Tag: Joseph Gordon-Levitt

  • My Favourite Things: October 2013

    my-favourite-things

    OCTOBER

    lucyline.gif

    I’m back to give you more of my favourite stuff online. The videos aren’t necessarily from the last month, but that’s when I found them so it’s good enough for me!

    1) We Are Brothers

    Two brothers (with the decidedly mad names Baddy Paris and Rufus Starlight) set out to give the most memorable best-man speech at a wedding and I think they gave it one hell of a shot. Here is a snippet of their description:

    “At his wedding we pleaded for our brother not to leave us, in the only way we knew how to say it; through the medium of 80s music and video. We thought we’d done ok, but he left us anyway”.

    It has no right to be as good as it is.

    2) Political Apathy

    Russell Brand recently was interviewed by Jeremy Paxman about his political beliefs. It was a slightly heated but eloquent debate about apathy in the modern political system. You can watch a large portion of it here:

    It has sparked lots of conversation online with people both agreeing and disagreeing with Brand’s viewpoints. Comedian and friend of FRED Rufus Hound share’s Brand’s thoughts and even spoke about it a couple years ago on his comedy special. Check it out below, it’s pretty hilarious and scarily accurate:

    3) Beetlejuice: A Minecraft Rollercoaster

    I have never played Minecraft. I think I’m just too old to get it. But, those who do play it have made some excellent things. Example A: This rollercoaster created in homage to Tim Burton’s best film (that’s right, I said it). It features recreated scenes and designs based on the film and it has a great tune playing too.

    4) Lip Sync Battle

    Once again proving that Jimmy Fallon has stolen the life I should be living, this little video is inordinately smile inducing. Jimmy, Joseph Gordon Levitt, and Stephen Merchant play a game of lip synching to popular songs.

    Who knew Stephen Merchant could move so well?

    5) Hipster or a Hobo

    To play us out this month, The Rubberbandits are back with their first new material since their double album “Serious About Men”. It’s a slower r’n’b song about the thin line in current fashion trends.

    ——————————————————————

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

    Aaron Fever is the creator of cry-singing to “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun”. He is also more accurately an internet whore and rarely leaves the house. If you like what you read here check out his blog http://www.aaronfever.com

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/11/13: Flibble

    weekendshopping.png

    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 was genuinely wary about how good Red Dwarf X (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) would be. It had been over 10 years since the last actual series, and while it had its moments, the recent Back To Earth was a relatively dry affair. Thankfully, the Dwarfers return to a studio audience and the character comedy that I fell in love with from the show’s early seasons. Bonus materials include deleted scenes, a gag reel, and an absolutely incredible feature-length documentary chronicling the difficult journey in producing the show’s return.

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    Thinkgeek time! Whether it be for travel purposes or just emergencies, having battery backups able to recharge mobile devices is a plus, and one of the newer ones to consider is the iGeek Large Capacity Portable Charger ($69.95), which has the unique distinction of being able to recharge the power hungry iPad.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    Much has been said about the genius of Looper (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP). But, truth be told, I don’t share the hyperbolic enthusiasm – rather, I’ll just say it’s en enjoyably solid time travel flick anchored by wonderful performances from Joseph Gordon Levitt & Bruce Willis, and leave it at that. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and deleted scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    Making the transition from TV to feature film is an often tricky proposition, and its quite a rare thing for it to be a comedy making that transition. To do it and to do it well is nearly unprecedented, which makes the success of The Inbetweeners Movie (Lionsgate, Rated R, DVD-$26.98 SRP) worth celebrating. And it’s also a great film, which finds the 4 lads out of school and having a decidedly awkward holiday. There’s also hours of bonus materials, from featurettes and deleted scenes to a gag reel and 24 takes of walking out of a door.

    blankguide.gif

    It was quite a surprise to hear that Tim Burton’s nigh-legendary stop-motion short made during his brief tenure at Disney would be turned into a full-fledged feature, but then it shouldn’t have been, since Frankenweenie (Walt Disney, Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP) was a charmer, and the expended film largely manages to keep that charm of a young boy using science to bring his dearly departed dog back to life intact. Bonus materials include the original live action short, a making-of documentary, and a brand-new short subject, to boot.

    blankguide.gif

    If you’re curious about how moderate John McCain compromised his principles and ultimately threw away his chance at the Presidency, take a look at HBO’s Game Change (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), which dramatizes the machinations of the 2008 election that led to such a downfall in principles. Bonus materials include a pair of featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    If you enjoyed the first series of Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant torturing the hapless Karl Pilkington by sending him to exotic locales within which to moan, then expect more of the same with An Idiot Abroad 2 (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP). Just don’t expect him to bungee jump. Bonus materials include featurettes and deleted scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    Though I wasn’t expecting much from it, it was a pleasant surprise to a find a fun outing in Episodes (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), the tale of a husband-and-wife UK writing team whose delight at having their hit show adapted for the US market turns to despair as the adaptation of their intelligent show turns into a dumbed-down sitcom starring Matt LeBlanc (hilariously sending himself up). The 2-disc set contains the first and second season, but sadly no bonus features.

    blankguide.gif

    As long as teenage girls go crazy at the sight & sound of the latest pop sensation, much to the confusion and consternation of adults, then the musical Bye Bye Birdie (Masterworks Broadway, $11.99 SRP) will still be as relevant today as it was 50 years ago, as the tunes in this newly remastered version of the original soundtrack recording (starring Janet Leigh, Dick Van Dyke, Ann Margaret, & Paul Lynde).

