Tag: Spike Jonze

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 5/16/14: Manos A Go-Go

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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 become cliché to call a Spike Jonze film “quirky”, but there’s a reason clichés become cliché, and his latest, Her (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) is certainly a quirky, endearing little film in the Spike Jonze style. Joaquin Phoenix stars as a lonely professional letter writer in the near future rebounding from a difficult breakup, who finds his soulmate in the form of a fast-learning artificial intelligence named “Samantha” (Scarlett Johansson). Bonus materials include a trio of featurettes.

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    They can make brilliant human figures until the cows come home as their particular brand of magic becomes commonplace, but it’s not until you see something as epic as their ED-209 (Sideshow, $409.99) – the disastrously deadly peacekeeping robot featured in the original Robocop – that you can truly appreciate what Hot Toys can accomplish. As it’s in scale with the 1/6-scale figures (and the forthcoming Robocop), it’s a truly massive piece, and incredibly intricate in its detailing. Fully articulated, you could use this “toy” as a stop motion miniature, it’s just so good. And to plus its greatness even more, it even has a remote-operated sound feature which, at the touch of a button, plays a collection of ED-209 lines and sounds from the film. How cool is that?

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    Magnets and gyroscopes – two nerd tastes that taste great together, and that’s exactly the dynamic duo that’s combined in ball form with the Nanodots GYRO DUO: Magnetically Gyroscopic Balls ($24.99)… And they’re just what it says on the tin – A pair of magnets paired with gyroscopes that are just plain fun to play around with. Can’t ask for more than that.

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    It can be a dicey proposition fraught with peril, going back and revisiting past successes, but the triumphant trio of Mike, Bill, & Kevin manage it in true style with Rifftrax Live: Manos – The Hands Of Fate (Rifftrax, Not Rated, DVD-$12.95), which features an entirely new set of riffs on a Mystery Science Theater 3000 classic. As an added bonus, the disc also includes outtakes with commentary from the guys. Get it for the love of Torgo. He needs your love.

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    The most fascinating part of Star Wars Storyboards The Original Trilogy (Abrams, $40 SRP) are the storyboards from the original film, as they present not-yet-solidified characters in vaguely familiar yet by no means finalized designs, in a universe with limitless potential. By the time we get to the boards for Empire and especially Jedi, the universe is pretty well solidified and the boards seem more like a comic book for what we eventually saw onscreen.

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    Yeah, it should come as no surprise that Kenny Powers as a suburban dad would not last for long, so the fourth and final season of Eastbound & Down (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) finds Danny McBride’s crass creation back in the swing of it after meeting up with an ex-teammate. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, outtakes, and deleted scenes.

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    Watching the documentary series Unsolved Mysteries Of The Second World War (Eagle Rock, Not Rated, DVD-$16.98 SRP) brought back fond memories of the kind of program that would fill the schedule of the pre-junk TV History Channel, when it would be endless hours of documentaries about World War II. This 3-disc set explores some of the lingering questions behind the war, from how much Churchill may have known about the impending Pearl Harbor attacks to why Hitler halted his troops before Dunkirk.

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    Making a pledge to remain firmly entrenched in the swinging single life winds a trio of friends (Zac Efron, Miles Teller, Michael B. Jordan) into plenty of mildly amusing situations when the chief proponent of the vow, Jason (Efron), meets a girl (Imogen Poots) who he can’t get out of his mind in That Awkward Moment (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$25.99 SRP). Bonus materials include featurettes and a gag reel.

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    Fedor Bondarchuk’s Stalingrad (Sony, Rated R, 3D Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), which ties a love story into the historical German siege, suffers much the same problems as the film Pearl Harbor – a beautifully shot film about a fascinating slice of World War II history that is hobbled by a pointless shoehorning of romance and bland characters. It’s a shame they don’t let the history stand by itself, because it really is a good looking flick, particularly in 3D.

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    The mystery series based on Craig Johnson’s best-selling Longmire (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) books comes back for a second season of complications for Sheriff Walt Longmire as deep suspicions about the death of his wife and his wife’s killer come to the foe. Bonus materials include extended episodes and a featurette.

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    Hey hey! It’s time for this week’s soundtrack round up! So what cinematic audio delights do we have available this go round? There’s John Ottman’s score for X-Men: Days Of Future Past (Sony, $9.99 SRP), Bear McCreary’s Da Vinci’s Demon’s: Season 2 (Sparks & Shadows, $9.99), Patrick Cassidy’s Calvary (Varese Sarabande, $17.87 SRP), and Rachel Portman’s Belle (Varese Sarabande, $17.87 SRP).

