Tag: Peter Pan

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 8/23/13: That Is The Question

    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…)

    While I have great affection for the flawed remake starring Mel Brooks and Anne Bancroft, the original Ernst Lubitsch To Be Or Not To Be (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$ SRP) is an indisputable classic, newly remastered in high definition and starring the legendary Jack Benny and Carole Lombard as the married thespians in Nazi-occupied Warsaw. Bonus materials include a brand new audio commentary, a 2010 French documentary on Lubitsch, a pair of radio adaptations, and a 1916 German silent short directed by and starring Lubitsch.

    blankguide.gif

    There have been many books that purported to present the definitive history of the original Star Trek. Much like Roshomon, many presented a perspective on the show’s genesis. But we’ve finally got the overview that incorporates all of those memories plus original memos, documents, and interviews and places them in a comprehensive context – These Are The Voyages (Jacobs Brown, $39.95 SRP), the first volume of what will eventually be a trilogy, each focusing on a season of TOS. Author Marc Cushman has done the if not impossible, then very nearly improbably feat of remaining neutral while presenting the facts, tales, anecdotes, and recollections behind one of the most enduring pop phenomenon of the 20th century – and beyond.

    blankguide.gif

    And speaking of Star Trek, explore the golden age of trading cards with Abrams ComicArts’s Star Trek: The Original Topps Trading Card Series (Abrams ComicArt, $19.95 SRP). It’s a lovely little tome that features every card and card back from the trading cart set, plus additional trivia and even a set of bonus cards. Though, sadly, no bubble gum.

    blankguide.gif

    Hey! Are you an Adventure Time fan, desperate for some kind of book to keep you company? Then, HEY! Get The Adventure Time Encyclopedia (Abrams, $19.95 SRP)! But it’s not just any old boring book of facts – because it’s written by the Lord Of Evil himself, Hunson Abadeer… Who just so happens to be Marceline the vampire’s dad. So yeah, it’s goofy, it’s funny, and it’s decidedly odd. Great, right?

    blankguide.gif

    Every so often, I’ll get a lovely surprise in the mail from John Swartzwelder (the brilliant writer behind 59 episodes of The Simpsons). I’ve said it before, and I shall continue to say it as long as he continues to write them – If you’ve not yet read his series of brilliantly comic novels starring dim detective Frank Burly, than you do not deserve to be literate. So yes, do catch up, and also pick up the latest – Detective Made Easy (Kennydale Books, $15.95 SRP) – or just walk away and never read again. But hey, I recommend you read them all.

    blankguide.gif

    After publishing quite wonderful volumes collecting the Mickey Mouse newspaper strips by Floyd Gottfredson in black & white, the fine folks at Fantagraphics have released the first volume in glorious color – Mickey Mouse Color Sundays: Call Of The Wild (Fantagraphics, $29.99 SRP). As with the previous must-have tomes, there is plenty of supplemental materials within the volume, including essays, rare articles, photos, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    For more years than I can recall, the amiable scholars at Twomorrows have been publishing a wide range of magazine and books chronicling every nook and cranny of the comics, creators, characters, and companies fans know and love. Earlier this year, they took that love and scholarly approach to the next logical step, by launching a must-have document of four-color history in the American Comic Book Chronicles (Twomorrows, $40.95 SRP), which will eventually chart from 1940 to today. The debut volume covered the 1960’s from 1960-1964, the second release jumped ahead to the 1980’s (covering from 1980-1989), and the latest volume leaps back to the 1950’s – a decade when the medium came under attack and was forced to censor itself. Get this book, as well as the previous volumes, and then start setting aside shelf space for the rest – which can’t come fast enough.

    blankguide.gif

    While it started on somewhat shaky ground, now that we’ve arrived at the third season of Boardwalk Empire (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.99 SRP), the little show about Atlantic City in the roaring 20’s has matured into a brilliant character piece for Steve Buscemi’s Nucky Thompson just as Prohibition makes alcohol a booming business for organized crime. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, and newsreels.

    blankguide.gif

    To expect anything from Baz Luhrmann but a bloated technicolor extravaganza is to have a poor memory of his filmic inclinations, so it should be no surprise that his take on F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$44.95 SRP) – starring Leonard DiCaprio as the titular roaring socialite – is exactly that. And, like every other flawed Lurmann film, it’s worth watching just for the spectacle alone, even if it all collapses under its own weight. Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes, deleted scenes, and an alternate ending.