    blankguide.gif

    It’s saccharine sweet, but there’s something in how matter-of-factly The Odd Life Of Timothy Green (Walt Disney, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) presents its simple little fable of a mysterious boy who arrives one night to be a barren couple’s perfect son that caught me off guard enough to accept its sweetness at face value. Fancy that, eh? Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a music video.

    blankguide.gif

    In the rush to dramatize the killing of Bin Laden, the first film out of the gate was Seal Team Six: The Raid On Osama Bin Laden (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), which – while lacking the Oscar pretensions of the more recent take on events – is a solid look at the dangerous operation and the servicemen that carried it out. Bonus materials include a making-of featurette.

    blankguide.gif

    Combining the best of Mad Men and Newsroom, the BBC period drama returns in The Hour 2 (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP), which brings the team to 1957 and rapid change, both social and from within the office.

    blankguide.gif

    I know it’s got a rapid fan following, and for those rabid fans, the arrival of Archer: Season Three (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is probably a cause for celebration, as it brings with it audio commentary on select episodes, featurettes, and an enhanced version of the “Heart Of Archness” Trilogy.

    blankguide.gif

    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

    ##

  • My Favourite Things: December 2011

    my-favourite-things

    December

    lucyline.gif

    Hello and welcome to the last MFT of 2011! It has been a good year and I’d like to thank all the visitors to FRED for helping to make it one I will always remember. But there is still business to be done so check out my favourite things from the past month.

    1) Kerry Callen’s Super Antics

    For those who don’t frequent Kerry Callen’s blog she’s a super cool comic artist. She recently did a series of classically styled Superman comics. So far she has only done three but I’ve included two of them below (the other is a little longer but you can see it by clicking here). I love them due to some great humour and a real likeness to that old comic look.

    ear-bullet

    super_antics_3

    2) Paolo Rivera’s Christmas Devil

    Over on Paolo Rivera’s blog he recently shared his artwork for Daredevil #7 which came out this month. This cover is not only beautiful but really shows the difference between the Daredevil of the past 10 years and his current re-incarnation.

    daredevil-christmas

    You can see more more of his great art and a lot of behind-the-scenes info that goes into it on his blog so be sure to stop by there at some point.

    3) Comic Twart

    Some more comic artwork from another blog (seeing a pattern here this month?). This time the wonderful team over at Comic Twart, which includes the likes of Francesco Francavilla, Chris Samnee, Evan ‘Doc’ Shaner, and Tom Fowler pick a subject for everyone to draw. They try and do this once a week but with so many working comic artists among them, it often gets stretched out.

    There is so much cool stuff to choose from, but to give you an example I’ll show you the work submitted for the subject “Judge Dredd”.

    judge_dredd_its_the_law_low
    judge_dredd_low
    Both by Francesco Francavilla

    judgedredd_flat
    by Dave Johnson

    judge_dredd
    by Ramon Perez

    dredd
    by Evan Shaner

    4) Canyon Defense 2

    The original Canyon Defense game over on Miniclip.com has killed (at an accurate estimate) about a million hours of boring work time for me. I can’t even lie about it. I’ve played this game more than I’ve done work. If my employers ever noticed I’d be fired for sure. So when I say “I liked this game” you can understand the severity of my statement.

    I squeeled with delight when I saw that they released a sequel this month and I’ve already burnt my eyes to a crisp with gameplay.

    The premise is simple. It’s a typical tower defense game. Stop the enemy from reaching your base by setting up automatic-firing posts along the road in. You get more money with every enemy you kill and more tower types open up as you progress.

    cd1

    This time round it’s a little more complex with a hell of a lot more maps and a better learning curve, so beginners will have an easier time to figure out the common strategies that help you get by.

    cd2

    I feel like I shouldn’t have to sell this too hard for you. If you like these sort of strategy games, I’m sure you’ll have a crack at another one like this. Canyon Defense 2 is not the first of it’s kind I’ve recommended here, so give it a go.

    5) What Are You Doing New Years Eve?

    I’ve always been of the mindset that you should finish everything with a song. So to play us out of 2011…

    ——————————————————————

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

    Aaron Poole is the creator of the song “Auld Lang Syne”. He is also more accurately an internet whore and rarely leaves the house. If you like what you read here check out his blog http://aaronfever.blogspot.com

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 10/7/11: Pee-Wee’s Submarine

    weekendshopping.png

    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…)

    Nothing like the getting a film you’ve desperately wanted on Blu-Ray from a given director dropping alongside a misfire from said director to really set up the cognitive dissonance. I’m ecstatic to finally have Tim Burton’s Pee Wee’s Big Adventure (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP), replete with an audio commentary from Burton & Paul Reubens, a commentary with Danny Elfman, additional scenes, and production art. But then Burton’s misguided Charlie And The Chocolate Factory (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP), which is just an odd, unnecessary remake of a true classic. And this disc is actually loaded with bonus materials, including an audio commentary, featurettes galore, and much more. Swings and roundabouts.