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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 3/5/10: Mighty Miyazaki

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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…)

    Any time we can get fully remastered editions of the Studio Ghibli films, color me delighted – and that’s just we’ve got with new 2-disc special editions of Castle In The Sky, Kiki’s Delivery Service, & My Neighbor Totoro (Walt Disney, Rated PG/G/G, DVD-$29.99 SRP each). Each release features a behind-the-scenes exploration of the film, an introduction by John Lasseter, and a storyboard presentation of the film. Sadly, none of the films are getting a Blu-Ray release, but at least the most recent – Ponyo (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-ray-$ SRP) – does, and comes with a standard version to boot, plus the same bonus materials as the other Ghibli releases. Will we get high definition versions of them soon? I hope so.

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    Eliminate all of those excuses about it being far too difficult and time consuming to brew a proper mug of tea by picking up the IngenuiTEA 16oz teapot ($18.99), an ingenious device that allows you to put the tea leaves in the plastic pot, brew to perfection, then set it on your mug and let the spring action release just the tea – leaving the leaves behind. Great, right?

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    Prior to starring in John Carpenter’s Elvis (Shout! Factory, Rated PG, DVD-$19.99 SRP), Kurt Russell was largely known for the work he’d done at the Disney studio as a teenager. After his remarkable turn in this memorable biopic, there was little doubt that Russell had an adult career in the offing. This new special edition sports an audio commentary, a new featurette with archival interviews, rare American Bandstand clips, and a photo gallery.

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    The market’s being flooded with any movie or special that ever bore the name, but what sets the 1966 BBC production of Alice In Wonderland (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), besides being directed by Jonathan Miller, is its all-star cast – including Peter Sellers, Sir John Gielgud, Peter Cook, Sir Michael Redgrave, Alan Bennett, John Bird, and more. Bonus materials on the disc include an audio commentary, the 1903 silent film version of Alice, a photo gallery, a Ravi Shankar performance, and Dennis Potter’s 1965 biopic about the real-life Alice Liddell.

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    It’s a memorable book, but Maurice Sendak’s Where The Wild Things Are (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, DVD-$28.98 SRP) is also a very slight book – certainly not something that’s easily expanded and transitioned to a feature-length film. Purists may cry foul, but I feel Spike Jonze succeeded in making that transition, creating a film that melds Gilliam’s Time Bandits with Henson’s Dark Crystal & Labyrinth in terms of just endearingly oddball energy. Bonus features include a series of behind-the-scenes short subjects. The Blu-Ray edition ($36.99 SRP) adds the HBO First Look special and an animated adaptation of Sendak’s Higglety Pigglety Pop! Or There Must Be More To Life.

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    It’s a trippy, Teutonic mess of a children’s film (What can you expect from Wolfgang Petersen?), but thousands of viewings on 1980’s HBO endeared me to The Neverending Story (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$28.99 SRP), which has made its way to high definition in a restored print that blows previous DVD editions away. Sadly, there’s not a bonus feature to be found, which is a real waste.

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    The Daleks get their due in a pair of classic Doctor Who releases, starting with the 4-disc Doctor Who: Dalek War set (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), featuring the fully restored (now in color!) Jon Pertwee arcs Frontier In Space & Planet Of The Daleks. We then jump ahead to the Sylvester McCoy years with Remembrance Of The Daleks (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP). As usual, both releases are positively loaded with bonus features, from commentaries and featurettes to interviews and easter eggs.

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    Get your fill of good ol’ country lawyerin’ with the complete fourth season of Abe Simpson’s favorite show, Matlock (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP). The 6-disc set contains all 23 episodes. My favorites? Whenever Don Knotts would show up. When. Ever.

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    If you’re a fan of The Sarah Silverman Program and have been endlessly wondering if they’d ever release all of the music featured in the show, you can now cease your endless wondering and simply pick up a copy of Songs Of The Sarah Silverman Program: From Our Rears To Your Ears (Comedy Central Records, $9.98 SRP). It contains all of the songs (and dozens of dialogue snippets) from the first 3 seasons.

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    Calling Bitch Slap (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$22.97 SRP) a B-movie is a bit generous, but it certainly is a raucous C-D-grade flick about a trio of hard fightin’ women out to retrieve some stolen jewels from a gangster’s hideout. Yup. That about sums it up. Bonus features include audio commentaries and a featurette.

