Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, January 6th.
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, January 6th.
The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.
All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, December, 30th.
The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.
In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away four (4) copies of 500 DAYS OF SUMMER on DVD. Winners will also receive a HALL & OATES CD PRIZE PACK (the duo’s music features heavily in the film).
Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, January 6th.
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, January 6th.
The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.
It’s that time of year again, when sites the web-over compile helpful holiday shopping lists to guide you into the deepest, darkest pits of retail with a map that will hopefully get you out alive. Here now, without further ado, is the 2009 Quick Stop Holiday Shopping Guide.
(If you see anything you like, please support Quick Stop by using the links below to make your holiday purchases – it’s appreciated!)
I’ve banged on about for years, and I’m going to keep going virtual door to virtual door until the word gets out about QI. If you’ve never heard of the UK quiz program QI, you’re missing out on one of the funniest “educational” shows ever devised (the devisee being creator/producer John Lloyd, formerly of Blackadder, Not The Nine O’Clock News, and Spitting Image). The key to QI (which stands for “Quite Interesting”) is the central tenet of its philosophy – it’s not always being correct that counts, but being interesting (and funny). The interesting nature of a given piece of information spurs conversation and debate, eventually leading round to the learning of said informational nugget. Did you know that the Earth has more than one moon, for example? Or that otters kill crocodiles? Soon to make its debut on BBC1 (with its 5th season), it’s hosted by Stephen Fry and features a rotating panel of four comedians (one of which is mainstay Alan Davies) – and it’s one of the most hilarious shows I’ve ever seen… Honestly, you’ll laugh as much as you learn, and I still hold out hope a network in the US is smart enough to pick the show up uncut, as BBC America have been nothing but boobs about it (Hello, Comedy Central! Hello, Discovery Channel! Hello, PBS! Somebody!). Until then, you can grab a copy of both the first (A Quite Interesting Game) and second (Strictly Come Duncing) interactive QI DVD games (Warner Home Video, DVD-£18.99 each), the 2-disc, feature-laden DVD sets of the first three seasons – The A Series (2 Entertain, Not Rated, DVD-£19.99), The B Series, & The C Series (Warner Music Entertainment, Not Rated, DVD-£19.99 SRP each). Keep in mind that all five of which are available only for Region 2, so make sure you have a Region Free player. For those in the US, the very first QI Book of General Ignorance (Faber & Faber, $19.95 SRP) and the follow-up Book Of Animal Ignorance (Faber & Faber, $ SRP) are available, and they’re both brilliant tomes which collect much of the interesting information featured in the first four seasons into one handy volume, plus scads more of those aforementioned nuggets of intellectual goodness. Folks in the UK (and bright, industrious Americans who know how to use the internet, HINT HINT) can get their very own copies of both the inaugural QI “E” Annual, last year’s QI “F” Annual, and this year’s QI “G” Annual (Faber & Faber, £12.99 each), which make the perfect holiday gift for all ages. Last year also brought Advanced Banter: The QI Book Of Quotations (Faber & Faber, £14.99 SRP), which is the most interesting compendium of clever and memorable quotes you’ll ever lay your inquisitive mind upon. Last but certainly not least is the QI Book Of The Dead (Faber & Faber, £16.99 SRP), which is positively packed with quite interesting things about the departed, from Benjamin Franklin to Nikola Tesla. By all means, learn what all the hubbub is about (and stop by the official QI site at www.QI.com).
I admit it – I was skeptical of Up (Walt Disney, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$45.99 SRP) when I saw the first teaser, ages ago. How would Pixar pull of what seemed to be a film starring an old man living in a house held aloft by balloons? Well, I should really learn to doubt Pixar less, because once again they pull off an unorthodox premise with style, wit, and a breathtaking amount of real, genuine emotion as we follow the story of elderly Carl Fredrickson as his plans to fulfil a lifelong dream get turned upside down by an unlikely stowaway in the form of an 8-year-old Wilderness Explorer, Russell. Just see the film, particularly in high definition, which comes bundled with a standard DVD as well. Bonus features include a brand new short starring Dug the dog, behind-the-scenes documentaries, an integrated making-of, and more. The best way to get the flick, though, is in conjunction with the super-duper Limited Edition Luxo Jr. Collectible Desk Lamp Set (Walt Disney, $199.99 SRP), which comes packed with a replica of Pixar’s iconic mascot attached to a base display that also stores your Pixar Blu-Ray titles – including the packed-in copy of Up.
And you can add to your Pixar display with the Ultimate Cars Gift Pack (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP), which not only includes copies of Cars in both standard and Blu-Ray, but also a pair of exclusive diecast cars with Ransburg paint – Cruisin’ Lightning McQueen and Rescue Squad Mater.