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    You know me. You know I love multi-tool gadgets, just for their design awesomeness in secreting away a bunch of tools in a simple, straightforward, often practical form. Such is the case with the 23 tools found in the Kelvin 23 ($24.99), which bills itself as an urban super-tool. And it is, with everything from a screwdriver and measuring tape to a hammer and spirit level.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    I admit, I wasn’t entirely sold on the idea of the return of Pee Wee Herman. I wanted it to happen, but feared that after all this time and an awful lot of water under the bridge, the charm that made the show so iconic could not be recaptured. Well, my fears vanished when watching The Pee Wee Herman Show On Broadway (Image, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP), which brilliantly combines elements of the original live show, the TV show, and new material into a magical evening of theatre that this special perfectly captures. The disc also features a raucous audio commentary that’s well worth a listen.

    blankguide.gif

    It walks a fine line of quirkiness, but Richard Ayoade’s Submarine (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is the offbeat coming-of-age film that Wes Anderson so desperately wanted Rushmore to be. I can’t recommend you dropping everything and watching it as soon as possible highly enough. So do it. Bonus materials include a making-of featurette and deleted scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    With the release of both the deluxe Beauty And The Beast 3D & Lion King 3D sets (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP each), you can delight in truly special editions of both films, loaded with bonus features, and also make your own judgement on whether the process of retroactively making 2D animated films into 3D is a wise one. Personally, I’m still on the fence. While the technology and skill involved in pulling it off are certainly impressive, and there are plenty of “wow” moments while watching both at home, it doesn’t really add much to what were already solid, classic films. But hey, for the price you’re paying to get the 3D sets that contain the regular Blu-Ray and DVD versions as well, you’d be a fool not to pick them up that way. The bonus features on the Beauty and the Beast set are identical to the previous Blu-Ray release, while the new-to-disc Lion King comes loaded with an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, a deleted song, bloopers, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    And while you’re watching the animated versions cavort, why not see how the real live felines act and interact with the Disneynature documentary African Cats (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP). As you can expect from Disney’s documentary history, it’s got a narrative structure, but the footage is absolutely stunning. Bonus materials include filmmaker annotations and featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    If you’re a fan of the era and creators that truly solidified Marvel as the premier comic book company, pick up a copy of Pierre Comtois’ excellent overview Marvel In The 1970s (Twomorrows, $27.95 SRP), which takes an issue by issue look at the House of Ideas comics the defined the decade, and the writers and artists behind them.

    blankguide.gif

    For the past few years, when I’ve wanted to show off the incredible quality of Blu-Ray – and my massive TV – I’ve popped in the BBC’s landmark nature documentary Planet Earth (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.98 SRP). Well, they’ve gone and made it better with a brand new special edition, featuring a re-encoded and improved picture, plus four brand new bonus programs in addition to the features carried over from the previous release. Is it worth the upgrade? Yes. Yes it is.

    blankguide.gif

    The show’s overcome a rough start and solidified into a quirky delight, but the main reason I’ve stuck with Bored To Death (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP) through its second season is that they very wisely amped up the presence of the one-two punch of Oliver Platt and John Hodgman. In fact, I’d like a spin-off series starring just them. Solving mysteries. Around the world. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, and outtakes.

    blankguide.gif

    What’s the easiest way to tell a series has caught on? The obligatory special edition re-release of an already existing release, this time being the new edition of the first season of The Walking Dead (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.97 SRP). The new edition adds a 3rd disc featuring the black & white version of the pilot, audio commentaries, more featurettes, and interviews with Greg Nicotero and (now-fired) showrunner Frank Darabont.

    blankguide.gif

    While it’s not as abysmal as Back In Action, Space Jam (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP) was still a painfully awkward and ultimately unsuccessful attempt to make the classic Looney Tunes characters “hip” to modern audiences – ignoring the obvious fact that the characters’ original cartoons are eternal because they are actually *funny* and not a disingenuous attempt to make them supporting players to Michel Jordan. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and music videos.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s not exactly high brow cinema, but I have a fondness for the farce Soapdish (Paramount, Rated PG-13, DVD-$12.98 SRP), featuring an all-star cast in the ludicrous world of network soap operas, where the drama behind the scenes is even more insane than what’s in front of the cameras. Hell, it’s worth seeing just for Kevin Kline’s performance. Really, it’s just a shame this 20th anniversary edition didn’t get a Blu-Ray release. Bonus materials are limited to a making-of featurette and the theatrical trailer.

    blankguide.gif

    It doesn’t hold a candle to actually seeing him live, but you can get a pretty good, and pretty enjoyable sense, of the tour-de-force fun with Weird Al Yankovic Live: The Alpocalypse Tour (Paramount, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$22.98 SRP), filmed during his most recent tour. Bonus materials include additional live performances, music videos, YouTube videos, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    I’m not sure I fully appreciate the material generated for and presented on Hit Record’s Recollection Volume 1 (Hit Record, $29.95 SRP), which is a book/DVD/CD collection of essays, short films, songs, poems and more, brought together by the collective founded by Joseph Gordon-Levitt. To be sure, I appreciate the creative freedom and exploration evident in its very existence, and hope they can continue doing it for years to come.

    blankguide.gif

    The story behind Fast Five (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP) is really not terribly important. Are you really watching the Fast And The Furious movies for the story? Really? Of course not. You’re watching them for the cars, and the things the cars do. Often in a fast, dangerous manner. You’re also keeping Vin Diesel off the streets. So you remember that. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, featurettes, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    When I was a kid, during visits to her house on Long Island, my aunt used to occasionally play us her favorite song – Bette Midler singing “The Rose”. Since then, and because of seeing Better be pretty damn funny during appearances on Johnny’s Tonight Show, I have an affection for The Divine Miss M, so much so that I actually got a kick out of her bombastic, camp, yet joyously showbizzy return to the stage in Bette Midler: The Showgirl Must Go On (Image, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP), in which she sings her hits.

