
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 had no expectations for Small Apartments (Sony, Rated R, DVD-$22.99 SRP), which is good, because it wound up being a quirky, heartfelt little film that delighted me no end with its simple humanity led by a winning performance from Matt Lucas as a man with big dreams in a small place surrounded by the similarly disillusioned. Bonus materials include a pair of featurettes.

Rejoice, fans of wit and sequential art, for the great Michael Kupperman has given us a second volume of Tales Designed To Thrizzle (Fantagraphics, $24.99 SRP), filled with the adventures of magicians, Mark Twain & Albert Einstein, jungle princesses, ghosts, and Cowboy Oscar Wilde. Go. Get. Now.

What more needs to be said about the absolutely stunning visuals and insight contained in the BBC’s breathtaking nature documentaries? All of those superlatives and more apply to their latest, Africa (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP), which focuses on the disparate ecosystems of that massive continent, all of which are presented by the eminently affable Sir David Attenborough. Bonus materials include a making-of featurette for each episode, interviews, outtakes, and deleted scenes.

It may not be the same kind of highbrow fare as one might get from Pixar, but Hotel Transylvania (Sony, Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$55.99SRP) is one of those flicks that exists many to string together a lot of fun gags and characters at a quick pace with enough heart to not make it all seem crass, and that’s fine. That fact that it’s directed by the legendary Genndy Tartakovsky (Dexter’s Lab, Samurai Jack) certainly helps matters. Bonus features include an animated short, deleted scenes, and audio commentary, music videos, and more.

Surprisingly, Nickelodeon’s relaunch of the franchise is actually pretty snazzy, as you’ll find in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Rise Of The Turtles (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.99 SRP), which includes the double-length pilot introduction to the updated heroes on the halfshell, plus an additional four episodes and animatics.

Watching the documentary Bully (Anchor Bay, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP), it’s both shocking and depressing to see the verbal and emotional brutality that exists amongst today’s youth, that I don’t recall being nearly so vicious when I was a kid, compounded by today’s prevalence of social media interaction and dissemination. Very depressing. Very sobering. Very much worth your time to see. Bonus materials include deleted scenes, featurettes, and a special version of the film edited for younger audiences.

Above all else, The Master (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is a sly, sometimes unsubtle, but eminently watchable portrait and ultimate condemnation of the cult and its ability to sway under the guise of assistance – No matter the specific organization or charismatic master in question. Phillip Seymour Hoffman is, as usual, gripping in his role of the aforementioned charismatic, Lancaster Dodd, while the audience is drawn into his world via Joaquin Phoenix’s PTSD-suffering WWII vet. Bonus materials include outtakes, featurettes, and John Huston’s 1946 documentary on WWII vets, “Let There Be Light”.

When a pair of engaged young lovers (Gael Garcia Bernal & Hani Furstenberg) venture into the Georgian wilderness on a backpacking holiday with a local guide, an incident creates a rift between them that threatens to undo both their vacation and their life together in The Loneliest Planet (MPI, Rated R, DVD-$29.98 SRP). Bonus materials include a behind-the-scenes documentary, mountaineering photos, and a trailer.

This week’s soundtrack selections? Brian Tyler’s limited edition score to John Dies At The End (La-La Land Records, $24.25 SRP) and Marco Beltrami’s score to A Good Day To Die Hard (Sony Classical, $11.99 SRP).

In The Client List (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$45.99 SRP), Jennifer Love Hewitt stars as a struggling single mom who finds she can earn a lot more from her job at a local spa by offering extra “services” on the side. Yes. Those kind of services. The 3-disc set contains all 10 episodes, plus outtakes and deleted scenes.

An unexpected and terribly fraught May-November romance develops between a respected older journalist and a young journalism student in Madrid 1987 (Breaking Glass, Not Rated, DVD-$21.99 SRP), after a they find themselves both locked in a bathroom, naked and at odds.

Every so often, it’s lovely to see a straightforward look at a pair of people who need each other in unexpected ways, such as in A Simple Life (Well Go USA, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP), which finds a young filmmaker having to care for his family’s multigenerational caretaker after she suffers a stroke.

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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Because you animals are so ravenous for free stuff, I’ve got another free screening here in Phoenix.
Here is the curious thing about watching and reviewing things that come into my home: I give everything a fair shot. Everything.
Now, for better or worse, I can’t get Nickelback’s radio hits out of my head. When you have to share a radio in the car with someone else it is just inevitable that there are going to be songs you will be exposed to. Nickelback is that band, for some reason, and while I know they get bagged on in circles where it’s cool to make fun of guys who can draw a crowd you won’t get that from me. Nickelback: Live At Sturgis is just a fun romp down the path of guys who know what the audience wants and is giving it to them night after night if this show is any indication. No, they’re not singing about changing the world like Bono and they’re not talking about the pain of being alive like Tool is, these guys just want to drive their Camaro really fast and keep the windows down so their mullet can flap in the wind.
Has anyone read the short story Billy Budd by Herman Melville? In it, the story has a moment where a razor across the throat has a lot more significance than it does with just a guy getting a shave. It’s a sinister moment in the story’s progression and in this film, IL DIVO, the movie opens up with the titular character, Giulio Andreotti, getting a straight razor shave. The implications of what this means with regard to what will come after is rife with subtext.