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    The trailers for the movie have left me cold, but I’ve been an admirer of Chris Sanders’ artwork since Lilo & Stitch, so to see it pop up in the design for the titular beast in Dreamworks’ How To Train Your Dragon was welcome, and I’m always a fan of pouring through books like The Art Of How To Train Your Dragon (Newmarket Press, $40.00 SRP), which is packed with production artwork for the film.

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    The film itself lags in spots, but Robin Wright proves again how powerful she can be on screen as the titular middle-aged housewife and mother in The Private Lives Of Pippa Lee (Screen Media, Rated R, DVD-$27.98 SRP), who undergoes a reawakening and seeks to recapture the wild energy of her youth (as shown in flashbacks, played by Blake Lively) as she encounters a kindred soul (Keanu Reeves). Bonus features include an audio commentary and cast interviews. A Blu-Ray edition ($29.98 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus features.

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    I’m sure car nuts enjoy TLC’s reality series focusing on the refurbishment of old cars, Overhaulin’ (TLC Store, Not Rated, DVD-$29.95 SRP). Like everything else on the channel, it’s essentially a reality series about the builders tasked with turning these clunkers around in a short time.

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    It’s dangerous and sensationalistic, but for the footage of the storms alone, I’m always going to be entranced by a show like Storm Chasers (Discovery Store, Not Rated, DVD-$29.95 SRP), which follows the men who follow devastating midwest storms.

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    After releasing them as full seasons, they’ve decided to start the whole split-season thing with Have Gun – Will Travel: The Fourth Season Volume One (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP). The adventures of Paladin continue with the 19 episodes contained in the set.

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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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  • Trailer Park: Life, The Universe, & an Oscar Ode

    By Christopher Stipp

    The Archives, Right Here

    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.

    Check out my new column, This Week In Trailers, at SlashFilm.com and follow me on TWITTER under the name: Stipp

    WE LIVE IN PUBLIC – DVD Review

    we_live_in_public_official_posterThere’s a moment in WE LIVE IN PUBLIC (Now out on DVD) in which Josh Harris, an Internet wunderkind who saw the convergence of our online and everyday lives meshing long before any of us delighted in the joy of broadband service, makes an underground lair. Now, as founder of Pseudo.com, one of the very first sites to ever make video on the Internet available in the late 90’s, he wanted to push the sociological and psychological boundaries of what we would consider voyeuristic. He built a bunker, for lack of a better word, underground in New York where dozens upon dozens of people, artists mostly, had to submit not only applications for the chance to have their lives taped 24/7 but were put through rigorous examinations to determine their willingness to be completely exposed to those around them in ways we hadn’t yet been exposed to. One of the things you learn quickly about the cultural mores of artists, I think, is that through this selection process you notice that these people are open to the idea of things, the idea of a good artistic endeavor, in a way that I don’t think Ma and Pa Kettle would, as the general looseness of those who agreed to be filmed bathing, fornicating, and doing whatever they wanted while the cameras rolled is apparent in their giddiness to take part in this experiment.

    Through the fresh direction of Ondi Timoner, her documentary DIG! still ranks as one of my favorites in that genre, we see how Josh’s own theories about the Internet’s allure for instant fame and our insatiable need to consume information about the lives of those we follow play out on camera. The bacchanalia of sex, video cameras, guns, and general licentiousness that took place over the course of 30 days is fantastic in how revolutionary the idea was at the time at the turn of the millennium. Oddly enough, it was the clock striking the year 2000 that put an end to the communal party as “The Man” stepped in to put and end to what was a living, breathing example of the world that was about to come.

    Josh decides to get intimate with the idea of the personal expressed through online channels and decides to do the same thing but makes it above ground and limits it to 2 people: his girlfriend and himself. What occurs is really the meat of the things we all know about today in some way or another. That the idea the Internet could allow for real intimacy is really a fallacy. This situation only confirms that when you scrutinize and pick apart situations for everyone to look at and comment on there is nothing, absolutely nothing, positive that can come out of it that would indicate how humans really act when the doors are closed.

    It’s a false sense of reality and this film captures the essence of the Internet age in a way you never thought to ask because we’re all too busy making our own opinions, and lives, known on the Internet. The situations that Harris create only bolster the argument that technology, inherently, does not allow for personal intimacy. It’s a false front but the advent of new and better ways for people to communicate with one another, ironically, artificially create that sense and it’s that sense that Timoner captures so very well.

    If you’re a fan of documentaries this one should be required viewing for anyone who wants a deeper understanding of what kind of lives we’re building for ourselves online and whether this is truly healthy for our own sense of self. Loved it.