    blankguide.gif

    I don’t particularly think anyone was clamoring for a new installment in the Scream franchise, but Scream 4 (Anchor Bay, Rated R, DVD-$29.98 SRP) has arrived regardless, and manages to be a not-embarrassing bow on the continuing adventures of Neve Campbell, Courtney Cox, and David Arquette in slasher-land. Oh, and they added Emma Roberts to the mix this time. And Rory Culkin. Everything’s better with Rory Culkin. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, deleted/extended scenes, a gag reel, featurettes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    Besides the obvious double entendre in the title, Elvira’s Haunted Hills (E1, Rated PG-13, DVD-$19.98 SRP) is a fun enough little flick, even if it lacks the powerhouse that drove the Mistress Of The Dark’s first feature – Edie McClurg. Still, this one does deliver Richard O’Brien as a creepy widower with eyes on Elvira, who just so happens to be the ringer for his late wife. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, outtakes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    I know I had misgivings at the time, but it’s not until all these years later, revisiting it for its high definition release, that I realize just how cloyingly caramel apple sweet The Cider House Rules (Miramax, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$14.99 SRP) is. That, and Prince of New England Tobey Maguire really has the emotive skills of a wood plank. At least Michael Caine is there to remind you that Michael Caine is there. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, a making-of featurette, a deleted scene, and the theatrical trailer.

    blankguide.gif

    How do you know a new season of Beavis And Butt-Head is on the horizon? You get the release of Beavis And Butt-Head: Mike Judge’s Most Wanted (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), featuring 20 cartoons selected by Judge, plus a featurette, a preview of the new season, and the uncut “Frog Baseball”.

    blankguide.gif

    Gabriel Byrne returns as therapist Dr. Paul Weston in the 3rd season of In Treatment (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP), which finds the good doctor coping with his recent divorce, a move to a new city, and a medical scare, as well as a batch of new patients. The 4-disc set contains all 28 episodes.

    blankguide.gif

    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

    ##

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/8/10: Kung Fu Fightin’

    weekendshopping.png

    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 been a long, long, LONG wait, but the fine folks at Cinematic Titanic make a strong return with their road-tested riff of the awkward merging of both Kung-Fu AND Blaxsploitation, all wrapped in a model of poor filmmaking and worse acting… I give you East Meets Watts (Cinema Titan, Not Rated, DVD-$14.99). Not only is the riffing tight, but this is also the first Cinematic Titanic Live release, which was recorded in front of a live audience. And it works a charm. Now let’s speed up those releases, guys!

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    I’ve never owned a good cooking knife in my life. Usually, I’ll hack meat and vegetables with a steak knife, ’cause that’s all I’ve got. Every time I’ve tried to buy a better knife, I’ve always chosen poorly, and wound up with a quick-dulling instrument that just sends me right back to my trusty serrated hacksaws. Well, now I’ve seen the light – and it’s not metal. No, it’s Ultrasharp Ceramic Knives ($74.99). The blade is sharp – really sharp – and it never dulls. How sweet is that? And not only do you get the blade – you also get a ceramic bladed peeler… You know, for peeling stuff. Stuff! Peeled!

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    It’s not a kiddie movie, but I certainly saw it as a kid, and I still love the anarchic blackness that permeates one of the most offbeat holiday flicks to ever hit screens, Gremlins (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$28.99 SRP). In fact, it was this – along with Indiana Jones and The Temple Of Doom (interestingly enough, both Amblin pics) that helped usher in the PG-13 rating. Now in full high-definition, bonus features include a pair of audio commentaries, a making-of featurette, additional scenes, a gallery, and trailers.

    blankguide.gif

    No one rants with quite the same vigor – and accessibility – as Charlie Brooker. Like a cross between Mark Twain and a riled wasps nest, Brooker’s regular column in the Guardian is an ongoing social commentary that inspires equal parts knowing laughter and sympathetic bile. Don’t believe me? Pick up the latest collection – The Hell Of It All (Guardian Books/Faber & Faber, £12.99 SRP) and read for yourself.

    blankguide.gif

    How sweet is it that we’re actually a dozen volumes in to the The Complete Peanuts? What seemed like it would take forever to accomplish – the presentation of the entire run of Charles Schulz’s classic strip – now seems to be flying by, as we can all dive into The Complete Peanuts: 1973 to 1974 (Fantagraphics, $28.99 SRP), and cast our vote for Sack. He’s the greatest. Now bring on the next volume!

    blankguide.gif

    If their continued collections of Peanuts weren’t enough to earn Fantagraphics the love and adoration of comics fans the world over, then their beautiful collections of the EC Segar strips starring his cantankerous, shambling sailor should secure that place within their hearts. The 4th collection – Popeye: Plunder Island (Fantagraphics, $29.99 SRP) – has as its centerpiece the titular adventure, presented for the first time in full color, completely uncut.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s refreshing to upend the traditional romantic comedy formula and look at how unpredictable love can actually be with 500 Days Of Summer (Fox, Rated PG-13, DVD-$29.98 SRP), which brings together Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel as the awkward pair. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and deleted/extended scenes. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available with additional featurettes, interview, audition tapes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    While Office Space has become an instant classic and even the marginalized Idiocracy has become a cult flick, Mike Judges latest, Extract (Miramax, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), is a bit scattershot. While the ensemble is top notch – Jason Bateman, Mila Kunis, Kristin Wiig, and Ben Affleck – the story, about the sale of a small-town flavor extract company that begins to fall apart around the owner (Bateman), doesn’t ever really gel. Which is a shame, because all of the ingredients are there. Bonus materials include a featurette and deleted/extended scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    What do you do when you’re a network with a surprise hit on your hands? You don’t wait around for your debut season to wrap before you rush out a DVD collection featuring the first half of said season – and that’s what we’ve got with Glee: Season 1 Volume 1 (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP). The 4-disc box set contains 13 episodes, plus audition pieces, featurettes, a casting session, and more. Yes, you know you want this set. You know you’re a fan. ADMIT IT.