    blankguide.gif

    I have no problem summing up my experience of watching the Oscar-winning drama Amour (Sony, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) with the term “depressingly beautiful”. Its portrait of a couple who’ve spent a lifetime together facing the end if heartbreakingly poignant. Bonus materials include a Q&A with director Michael Haneke and a making-of featurette.

    blankguide.gif

    Find out the ultimate punchline when a vampire, a werewolf, and a ghost cohabitate in the fifth and final season of the original UK version of Being Human (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP), which finds Hal, Tom, and Alex as the government comes calling, as does the need to pay bills. Bonus features include interviews, deleted scenes, and featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    Make a rip-roaring adventurous mashup between A Bug’s Life, Fern Gully, and Fantastic Voyage and you get the appropriately named Epic (Fox, Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP), about a young teenager that finds herself suddenly very small and caught up in a big battle to save the noble Leafmen from an army of evil warriors. Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    Time has not made Star Trek: Enterprise (Paramount, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$129.99 SRP) a better show. Granted, it’s still a far sight better than JJ Abrams’ popcorn abomination, but the real tragedy of Enterprise is the sheer amount of wrongheaded decisions… Frankly, starting with the prequel premise of the show itself. But even if I dislike the show, I enjoy the new Blu-Ray editions immensely, due solely to the unbelievably candid bonus materials. The second season set follows up on the brilliant first season documentary with a pair of documentaries featuring an overview of the second season and its difficulties, and a cast reunion that acts more like a confessional for co-creator Brannon Braga. Perfect.

    blankguide.gif

    If you’ve got kids in your life, do them a favor by giving them the gift of the latest pair of Scholastic Storybook Treasures releases – the Mo Willems collection Don’t Let The Pigeon Stay Up Late and the 4-story collection Children Make Terrible Pets… And More Stories About Family (Scholastic, Not Rated, DVD-$14.95 SRP each).

    blankguide.gif

    I’m not as terribly big fan of Disney’s cash-grab direct-to-video sequels from a few years back. Some of have been tolerable, most atrocious, and very rare is one that is somewhat good. The Peter Pan sequel Return To Neverland (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$36.99 SRP), making its debut in high definition, has enough enjoyable moments – mostly with Captain Hook and Mr. Smee – to make the affair a decent watch before it is stashed back in the Disney Vault. Bonus materials include deleted scenes, previews, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s refreshing to see Keifer Sutherland in a more nuanced and adult portrayal of a post-9/11 world in The Reluctant Fundamentalist (IFC, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP), a tale of the kidnapping of an American academic in Pakistan that sets in motion a domino effect casting suspicion on a young Pakistani professor. Bonus materials include a making-of featurette and a trailer.

    blankguide.gif

    What the Warner Archive has perfected, particularly with its animated releases, is a very clever and utterly successful manipulation of nostalgia which makes purchasing their releases inevitable. They know they have us with the Hanna-Barbera collection releases of the complete Captain Caveman And The Teen Angels and Help! It’s The Hair Bear Bunch (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$29.95 SRP each). Heck, they’ve even got me with the release of the complete first season of Marine Boy (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$24.95 SRP).

    blankguide.gif

    This week’s TV sets bring both NCIS series and the still sparkling courtroom tales of Alicia Florrick. First up, we’ve got NCIS: The Tenth Season (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$64.99 SRP) and NCIS: LOS ANGELES – The Fourth Season (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$64.99 SRP). Bot sets contain audio commentaries, deleted scenes, featurettes, and more. And finally, there’s the 4th season of The Good Wife (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$64.99 SRP), which sports featurettes and deleted scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    I’m not entirely sure what happened to David Zucker, but the man behind sublime spoofs like Airplane! and Police Squad is almost entirely absent from the ham-fisted Scary Movie V (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP). Maybe it’s because in the desperation to keep references near-current it makes the whole affair terribly dated right out of the box. Bonus materials include deleted/extended scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s no Tango & Cash, but what Pain & Gain (Paramount, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) – starring Dwayne Johnson, Mark Wahlberg, & Anthony Mackie as a trio of personal trainers get caught up on the wrong side of the law – manages to remind viewers is that director Michael Bay used to know how to make fun, funny action films that weren’t senseless bastardizations of licensed properties.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s still not my cup of tea compared to the sublime Sherlock, but it seems CBS’ own take on a modern Holmes, Elementary (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$55.98 SRP), has gained traction with viewers. Enough traction, anyway, to guarantee a second season. The 6-disc set contains all 23 first season episodes, plus featurettes and webisodes.