    About the film:

    As the social networks become more and more mainstream, questions of personal privacy continue to be an issue. But in the “˜90s, Internet guru, artist, futurist and visionary Josh Harris was experimenting with that very subject. Ten years in the making and culled from 5000 hours of footage, WE LIVE IN PUBLIC, from award-winning director Ondi Timoner (DIG!), documented his tumultuous life for more than a decade to create a riveting, cautionary tale of what to expect as the virtual world inevitably takes control of our lives. Called “remarkable [and] mesmerizing”, the 2009 Sundance Grand Jury Prize Winner for Best Documentary reveals the effect the web is having on our society, as seen through the eyes of Harris, “the greatest Internet pioneer you’ve never heard of”.

    Harris, often called the “Warhol of the Web”, founded Pseudo.com, the first Internet television network during the infamous dot-com boom of the 1990s. He also curated and funded the ground breaking project “Quiet” in an underground bunker in NYC where over 100 people lived together on camera for 30 days at the turn of the millennium. With “Quiet”, Harris proved how we willingly trade our privacy for the connection and recognition we all deeply desire, but with every technological advancement becomes that much more elusive. Through his
    experiments, including a six-month stint living with his girlfriend under 24-hour electronic surveillance which led to his mental collapse, Harris demonstrated the price we pay for living in public.

    Featuring music by The Pixies, Spoon and Jamiroquai, WE LIVE IN PUBLIC is presented in widescreen with Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo. Extras include commentary from Internet pioneers Chris DeWolfe and Jason Calacanis and venture capitalist Fred Wilson, a Sundance 2009 retrospective, the official trailer and more.

    THE UNIVERSE SEASON 4 – DVD Review

    uniI’ll admit it: I’m dumb.

    I hated math and I liked science a little less. However, I was utterly enthralled with Mr. Wizard’s World.

    Don Herbert was a master of taking really complex concepts that ruled our every day existence and crafted experiments to show kids like me that there was practical explanations about how calories were calculated, the nuances of gravity, and what the effects of liquid nitrogen were on a hot dog. This engendered a sense of wow about the world I lived in but the problem was that Mr. Wizard only came on for 1/2 a hour a day and school lasted hours upon hours and they never brought that kind of teaching style to the table.

    Fast forward 20 years. I still hate math but I do like science. I may not understand the complex means by which people get to the answers what the coefficient is of the force that will ensure the wing of the plane I am riding in doesn’t snap off but it intrigues me. Thankfully, The Universe is a lot like Mr. Wizard for grown-ups like me who aren’t necessarily nerds when it comes to understanding how the larger universe around me operates but who want to learn.

    In the fourth season this series continues to impress and educate with its methodological tack for making sense of the space that our globe is ensconced in on all sides. From using computer modeling to show how star clusters function and what happens when big things collide into planets to employing real life scientists who actually enjoy what they do and communicate as such on camera provide a viewing experience that just felt easy for me to follow. And I think the ease with which these things are explained help to make this a show that isn’t just aimed at people who may fancy themselves junior astronomers. This is a show for people like myself who aren’t well-versed in the complex mathematics involved which would explain everything they’re talking about but who really do need some help in slowing down and compartmentalizing the information in bites that are simple enough to consume. No, I don’t realize the difference between stars that seem to be the same and the relationship of dimness which can set them apart but, thanks to season 4 of The Universe, I saw someone with a white car back up in a parking lot to illustrate the point they were making.

    Look, there should be no shame in saying that you’re deficient in certain areas of your mental wheelhouse but the pleasure a series like this brings, where people are delighted to explain ideas that eggheads have been agonizing over for centuries and where scientists are more than happy to create a real-world scenario that contextualizes what they’re saying, makes me more than giddy to see where else they can fill in the holes. To boot, this is also a series I can enjoy with the rest of my family as everyone can get something unique out of it and I think that speaks volumes about the production aims for a series that wants to not only cast the net really wide but wants to try and elevate the conversation for everyone involved.

    As long as they keep making shows like this I will be more than willing to try and school myself because if they’re anything like this, I don’t mind sitting in front of the television for hours on end.

    About the film:

    Using stunning HD graphics and packed with authentic NASA footage, THE UNIVERSE returns in SEASON FOUR to transport home viewers past the wonders of our own solar system and out to the bizarre far-flung reaches of the cosmos. From death stars to ringed planets, star clusters to space wars, THE UNIVERSE: THE COMPLETE SEASON FOUR on DVD and BLU-RAY uses new discoveries and more advanced CGI to help explain the mysteries of outer space.