    blankguide.gif

    Catch up on your TV viewing over the holiday break with both the 3rd and final season of the sci-fi show Kyle XY (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP) and the 3rd season of The Secret Life Of The American Teenager (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP). Kyle XY features audio commentaries, a featurette, and deleted scenes, while Teenager gets the pilot episode and a Q&A.

    blankguide.gif

    It came and went from theaters with only the slightest of notice – a disappointment, considering it was the theatrical follow-up to Juno from screenwriter Diablo Cody. Which is a shame, as Jennifer’s Body (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is a goofy little bit of teenage horror that brought fond memories of the equally B The Faculty. Give it a spin at home. Bonus features include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, video diaries, featurettes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    Check another series off your running list, as we’ve come to the release of the 7th and final season of Mission: Impossible (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP). Will Jim Phelps (Peter Graves) finally encounter an impossible mission? Or we he wind up doing links on A&E in just a few short years? Watch the 22 episodes in this set regardless of the answer.

    blankguide.gif

    Oh, what I wouldn’t do to put a bullet through the sadly long-lived American Pie franchise, which has now moved into American Pie Presents The Book Of Love (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$36.98 SRP), if only to free Eugene Levy from whatever cursed existence binds him to these flicks. Bonus features include featurettes, trivia, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    What was just about the last season of the show turned out to be just another one after it was picked up, so now you can rest easy as you partake of Chuck: The Complete Second Season (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), knowing that it’s not the last. Also? 3-D episode! Bonus features include a bevy of featurettes, webisodes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s the second volume of The Fugitive‘s third season (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), and we’ve reached the point where Dr. Richard Kimble discovers the identity of the elusive one-armed man, just as pursuer Lt. Phillip Gerard decides to employ… A COMPUTER!… to track the good doctor down. The 4-disc set contains 15 episodes.

    blankguide.gif

    The regular episodes are often painful scattershot, but the focus of their Star Wars episodes seems to bring out the best in Seth MacFarlane & company, as you can see for yourself with Family Guy: Something, Something, Something Dark Side (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$22.98 SRP). Bonus features include an audio commentary, fact-ups, a featurette, and a sneak peek at a table read. A Blu-Ray edition ($29.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus features.

    blankguide.gif

    Go all the way back to the days of Wendy, Marvin, & Wonder Dog with the first volume from the premiere season of the original Super Friends! (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP). Journey back via this 2-disc set featuring 8 episodes plus a newly produced super fan workout, the “Super Friends Trivia Challenge”.

    blankguide.gif

    I remember when The Green Mile (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) was originally released on VHS, in a bulky 2-tape set during the last gasp of that format before DVDs came on the scene. Even the original DVD release suffered from the film’s length, with a featureless release. Well, now that it’s come to Blu-Ray, it’s all on one disc, which also contains an audio commentary, a documentary, additional scenes, make-up tests, a look at the teaser trailer, Michael Clarke Duncan’s screen test, and more. How’s the for progress?

    blankguide.gif

    I’d like to say that Mel Brooks’ Spaceballs: The Totally Warped Animated Adventures (MGM/UA, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP) is a glorious disaster, but it’s not. It’s just a sad, poorly written series that sullies the memory of Brooks’ 80’s guilty pleasure. Unfortunate.

    blankguide.gif

    Christmas is dead and buried, so that means we start getting releases like a special edition of Winnie The Pooh: A Valentine For You (Walt Disney, Not Rated, DVD-$29.99 SRP) which, as you can imagine, is the 2/14 themed outing for that willy nilly silly old bear. As far as bonus features go, it’s pretty much just an episode from The New Adventures Of Winnie The Pooh.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s all hit the fan in the third season of Big Love (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP), as Bill Henrickson’s carefully constructed family and business ventures begin to erode from pressures outside and in. The 4-disc set contains all 10 episodes, plus a trio of mini-dramas and four direct-to-camera videos from Bill and his three wives.

    blankguide.gif

    Wrap up the season that brought in Rob Estes, Alyssa Milano, and Lisa Rinna (and showed the door to Grant Show, Marcia Cross, & Laura Leighton) with Melrose Place: The Fifth Season Volume 2 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$36.99 SRP). The 3-disc set contains 13 episodes, but zero bonus features.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s not good cinema, but the flicks contained in Roger Corman’s Best Of The B’s Collection 1 (Infinity, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) certainly are memorably bad. This 4-disc pack contains seven remastered Corman films starring the likes of Gary Busey, Jack Nicholson, Scott Glenn – Naked Angels, Bury Me An Angel, The Fast And The Furious, The T-Bird Gang, The Wild Ride, The Winner, and Angels Hard As They Come.