We’ve reached a bit of milestone with the release of Saturday Night Live: The Complete Fifth Season (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$69.98 SRP). Not only is it the season wherein the show reached its 100th episode, but its also the last to feature members of the original Not Ready For Primetime Players – now pared down to Gilda Radner, Larraine Newman, Garrett Morris, and Bill Murray after the departure of John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd. Additions to the cast included Harry Shearer and Brian Doyle Murray, plus an increased role for Al Franken and Tom Davis. Bonus materials include audio commentary with Buck Henry and Elliott Gould. I’m curious to see if we’ll get the train wreck 6th season … I really hope we do.
As the Tennant era comes to a close, be sure to snap up your very own handy-dandy tool that The Doctor wouldn’t be caught without ““ the Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver ($19.99). Not only do you get a fully illuminating screwdriver with authentic sound effect, but it also comes with a pen nib and his psychic paper wallet. Take that, Daleks!
Oh, to be a kid today, with all of the advanced electronics now available to toy manufacturers. Back in my day, we’d be luck if we had a pull string to make something talk – or an audio tape that would prompt eye blinks and mouth flap. Today, the wizards at Thinkway have crafted the mind-bogglingly cool Ultimate Buzz Lightyear (Thinkway Toys, $199.99 SRP). Standing almost 2 feet tall, this Buzz speaks in Tim Allen’s voice, can walk around, salute, “fire” his “laser”, communicate with Star Command, and even be put in autonomous wandering mode. Yes – your toy can just roam around your room. Creepy. And oh so cool. What will they think of next?
It wouldn’t be the holiday season without A Charlie Brown Christmas (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP), now available in glittering high definition alongside the standard edition of much-newer I Want A Dog For Christmas, Charlie Brown (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP). If that weren’t enough to get you in the spirit, there’s also the high-def debut of the original, classic How The Grinch Stole Christmas (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP), retaining all of the bonus features found on the standard special edition (same goes with A Charlie Brown Christmas. Finally, there’s a new direct-to-video special starring the original hot & cold duo in A Miser Brothers’ Christmas (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP).
As a kid, next to the likes of A Charlie Brown Christmas and How The Grinch Stole Christmas (and yes, even A Claymation Christmas), another perennial special that found its way into my holiday viewing schedule was Yogi’s First Christmas (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$14.95 SRP). Thanks to the wonderful Warner Archive Collection, now I can easily show Yogi’s discovery of Christmas (when he gets woken up during his hibernation) with my nephews.
Many take potshots at the show, but there’s a reason why Hogan’s Heroes remains such a fan favorite – it’s a fun, funny, absurd, Bilko-esque comedy that happens to be set in a German POW camp during World War II. Much like Mel Brooks after it, it made the Nazis into fools, with an Emmy-winning perf0ormance by Jewish actor Werner Klemperer as the bufoonish, ineffectual Kommandant Colonel Klink (the ability to ridicule the Nazis was what made Klemperer decide that taking the role – and the premise of the show – was OK). You can now get the entire series in one fell swoop via the Hogan’s Heroes: Kommandant’s Kollection (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$179.99 SRP), which also contains an exclusive bonus disc with an alternate/extended version of the pilot, a new interview with Richard Dawson, an alternate 1st season episode in German, Emmy wins, a Hollywood Palace clip featuring the cast, and more.
Wanna zone out for the holidays? Sure ya do! And you can completely zone out by staring into the soothing blue glow of the Mathmos Bubble ($59.99), a rechargeable indoor/outdoor”¦ well”¦ glowing ball. Pretty much says it all. NOW STARE INTO IT AND FEEL THE WORLD DRIFT AWAY”¦
I will admit right off the bat – nothing I’ve seen of James Cameron’s Avatar has made me in the least bit interested in seeing it. In fact, all of the hyperbole about it from the likes Jeffrey Katzenberg makes the reality of what I’ve seen seem all the more ludicrous. It is the focus of a merchandise bonanza, of course (it must be, right?), so shelves have been flooded with not only 3 3/4-scale Avataraction figures (Mattel, $10.99 SRP each), but also 6″-scale Mattel Movie Masters Series figures ($14.99 SRP) of all the lead characters. The saving grace, though, is that young children don’t know well enough what figures might be from where, and the Avatar figures are perfectly size-compatible with Star Wars, GI Joe, DC, and Marvel action figures. Just pretend their an invading alien force that can only be fought by Snake Eyes, Han Solo, Spider-Man, and Batman. See? Now they’re worth getting.
Speaking of figures that are orphaned by a mediocre big screen inspiration, I present the 3 3/4-scaled figures based on GI Joe: The Rise Of Cobra (Hasbro, $10.99 SRP). I’m a fan of the original animated series and the original animated line of toys, so the flick and figures based on it are… well… a bit annoying. So kids? Get these figures, and consider them weird, bizarro alternate dimension versions of characters like Cobra Commander.