    These special edition sets feature all 12 episodes from SEASON FOUR plus special “Ask the Universe” segments in which the series’ most popular experts answer viewers’ questions. Examine which elements from popular sci-fi movies could really exist ““ from the ice moon of Endor to wormholes and transporters. Discover how the universe is awash in all sorts of strange liquids, from oceans of methane to blobs of alcohol floating in space, and even iron rain. And watch and marvel as experts cook up ten ways to destroy the Earth, including blowing it up with anti-matter, hurling it into the Sun, and colliding with another galaxy in this top-rated #1-selling HISTORYâ„¢ franchise.

    TELL THEM ANYTHING YOU WANT – DVD Review

    mauriceAs Maurice Sendak tells it, life growing up was sweet with his older brother and older sister.

    This rather compact documentary on the man who would pen Where The Wild Things Are is a sincere and touching view into the life of an author who never deigned to spend his life writing for children. His muse was set to make him the vessel through which he produced dozens of books that kids everywhere adored and revered.

    Clocking in at around 40 minutes this is a film directed by Lance Bangs and Spike Jonze that, honestly, is emotionally stirring when you listen to a man who initially comes off as a crotchety old coot who you wonder, initially, why he even agreed to be on camera. The man is crotchety, no question about it, but instead of railing against the ills of the world around him he seems consumed with the ills that plague his soul.

    While he recounts a life growing up with an older sister who he adored, in the special features there is a “dramatic” recreation with Jonze and Katherine Keener of a time he threw her under the bus after being left in a bake shop one time, and an older brother who helped him make hand-made toys you get a sense here was a man who had a rich childhood that was filled with wonder. He recounts the time, in a slow and exacting manner, how when he was a toddler seeing a picture of a badly decomposed photo of the Lindbergh baby that was kidnapped and left to rot in a forest. He tells how that affected him and you cannot help but feel in awe of a man who is able to recall those things which shaped his perception.

    About his writing for kids, and it sounds like he’s a grumpy old man, but he likens his talent to a malfunction. He doesn’t understand why he was able to churn out story after story where his characters were no older than kids in the throes of childhood. He doesn’t seem mystified by the process. He seems resigned to knowing that he was just following a path as an artist and never wavered from it. It’s sweet and tender but it offers insight into how Maurice would grow up to create Where The Wild Things Are, a story that was controversial for its depiction of a mother who would stoop to the level of her child. Controversial for its depiction of a mother that would let her emotions get in the way of societal niceties that dictated hard and fast rules about the role of parents.

    He talks sanguinely about death and its implications but you see an artist who knows he’s created something special for the world but, as any good artist would say, it doesn’t seem good enough. He has that “one more thing” still wanting to be created and you hope for all our sakes that he finally does. At one point, near the end of the documentary, he talks about why he wrote books for kids. He asks, almost self-reflexively, “Why is my needle stuck in childhood? I don’t know…That’s where my heart is.”

    This is a movie that should not be missed and should absolutely be hunted out and viewed.

    About the film:

    From Lance Bangs and Spike Jonze, acclaimed director of WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE, comes A PORTRAIT OF MAURICE SENDAK, a loving look at one of the most cherished and controversial figures in children’s literature. Featuring TELL THEM ANYTHING YOU WANT, this is a deeply moving tribute to Sendak, a seminal talent whose conflicts with success and lifelong obsession with death have subtly influenced his work.

    Now 81, Sendak is best known for his book, WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE, which he wrote twelve years into his career as a writer and illustrator. WILD THINGS would go on to become one of the most beloved and critically lauded children’s books of all time and, much to Sendak’s chagrin, would come to define his career. Through his own words, personal photos, and illustrations, Sendak offers a rare, intimate, and unexpected look at his exceptional life. A TRIBUTE TO MAURICE SENDAK also features James Gandolfini, Meryl Streep, Catherine Keener, and Tony Kushner honoring their friend and colleague.

    And the Winner is”¦

    By Ray Schillaci

    picture1The Academy Awards is either just around the corner or has been announced depending on when or if this gets posted. It’s been awhile since I’ve delivered my input on what’s out there. Thinking back I do not have a good enough reason not to have delivered Mr. Stipp a review or two a month. I could use the excuse that I have been traversing through a labyrinth of pain while in and out of a drug haze that impedes my writing, but I just don’t think that is acceptable. I will not continue on with my condition in fear of falling into maudlin territory and depressing you, the reader, and myself. So, in my humble opinion it’s unfortunate that the Academy has reduced itself to a cheap marketing ploy rather than get more creative to capture a television audience with the announcement of 10 “best picture nominees” rather than the streamline 5. Pardon me; did I use the word “creative” conjunctively with the Academy?