    blankguide.gif

    It never fails to bring a warm feeling when one of those Sunday afternoon flicks that used to permeate my youth gets all cleaned and gussied up and finds its way into high-definition. Certainly those warm feelings come from The Green Berets (Warner Bros., Rated G, Blu-Ray-$28.99 SRP), starring John Wayne in the first feature to focus on the Vietnam War. Bonus materials include a vintage featurette and the original theatrical trailer.

    blankguide.gif

    It doesn’t happen often enough, but Taxi (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) managed, with its fifth & final season, to go out on a strong note without anyone feeling that the show overstayed its welcome. The cracks were showing, granted – and Any Kaufman’s off-camera behavior was causing some issues on set – but it remains one of those timeless, character-based sitcoms that are just as funny today as it was over 25 years ago. The 3-disc set also contains episode and series promos.

    blankguide.gif

    David Tennant’s era as The Doctor has just come to a close, but there’s still plenty of classic Doctor adventures still in the pipeline. The newest releases to keep you warm (if the scarf isn’t enough) is the William Hartnell era Doctor Who: The Keys Of Marinus and the Colin Baker era The Twin Dilemma (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP each). Both discs are packed with bonus materials, including featurettes, audio commentaries, galleries, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s not for your younger kiddies, but there’s enough inventiveness and beauty of execution to make 9 (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) a film worth showing to kids. It’s post-apocalyptic world and ragtag band of decidedly non-traditional survivors are that special kind of inspiration that will spark a child’s imagination. Bonus materials include the original 11-minute short, an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    With the resurgence of 3-D, particularly in horror films, it was only a matter of time before the Final Destination franchise decided to go all cine-poky with The Final Destination In 3-D (New Line, Rated R, DVD-$28.98 SRP). You pretty much know the deal by now – it’s a pissy Death getting all postal on some young schlubs. Bonus features are limited to some additional scenes. A Blu-Ray edition ($35.99 SRP) is also available, which adds a pair of alternate endings, a pair of featurettes, and a look at the atrocious-looking new Nightmare On Elm Street.

    blankguide.gif

    You can feel the end coming on as the 9th season of 7th Heaven (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP) rolls along, as members of the Camden clan come and go, many no more than glorified recurring characters or cameos. The 5-disc set contains all 22 episodes.

    blankguide.gif

    Since getting the Disney license, the fine folks at Electric Tiki (distributed by the fine folks at Sideshow Collectibles) have been making some unique choices for their statue line. First there was Darkwing Duck, then Jessica Rabbit in an unused costume from one of the Roger Rabbit shorts, then the Rescue Rangers. Most unique, though, and welcome is Alice In Wonderland & The White Rabbit ($124.99), done in the style of Disney designer Mary Blair (perhaps most famous for designing the It’s A Small World attraction).

    weekendpicks20100108-30

    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

    ##

  • Trailer Park: 500 DAYS OF SUMMER – Reviewed

    By Christopher Stipp

    The Archives, Right Here

    So, I was able to sit down for a couple of years and pump out a book. It’s got little to do with movies.Download and read “Thank You, Goodnight” right HERE for free.

    And now, you can follow me on Twitter under the name: Stipp. Some weeks you get lucky with the kind of information that people are talking about. This week there were clones galore, a conversation about Obama’s politics between webmasters broke out and the Twitterverse continues to write in agony at Alex Billington’s existence.

    CAPRICA DVD GIVEAWAY

    caprica_dvd-372x500Who here loves Battlestar Galactica? Now, who wants something to take the edge off the series’ abscence from television?

    Here then is CAPRICA.

    Taken from Wikipedia:

    Caprica is a television series set in the fictional Battlestar Galactica universe. Beginning 58 years before the events seen in Battlestar Galactica, Caprica tells the story of how Colonial humanity first created the robotic Cybernetic Lifeform Nodes or Cylons, who would later plot to destroy human civilization in retaliation for their enslavement.

    An extended version of the pilot premiered exclusively on DVD and digital download on April 21, 2009. In early 2010, the first season, composed of the two-hour pilot and 18 hour-long episodes, is expected to begin airing on Sci Fi Channel in the United States. The rights to broadcast the series have also been picked up by Sky1 in the UK and Ireland.

    Universal Studios Home Entertainment has graciously given me, well, lots of copies of this fascinating and pretty wicked program. Part film, part pilot this is actually a piece of Sci-Fi that was at once engrossing and entertaining.

    If you’d lke to take the next step in Battlestar’s evolution just drop me a line at Christopher_Stipp@Yahoo.com and let me know if you want one. Knowing how ravenous some of you viewers are about BSG I have a feeling they may go pretty quick…

    SAVE FERRIS CHUCK

    chuckvsfootlong-300x212Zach Levi and Josh Gomez are friends of this site.

    I’ve talked to Zach more times than anyone else I’ve met since working here and I’m glad to be able and say that he’s, by far and away, one of the most deserving men working in showbusiness today.

    Chuck has shown him to be a quick comedic actor who is able to blend goofiness with an action bent without any problems at all. He’s funny and it shows in this program. Teamed up with Gomez the two of them have a chemistry that the writers of this program have blended well together.

    The cast is top shelf, the shows have always been solid entries into television’s prime time offerings insofar that they show you can be mainstream without yielding to blandness but they have had heart. You haven’t heard any kind of needless drama or people not getting along and, in fact, last year I was invited by Zach to hang at the Hard Rock with the cast after their presentation at Comic-Con. Unless they wanted to put on a show to someone who has zero pull in spreading any kind of rumor whatsoever, you would’ve thought this was a Sunday night dinner with family.