    blankguide.gif

    After a shambling second season, hopes were high for the third season of Walking Dead (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.99 SRP) – especially with the arrival of David Morrissey’s Governor and zombie pet-owner Michonne – but there were more legitimately confusing WTF moments than genuinely enjoyable WTF moments. Shame, really, because there were some bright spots to be found. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, and featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    One of the marks of a good documentary is it makes you care about a subject you hadn’t considered giving a second thought to, and that’s certainly the case with Scatter My Ashes At Bergdorf’s (E1, Rated PG-13, DVD-$24.98 SRP), which looks the fashion industry’s mecca, the luxury department store Bergdorf Goodman.

    blankguide.gif

    Besides the fact that the new 3 3/4-scale Doctor Who figures effectively split the figure line in two distinct camps – classic Who in the old 5″ scale and whatever the current characters are in the new scale – my biggest issue is with a decided sloppiness in the paint ops found on the new figures – the first wave of which include the 11th Doctor, Clara, an Ice Warrior, a new-version Cyberman, a Weeping Angel, and a Dalek (Underground Toys, $10.99 SRP each) – leaves something to be desired. It’s particularly noticeable on the Doctor and Clara, where careful attention to paint is necessary in so tiny a scale. And yeah, I do wish they restored the lighted sign and interior effects found in the original 9th/10th Doctor TARDIS toys for the new scale Flight Control TARDIS (Underground Toys, $ SRP). Still, I have high hopes for this new incarnation of the toys, and hope these little bumps are smoothed out for future releases.

    weekendpicks20130823-24.png

    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 2/8/13: You Can Fly

    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 certainly seems to take quite a long time between Disney’s high definition releases from their animation catalogue, but when you look at the stunning, absolutely pristine restoration done for the new release of Peter Pan (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$44.99 SRP), the wait makes perfect sense, because this film has never – NEVER – looked better than it does here. In addition to all of the bonus materials from the previous DVD release, the Blu-Ray ups the ante with a pair of deleted songs (“Never Smile At A Crocodile” is a wonderful earworm), a pair of deleted sequences (presented in storyboard form), featurettes, and even an introduction from Diane Disney Miller. Brilliant, and a must-get.

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    As I am terribly old and can remember playing the original Legend Of Zelda on my original NES system when it was a new release before battling the ferociously difficult Zelda II and immersing myself for days into A Link To The Past, the arrival of the massively geeky The Legend Of Zelda: Hyrule Historia (Dark Horse, $34.98 SRP) is a cause for celebration. Collecting creator interviews, information, production artwork, and even an official timeline of the series, it’s everything a Zelda fan could hope for in one tome, made even more special via the limited edition being stocked by the fine folks at Thinkgeek, which presents the book with a faux-leather cover that would not look out of place in any of the games.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    Eugene Mirman may not be a national treasure now, but he deserves to be. Or, at the very least, a fami9liar face to a much wider audience, which would certainly be the case if you gave a copy of his special Eugene Mirman: An Evening Of Comedy In A Fake Underground Laboratory (Comedy Central, Not Rated, CD/DVD-$ SRP). Because it’s very, very funny.

    blankguide.gif

    From the first time I heard “Rainbow Connection” as a small child, I had an affinity for the songs of Paul Williams. As I got older, I would hear his music all over the place, usually in the form of immensely successful interpretations by some of the most popular artists of the day, as well as seeing him in films and on TV. And I liked him there, too. Come to find out, I’m not alone in liking Paul Williams, as filmmaker Stephen Kessler shared the same love and decided to make a film about him called Paul Williams: Still Alive (Virgil Films, Rated PG-13, DVD-$19.99 SRP). Give it a spin. Tis brill.

    blankguide.gif

    For more years than I can recall, the amiable scholars at Twomorrows have been publishing a wide range of magazine and books chronicling every nook and cranny of the comics, creators, characters, and companies fans know and love. They’ve now taken that love and scholarly approach to the next logical step, by launching a must-have document of four-color history in the American Comic Book Chronicles (Twomorrows, $39.95 SRP), which will eventually chart from 1940 to today. The debut volume, The 1960’s: 1960-1964, looks at the origins of the Silver Age, from its launch at DC to its true blossoming in the halls of the newly-rechristened Marvel Comics. Get this book, then star setting aside shelf space for the rest – which can’t come fast enough.