    This is the Academy that anointed “best picture” in 1973 to the long forgotten, “The Sting” rather than embrace one of the most memorably chilling movies in film history, “The Exorcist”. The same group that selected the now forgettable, but still well made “Ordinary People,” completely dismissing the greatest film of that decade, Martin Scorsese’s monumental achievement, “Raging Bull” and one of the most emotionally draining and provocative films of all time, David Lynch’s, “The Elephant Man”.

    Between 1932 and 1943 the Academy had 10 “best picture” nominees and if you take a look at any one of those years (with the exception of 1939) the category could have easily been reduced to five. Seriously, does this year’s crop of film come anywhere near the mythos of the batch that was provided in 1939; Gone With the Wind, Wizard of Oz, Wuthering Heights, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Stagecoach, Of Mice and Men, Dark Victory, Goodbye, Mr. Chips, Love Affair, Ninotchka. If you are not familiar with some of these, do yourself a favor and rent them. They are the inspirations for many famous filmmakers in the last 40 years!

    Frankly, there are only five best pictures this year; The Hurt Locker, Inglourious Basterds, Up in the Air, Avatar and Up. I place Avatar on a precipice nearly being toppled by the far less expensive, but deeper District 9. The other films are well made human dramas that have no place under the best picture banner. Each one of the films I’ve mentioned as legit nominees have their strong sells to command the coveted spot. Avatar is the only questionable one. I’m not a Cameron basher and I do not concern myself with the budget of a movie. I am more concerned with the story itself and for the life of me I don’t understand how a film can be nominated for “best picture” without getting nominated for “best screenplay” or “best adapted screenplay”. Seeing Avatar is like going out with Paris Hilton ““ can it really last? Where’s the depth? It’s good for the time being, but years later it will get old and there will be little to enjoy. Am I being too mean?

    For me, Kathryn Bigelow’s, “The Hurt Locker” is every bit as visceral as Oliver Stone’s, “Platoon”. It’s one of the few films you watch after the first ten minutes and say, how can they possibly top that. The expectations are too high, and yet Bigelow delivers! On the other hand, Pixar’s, “Up” personifies a classic tale that nearly rings as original as “The Wizard of Oz”. It should not be dismissed as an animated film. The feelings are genuine and so are its actors, whose voices bring to life characters that forever stay in our heart and make an indelible mark in our lives. The story is both simple and unique carrying a bittersweet tome about life; the joys of youth and the pains of growing old. Speaking of original, Tarantino steps up to the plate and knocks it out of the ballpark with his grinningly fun inaccurate WW2 take, “Inglourious Basterds”. Tarantino challenges and we are all the better for it. He shows growth both as a director and a writer. He also remains outside the Hollywood system making his style not as accessible to mainstream audiences, but that’s why we love him. It reminds me of when Scorsese brought us Taxi Driver and Raging Bull ““ ending up being whole chapters in cinematic history.

    But superseding as the most important statement about where we stand as a nation and where we may be going is Jason Reitman’s, “Up in the Air”. From the subtle performances, nuanced script, deep rich cinematography and a score that leaves one with a mild taste of the sixties harking back to the classic, “The Graduate,” Reitman proves that he was the genius behind “Juno” and not Diablo Cody. Cody proved that herself with the tepid “Jennifer’s Body”.

    If you have not seen this masterpiece on corporate America, by all means do. Do not be put off by what you may think this picture is about. I thought, going in, it would be too bourgeoisie for me. How could I relate to people making 100 grand a year getting laid off when I knew way too many people making half of that getting the ax? How could I possibly care for the lead character that performs this heinous act? Reitman and company pull this off magnificently with George Clooney delivering the best performance of his career. Vera Farmiga (Orphan) cannot receive enough praise as Clooney’s seductive co-pilot who happens to have a delicious back end (unless they used a body double). She is not only the epitome of aging gracefully, she’s downright sexy too.