    That’s why I wanted to post a little something to help the program out. Called Finale and Footlong Campaign it is an effort to help stave off any effort to cancel the show. I would hate to think this is an exercise in futility but since Check out this site here on Zach’s personal website to find out more information about how you can help possibly, maybe save the program from an early, and unfortunate, demise.

    500 DAYS OF SUMMER – EARLY REVIEW

    500daysposterBoy meets girl. Boy falls in love. Girl doesn’t.

    This post modern love story is never what we expect it to be — it’s thorny yet exhilarating, funny and sad, a twisted journey of highs and lows that doesn’t quite go where we think it will. When Tom, a hapless greeting card copywriter and hopeless romantic, is blindsided after his girlfriend Summer dumps him, he shifts back and forth through various periods of their 500 days “together” to try to figure out where things went wrong. His reflections ultimately lead him to finally rediscover his true passions in life.

    I know it’s little more than hyperbole on my part but this is going to be a film you’re going to be talking about in effusive praise as the film breaks wide.

    What separates this film from a lot of other less interesting takes on the nature of relationships that men and women find themselves falling into and out of is its originality. It’s difficult to mine a topic that has been done so many ways since time immemorial but what makes 500 DAYS OF SUMMER so precious is that they’ve found a way to do it again and do it in a pastiche of pleasure and pain.

    In wanting to tell a story that doesn’t drip with the falsities of what happens between two people who come together this film goes beyond the tropes and trappings of less than fulfilling romantic narratives which usually end in perfectly predictable ways. Writers Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber have written a story that doesn’t try to be too dour, too deep or emotive. Rather, what they do manage to craft, and why this movie sticks to the ribs of your heart long after you realize what the narrator said in the beginning is true, is a story that tells what it’s like to really fall in love and have it fall apart. Such a simple premise, and I realize that in other hands this could have been yet another film in a long string of sub-par romance tales, but it’s the non sequential storytelling that at least primes the pump for an engaging movie experience.

    After we’ve established that the story is not going to flow in normal order, some of the thrill is not knowing which in the 500 days you’re going to get next, almost like a visual Choose Your Own Adventure novella, we are beautifully ballasted by the school boy charms of Joseph Gordon-Levitt who simply plays a man named Tom and the girl-you-always-wished-lived-next-door in Zooey Deschanel as Summer. These two are matched up in a way that at once feels right and exciting; you can actually buy into the idea that this budding hipster could actually woo a woman of Zooey’s pedigree. She’s not portrayed as a woman who’s playing hard to get but, and this is absolutely where you have to praise the talents of the writers, she’s a woman who is independent and played as such throughout the movie. There is no abandoning the sense of who Summer is as a woman simply because she gets with a man like Tom. You want to think that everyone is able to cast aside their childish things once love walks into their lives, and certainly Tom does, but Summer stays constant and, I would posit, only heightens the searing pain of what happens when Tom’s devotion, dedication and dreams aren’t enough to make a whole.

    Gordon-Levitt hasn’t been this arresting since his turn in THE LOOKOUT, his portrayal as Tom is alarmingly resonant to anyone who has loved so hard but ends up having nothing to show for it. Tom’s eventual meltdown in a staff meeting is particularly poignant as even though it’s played for dramatic effect and is obviously going for the overtly overwrought, despondent aspects of a man in a slight depression it’s psychologically telling as something that any human being who can’t make sense of their own emotional lives could relate to. As well, Gordon-Levitt, once he does get back on his emotional feet and has brushed off his shoulders a bit delivers a subtle, yet stinging, turn as Summer comes back into his life in a wedding sequence that kicks any man in the spiritual nut sack when you realize he’s still hanging on to “What if” instead of realizing it’s “What already was.”

    Deschanel, for her part, mystifies. She’s a tough mistress in that she never gives us what we all want from her and that’s for Summer to realize that Tom loves her, that it should be enough for her to believe in but that there is more going on than any of us realize. Like it was mentioned, she’s her own woman but that only increases her attractiveness. She doesn’t fall into the usual trappings of young lovers or infatuation or any of the feelings that always befall her cinematic equals. We love her in this film because she is still herself, is gorgeously depicted as a woman who has a bedroom smile that you wish you could awake to, a demeanor that won’t allow stupidity but who ultimately will make you work for her affection.

    The truly arresting moments come in the film’s quieter times. When Tom picks a fight with a guy who is obnoxiously coming on to Summer, and it’s a time when you can see the writers at work crafting a moment for a specific reason, that it doesn’t feel organic, the ultimate resolution of the fight between Summer and Tom is gorgeously shot and is bathed in the kind of silence that apologies without recriminations sometimes have.

    On the opposite end of the heady and heavy you have Paul, McKenzie and Rachel. Played by Matthew Gray Gubler, Geoffrey Arend and Chloe Moretz, respectively, they represent Tom’s two closest friends in the film and Tom’s very young sister to whom he tells everything. These three represent the comedic relief in the film and while they do feel like they’re serving the story’s purpose of lightening the mood they are by no means wasted. Gubler is absolutely charming as Tom’s confidant, Arend is positively hilarious and wish I had followed that man’s love trajectory and Moretz is the film’s other female element and she plays it well, her youth is in stark contrast to the maturity the writers have imbued her with but it’s positively welcomed. Along these comedic lines there is a song and dance number by Hall and Oats that should absolutely become your go-to mental representation should you ever hear the ditty outside of the theater.

