill all of those microscopic nasties. All you do is put the head of your toothbrush in, and then little it go to work.

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    It’s a button-pusher to be sure – as all Richard Curtis films are – but I’ve got admit, I did like his love letter to the illegal, ship-based rock broadcasters of late-60’s Britain in Pirate Radio (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$36.98 SRP). The plot is really secondary to the performances of the stellar cast – including Bill Nighy, Rys Ifans, Nick Frost, Kenneth Branagh, Chris O’Dowd, and Phillip Seymour Hoffman – and the soundtrack. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, and featurettes.

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    I’m not a terribly big fan of Ron Howard as a filmmaker, but the story of Apollo 13 (Universal, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$26.98 SRP) is still incredibly compelling – not the least of which because I’m a sucker for the space program. The new Blu-Ray edition is a worthy upgrade, as the visuals are still incredible for the time that the film was made, in the still formative days of CGI when practical effects still had a firm place in filmmaking. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, and behind-the-scenes & historical featurettes.

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    They shine with a pale, pale light compared to the classic MGM short subjects, but if your kids absolutely have to have more cat & mouse adventures, then there’s Tom & Jerry Tales: The Complete First Season (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP). The 2-disc set contains all 13 episodes.

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    Coming out of the theater with my 5-year-old nephew, I could tell that How To Train Your Dragon (available for PS3-$49.99 SRP, XBOX-$49.99 SRP, Wii-$49.99 SRP, & DS-$29.99 SRP), really sparked his imagination in the sort of a way that you know he could have walked right back in and seen it again. Well, lucky for my sanity, the video game tie-ins for the film are pretty darn fun across the board, combining both a story adventure and an instant gratification arcade ability to just control a pair of dragons waling on each other. As is usual with these releases, it’s available on every platform, and there no one that’s any more encouraged over the other (and even the DS edition is a hoot). Get at least one platform and have a blast.

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    Put memories of Platinum Dunes blah remake out of your head with the high-definition arrival of the original Nightmare On Elm Street (New Line, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP), as you watch Freddy Krueger carve up his victims in sparkling detail. Bonus materials include a pair of commentaries, alternate endings, a trio of featurettes, alternate takes, and behind-the-scenes vignettes.

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    Since selling off The Muppets, the Jim Henson Company has been chopping and packaging the material they have left for DVD releases. The Song Of The Cloud Forest (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$12.98 SRP) was originally featured in the short-lived Jim Henson Hour, but is combined here with episodes of Fraggle Rock and Animal Show with Stinky and Jake. Speaking of the latter, there’s also the 5-episode collection Animal Show with Stinky and Jake: Lions, Tigers & Bears (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$12.98 SRP).

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    In one of the slowest turnarounds ever, you can now pick up the 2-disc special edition release of The Official Inaugural Celebration (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP), containing the complete inauguration of President Obama, plus the concert celebration that followed.

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    I’m so happy to live in a world where a documentary has been made that looks at the fascinating – and odd – world of ventriloquism, which is called “venting” by its practitioners. I’m No Dummy (Salient Media, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP) looks at a trio of ventriloquists – Jay Johnson, Jeff Dunham, and Lynn Trefzger – and the history of the form.

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    Let your impressionable children plunk themselves down in front of the 2-disc Bakugan Battle Brawlers: Chapter 1 (Cartoon Network, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP), featuring another 13 episodes of flashy brawling action.

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    Every thing you can imagine hits the fan when J.R. Ewing reaches the 13th season of Dallas (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) and Ewing Oil is brought to the brink of destruction. Just another day in Texas, right? The 3-disc set contains all 27 episodes, which sadly continue to be released on those damned flipper discs. Come on, Warners!

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    Let your kids go on a bilingual jaunt around the world with Dora The Explorer: Explore The Earth! (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP). The single-disc release contains 4 episodes, plus a pair of Moose & Zee shorts.

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    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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