    The importance of this film speaks volumes and rightfully places it at the top of my list as best picture. Of course, that does not mean a thing when you look at the past; “French Connection” beating out “Clockwork Orange” or “No Country for Old Men” stealing best picture from “There Will Be Blood”. But every so often the Academy does surprise us and does the right thing. Look at “Lord of the Rings: Return of the King” in 2003, “Braveheart” in 1995 and both “Godfathers ““ I & II” in 1972 and ’74. I only hope box office does not become the ultimate decision over what is actually the best we have to offer in American cinema.

  • Contest Round-Up: 2010-02-24

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    Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at FRED. Every Wednesday, we’ll present a new clutch of DVDs, books, and other cool stuff you can take a shot at winning. All you have to do is click on the graphics below to be taken to their respective contest pages. And good luck!

    In conjunction with Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away six (6) copies of WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of COLD SOULS on DVD.

    In conjunction with Shout Factory Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of ELVIS on DVD.

    In conjunction with Comedy Central Records, we’re giving away three (3) copies of SONGS OF THE SARAH SILVERMAN PROGRAM on CD.

    In conjunction with Faber & Faber, we’re giving away four (4) copies of THE QI “G” ANNUAL.

    In conjunction with Hasbro, we’re giving away a MARVEL UNIVERSE: IRON MAN Figure.

  • Win WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE on Blu-Ray & DVD!

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    In conjunction with Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away six (6) copies of WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, March 17th.

    CLOSED! THANKS FOR ENTERING!

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, March 17th.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/15/10: Yellow Fever

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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…)

    Ignore all of the pale-wannabes and unfortunate attempts to adapt it for other markets, and stick with the original UK edition of Top Gear, hosted by the madman trinity of Jeremy Clarkson, James May, and Richard Hammond. If you don’t like cars, don’t worry – I could care less about cars, but love this show something fierce, and it all comes down to the energy, likeability, and humor of the presenters. Don’t believe me? Check out the newly-released Top Gear: Season 11 (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) & Top Gear: Season 12 (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) and judge for yourself. The 2-disc 11th season is barebones, but the 12th season contains audio commentary on the epic Vietnam and Botswana specials, deleted scenes, extended segments, and deleted scenes.

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    Tongs? Who wants use tongs when you’re cooking hot food! Heck, if you use tongs, you probably use oven mitts, too! Well, join the future and start on your journey to become more machine than man by getting a pair of Fusion Silicon Finger Tongs ($17.99 each), which are wearable heat-resistant implements that allow you to pretend you’re a cooking robot. Because you always wanted to do that. Right?

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    Jumping ahead of about 7 unreleased seasons, Springfield’s first family celebrates two decades on the air with the release of The Simpsons: The Complete Twentieth Season (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP). Flying in the face of previous sets loaded with commentaries on every episode, this is a paractically bare-bones release, with only an abbreviated version of the 20th anniversary special by Morgan Spurlock. However, as this was the first season to feature episodes broadcast in widescreen HD, this is also the first season to be released on in a Blu-Ray edition ($59.99 SRP). The bonus feature is the same, but it looks oh-so-sweet in high-def. I just wish the episodes themselves were funnier.

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    I don’t know how much work he actually did on it besides lending it his name (or if he’s even read it), but George Lucas’s Blockbusting (It Books, $29.99 SRP) is a fascinating examination of 300 of the most financially and critically successful films in Hollywood history, examining their creation, production, marketing, reception, and legacy via factoids, tidbits, and contest that’s a page-turner for any cinema nerd. Like me. And, most likely, you.

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    If you’re not yet aware of the work being done by the fine folks at La-La Land Records, let this be your wake-up call. They’ve been quietly releasing a whole slew of limited edition, much-requested soundtracks to classic flicks, and the latest to get their treatment is Caddyshack (La-La Land Records, $19.98). Not only do you get the tunes (“I’m Alright”, “Any Way You Want It”), you also get cues from Johnny Mandel’s score.

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    I’m always game when someone shakes up the chat show format with a unique take – made all the better when it’s hosted by someone that you actually want to spend time with. Such is the case with Elvis Costello’s Spectacle (MVD, Not Rated, DVD-$49.95 SRP), which combines live music performances by his guests with candid conversation that doesn’t come from heavily pre-planned, all-too-brief talk show appearances. The 5-disc first season set features the likes of Elton John, Lou Reed, Smokey Robinson, James Taylor, Rufus Wainwright, Roseanne Cash, and more. Bonus materials include bonus songs and backstage interviews. A Blu-Ray edition ($69.95 SRP) is available, with identical bonus materials.