    And that’s the other thing.

    Kudos to the film’s director, Marc Webb, for choosing a soundtrack that isn’t a bunch of shoegazing emo idiots slapped together for the sake of molding a hipster mix tape. A song by the aforementioned Hall and Oats, a karaoke version of “Here Comes Your Man” by the Pixies from a wicked Gordon-Levitt who knows how to rock a mic and scads of other musical nuances round out an ephemeral environment that feels very real to those in this film. Webb deftly allows these two to become more than just prototypical constructs and those who want to take issue with the idea that we’ve been here, we’ve done that so many times miss the point that if you were to look at what people have been given as a cinematic representation of love in all its trappings and pitfalls we have not been given a movie that makes you understand why we’re all willing to do it all over again. And again.

    This is a film that deserves the slow resonating buzz its been getting and without question deserves your support when it comes out on July 17th.

    RAY SCHILLACI GOES TO THE MOVIES

    Highlights from the 9th Annual PFF

    phoenix_film_festivalFor those of you not in the know, PFF stands for Phoenix Film Festival, the largest film festival in the state of Arizona. It might very well be one of the friendliest in the nation for true independent filmmakers. This is the buzz that was going around the eight-day event amongst auteur young and old. A professional and friendly (from both staff and film folk) atmosphere abounded. There was more of a sense of camaraderie than of competition. Encouragement and goodwill spilled over into the audiences as well.

    Not that every entry was a gem. There were a few diamonds-in-the-rough along with some coal, one just wanted to toss away (depending on your taste). There was the occasional offbeat and oft putting, but for the most part the festival offered a great escape from the pabulum served up by the major studios, and the pseudo-independents that are actually backdoor funded by the same perpetrators.

    This brings me to a filmmaker favorite that graced the festival and was greeted with roaring acceptance and applause, Paul Osborne’s, “Official Rejection”. This documentary plays out as entertaining as the best of Michael Moore and then some. Osborne takes us on the treacherous and comical journey of several true independent filmmakers who enter the real world of the film festival circuit. The disappointments, the funds wasted, the lack of professionalism and the festivals that are mere “poser” independents for major studios is met with dismay.

    Independent filmmaker, Scott Storm, is the center of all this and it’s amazing that the man does not end up punching somebody’s lights out. Osborne’s camera does justice for the new mavericks of media, making us want to cry foul. They pour their heart and soul into something only to have it discarded by money-grubbing schemers who have no intention on lending a friendly hand to help distribute the good word on an indie film. Storm knows from previous audience viewings that he has something worthy (later acclaimed indie thriller, “Ten “˜Til Noon”) and as the rejection letters mount one can’t help wonder if it is all for naught. Tales of payola abound as do festival shenanigans that have staff not only get accepted but win awards as well!

    Storm plays the common man/filmmaker well. His story gets under our skin and makes us want to cheer for him. He’s our Mr. Smith, but instead of going to Washington, he’s traveling around the country with a micro budget siding with other frustrated filmmakers. After an exhaustive and heartbreaking trek, the man finally runs into some luck with our very own Phoenix Film Festival. It actually becomes a breath of fresh air. But what ensues between other festivals suddenly vying for the same film with the same schedule is an eye-opener. It’s amazing the moral fortitude Storm provides us with his journey.

    Although director, Storm is the main focus, there are other noteworthy players; a real stand out is director, Johnny Montana. His off-the-cuff comments and blazon over-the-top personality elicits big laughs and one ends up wanting to see more of him. Another funny turn is director Osborne’s blatant pull for celebrities to pepper the documentary just for the purpose of getting them in the credits to draw box office attention no matter how short the interview is. Some of the more entertaining interviews are, Kevin Smith (would we expect anything less), Lloyd Kaufman (founder of Troma) and Andy Dick. A host of other notables are available and they round out the procession with an in-depth look into what has gone wrong with the system. Even Traci Lords (former pornstar and B-movie queen) puts in a few words; just cause she’s Traci Lords.

    In the end Osborne and company have developed a unique double-edged sword piece of filmmaking that is rather ballsy. It’s beautifully executed and begging never to see the light of day, because it’s not only biting the hand that feeds it ““ it’s chomping down and devouring the appendage while shitting it out and laughing. As good as it is, it did not get accepted into Sundance, Slamdance or Tribeca. They were not even given the benefit of a rejection letter. Instead, phone calls were issued out and some had taken offense. Does the truth hurt that much? Obviously, yes! One only wishes that Osborne had gone a step further and pulled a Michael Moore by visiting Redford regarding his precious Sundance. But even without that, Osborne has accomplished a clear vindication to anyone who has spent their soul trying to get recognized for their passion. Personally, I would like to send kudos to Paul Osborne and company for a triumph of the will that has true independents rejoicing over their frustrated voices being discovered.

    There is much more to come. The documentaries really shined this year and a few left field surprises had people talking for days. Also, I have to mention the wonderful creative opening sequence for the festival. A wink and a nod to Frank Miller’s “The Spirit” with Camerahead leaping the rooftops to get to the festival while featuring the sponsors in comic book frames. The presentation was a sheer delight. I will return with reviews on two highly noteworthy documentaries, “The Way We Get By” and “Shooting Beauty”. Also a peek at the surprise hit at PFF among others.