    blankguide.gif

    It had a built-in expiration, but that – and a cast that includes the great Hugh Bonneville & Jessica Stevenson – is what makes the comedy series Twenty Twelve (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP) so great. Imagine The Thick Of It, but focused on the planning committee for the London Olympics, and you know exactly what you get from this gem.

    blankguide.gif

    Bit by bit, Criterion is revisiting its deep library of world cinema greats and giving them full-blown high-def audio/visual upgrades that make them a must to repurchase. The latest is Volker Schlondorff’s adaptation of Gunter Grass’s acclaimed satire The Tin Drum (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP), about a highly intelligent boy who refuses to grow older past his third birthday as the world crumbles into the folly of a world war around him. Bonus materials include new interviews, featurettes, Grass reading experts from the novel, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    The wait is over, as you can now watch the entirety of the Gotham crusader’s last stand now that Batman: The Dark Knight Returns: Part 2 (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP) has hit. Bonus materials include a pair of featurettes, 3 bonus cartoons, and a preview of Superman: Unbound.

    blankguide.gif

    Surprisingly, there’s nothing cloying about Celeste And Jesse Forever (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), about separated couple (Rashida Jones & Andy Samberg) on the path of divorce who also happen to be the best of friends. But just as they begin to re-assess what they really mean to each other, a wrench is thrown into the works. There’s actually a strong genuine streak to the whole affair too often missing from traditional “romcoms”. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, and featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    Fox inaugurates their 2013 Studio Classics catalogue initiative with a trio of titles that certainly fit the bill – Wild River, How Green Was My Valley, & Gentleman’s Agreement (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP each). All are beautifully restored, with bonus features including audio commentaries, featurettes, trailers, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    I have to say, Flight (Paramount, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is the first enjoyable Robert Zemeckis film in years. It’s like he’s woken from a vegetative state, returning with a tight drama about a drunken, drugged-out airline pilot (Denzel Washington) who manages to perform a heroic landing after an equipment failure, and the awkward situation that comes from it. I could have done without the tacky, heavy-handed religious angle, but the rest of it makes up for it. Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes and a Q&A.

    blankguide.gif

    Fancy a bit of a starry nosh this weekend? Then look no further than the Dead Celebrity Cookbook (HCI, $19.95 SRP), in which Frank DeCaro collects dozens of recipes from the stars of yesteryear, from John Ritter’s favorite fudge to Bea Arthur’s vegetarian breakfast.

    blankguide.gif

    Anyone who’s ever been to a nice theater in a nature museum knows that seeing a beautifully-shot 3D nature film is just this side of actually being there, and a trio of new home video releases bring that experience right into your living room – Fascination Coral Reef 3D, Fascination Coral Reef 3D: Mysterious Worlds Underwater, and Amazing Ocean 3D (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP each).

    blankguide.gif

    A feature film usually works as a catalyst to unleash a flood of tie-in projects, but for the adaptation of a legendary stage musical, the options are somewhat limited. So, in lieu of action figures, we get a beautiful collectible tome like Les Miserables: From Stage To Screen (Applause, $45.00 SRP), which chronicles the history of the show from its earliest roots on the French stage to its massive success in London and Broadway, on to the recent big screen take. Additionally, the book contains reproductions of ephemera from original tickets and promotional flyers to posters and concept art.

    blankguide.gif

    Considering how inexpensive they are to produce, it should come as little shock that we’re already up to Paranormal Activity 4 (Paramount, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which returns with an all new malevolent spirit and a fair share of genuine scares. So think of it as an anthology series! As for bonus materials, you get 30 minutes of additional footage.

    blankguide.gif

    The second season of Misfits (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP) finds our 5 reluctant heroes on community service, all of which is being observed by a mysterious new figure with a secret that could affect them all. Bonus materials include additional scenes and featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    Made on a shoestring but with verve to spare, All Superheroes Must Die (Image, Not Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.97 SRP) is a pulpy little film about a quartet of superheroes stripped of their powers and under the gun in a plot orchestrated by a villain from their past. Give it a spin.

    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

    ##