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    Combine an anniversary of an evergreen title with rather unfortunate recent events, and you get a 10th anniversary special edition of the Shakespeare in high school 10 Things I Hate About You (Touchstone, Rated PG-13, DVD-$19.99 SRP), which shovels on a retrospective documentary, an audio commentary, and deleted scenes. A Blu-Ray edition ($28.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus materials. Also available is the first volume from the TV series of 10 Things I Hate About You (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$29.99 SRP), featuring 10 episodes, the pilot, audio commentaries, featurettes, and bloopers.

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    In the late 80’s when it made its debut, Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$45.98 SRP) was bizarre, particularly when compared with the other Saturday-morning cartoons surrounding it. Under the supervision of Ralph Bakshi, our hero’s adventures became surreal and odd in a way that paved the way for the likes of Ren & Stimpy and Spongebob. If you don’t believe me, look no further than this 2-disc set, which contains all 19 episodes, plus a trio of classic Terrytoons Mighty Mouse cartoons and an interview-packed featurette.

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    It’s often overlooked as the odd period between Cheers and his recent renaissance on Damages and Bored To Death, but Becker (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$36.98 SRP) was an often dependable workhorse sitcom starring Ted Danson. The 3-disc complete 3rd season contains all 24 episodes featuring the Bronx-dwelling doc.

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    From the editors of McSweeney’s comes Heads On And We Shoot (It Books, $39.99 SRP), a wonderfully unique (in its presentation, at least) look at the making of Spike Jonze’s adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s Where The Wild Things Are. The books is presented in three sections, laid out as a book (with covers) literally within a book. See? Unique! And the behind-the-scenes info is fun, too.

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    You can feel the creak beginning to set in as we enter the 12th season of ER (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), even though Dr. Victor Clemente arrives on the scene and Maura Tierney’s Abby becomes even more front and center. The 6-disc set contains all 22 episodes, plus unaired scenes and outtakes.

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    Bring the classic run of the series to a close before the lackluster post-movie, set-in-the-future episodes with the release of Transformers Season 2: Volume 2 (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$29.99 SRP). The 4-disc set contains 21 episodes, a featurette, PSAs, toy commercials, and concept art.

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    Don’t let the often cornball series keep you from seeing the original feature Fame (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), a gritty, often bleak, yet uplifting look at the students of New York City’s High School For The Performing Arts. The new Blu-Ray features a reunion commentary, a vintage featurette, a look at the school that inspired the movie, the theatrical trailer, and a bonus CD sampler of the soundtrack.

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    They’ve become cable classics over the years, despite their last-gasp, 80’s style over-the-top action cheese, but my do Last Action Hero & Cliffhanger (Sony, Rated PG-13/R, Blu-Ray-$24.95 SRP each) look good in high definition, Last Action Hero is featureless, but Cliffhanger delivers audio commentaries, deleted scenes, featurettes, an introduction from director Renny Harlin, and more.

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    Lionsgate is releasing handful of their music & musician-centric feature films in a series their calling “Music Makers”, all of which come packed with a sampler CD featuring a track each from the musicians highlighted in the films (with an additional cut from Bobby Darin). The films in question are the Darin biopic Beyond The Sea (Lionsgate, Rated PG-13, DVD-$14.98 SRP), Ray Charles in Ballad In Blue (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), Sammy Davis Jr. in A Man Called Adam (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), and Buena Vista Social Club (Lionsgate, Rated G, DVD-$14.98 SRP).

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    Maybe it’s in films like Wrong Turn At Tahoe (Paramount, Rated R, DVD-$14.98 SRP) that Cuba Gooding Jr begins to claw his way back from such memorable missteps as Boat Trip and Snow Dogs. In this direct-to-DVD mob flick, Gooding is a Mafia protégé tasked with taking out a drug dealer. Unfortunately, he finds out the titular Tahoe works for a really big mob boss (Harvey Keitel) who expects payment for the lost revenue. Give it a spin.

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    I never really cottoned to the BBC’s recent slick & shiny take on Robin Hood (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), but I know a healthy fanbase has grown up around it, and are surely awaiting the third season’s arrival. Sadly for them, that third season is the final one, and this 5-disc set features all 13 episodes, plus featurettes and video diaries.

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    While you’re patiently awaiting the arrival of Sideshow Collectibles’ own premium format version of Dave Stevens’ Rocketeer, why not pick up the Real Action Heroes 12″ version of The Rocketeer ($164.99) from Medicom Toy – conveniently from Sideshow Collectibles. The tailoring is spot-on and the overall effect is nifty, and it’s certainly a fun piece. You know you want it. Admit it.

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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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