The only figures I was actually happy with – even if the sculpts are a bit wonky – are those based on the classic Marvel characters as they appeared in the Secret Wars miniseries of the early-80’s. They’re being released as Secret Wars 25th Anniversary Comic Packs (Hasbro, $17.99 SRP), containing 2 figures and one of the 12 issues of the original Secret Wars miniseries.
A few years back, it looked like Disney Editions might be abandoning the lushly illustrated, highly informative tomes that made animation junkies like me salivate over every page. Thankfully, that has not been the case, as they’ve opened up the vaults and been releasing a breathtaking series of books based on the animation process. Last year brought a focus on the pre-production story process, while this year brings The Walt Disney Animation Series: The Archive – Animation (Disney Editions, $50.00 SRP). It’s packed with original production art from the breadth of their animated shorts and features, each one glorious in its own right,
Speaking of Disney Editions, I’d also recommend picking up their in-depth exploration of the World War II “Good Neighbor” trip that the US government sent Walt and a select team of his animators on, which is detailed in South Of The Border With Disney (Disney Editions, $40.00 SRP). The trip eventually resulted in the films Saludos Amigos and The Three Cabelleros.
This holiday season is turning into a true Spongebob-a-palooza, as both of my nephews are big fans of the magnificent yellow bastard, and are both savvy enough to know what they want. Which is why it’s helpful that Nickelodeon has been quite active getting the sponge onto themed board games (kids don’t play enough board games). This holiday season, not only can you get Spongebob Squarepants: Connect 4 (Hasbro, $18.99 SRP) and Spongebob: Sorry! (Hasbro, $19.99 SRP), but also Spongebob: Memory (Hasbro, $8.99 SRP), Spongebob: Kid Cranium (Hasbro, $24.99 SRP), and Spongebob: Operation (Hasbro, $19.99 SRP). That’s right – now you can try to remove Spongebob’s Barnacle Brain and Patty Pleasure Center. Heck, there’s even a Spongebob: Magic 8 Ball (Mattel, $24.99 SRP) with themed responses like “Aye-Aye Captain”.
In today’s digital age, there’s no need to use a slide rule. If you’re not familiar with a slide rule, it was essentially the pre-calculator age way if easily making some quite complex computations. In fact, they helped send us to them moon, and were the bane of many a high school student. And, thanks to ThinkGeek, you can get your very own Student Slide Rule ($19.99), lovingly recreated just for the nerd in you. Figuratively. DO NOT GO LOOKING FOR AN ACTUAL NERD WITHIN YOUR BODY.
I think the Star Wars prequels are an abomination, but I can still appreciate a good toy when it crosses my path (and delights my nephews no end). So what was this fun toy? The Star Wars: Indoor RC Republic Gunship (Hasbro, $49.99 SRP). That’s pretty self-explanatory – it’s a radio controlled vehicle that small and safe enough to hover about and fly indoors for up to 5 minutes at a time, commanded by a rechargeable remote. Vehicle? Flying? Fun.
Kid fans of the Nick show iCarly can now emulate the onscreen madness of Carly and Sam with a pair of toys, one of which actually features on the show. That show-specific item is iCarly: Sam’s Remote (Playmates, $16.99 SRP), which also features sound effects (just like on the show). “Random Dancing”, anyone? The other toy is the iCarly: Megabyte Mic (Playmates, $28.93 SRP), which allows kids to sing along with the theme song, sing their own song, or conduct their own interviews.
As dense as a diamond and just as exquisite, the second volume of world knowledge written by the world’s FOREMOST EXPERT on ALL THAT IS KNOWABLE (if not factual) and the possessor of soft hands and a baby’s face (the former per our handshake, the latter per Ricky Gervais), John Hodgman, is now available for purchase from your favorite book emporium IN SOFTCOVER. More Information Than You Require (Riverhead Books, $15.00 SRP) picks up where The Areas Of My Expertise left off – literally – and presents the reader (us) with learned knowings rare, surreal, useful, and useless, as well as 700 Mole Men (one of which bears a familiar name) and CHARTS! Lots and lots of CHARTS! How can you not want this book? THERE ARE CHARTS! “But what if I’m too lazy to read, and the clarion call of CHARTS is no attraction to me?” I hear some of you cry. Well, there is now More Information Than You Require: The Audio Book (Penguin Audio, $34.95 SRP), which finds Hodgman joined by his scruffy troubadourial sidekick, Jonathan Coulton, and a galaxy of guest stars (including DICK CAVETT!). Did you hear that parenthetical, people?!? DICK CAVETT! Get the audio book. And the book. And some candles. You can never have enough candles.
Don’t tell John Hodgman, but Scrabble is one of those games that I just never got around to learning when I was a kid. It never came up amongst my family, friends, or was available at all the middle school dances I spent sitting at the games table. So this holiday season, I promised, well, me that I would teach myself how to play. Luckily, I’ve been teaching myself with the Scrabble: Diamond Anniversary Edition (Hasbro, $39.99 SRP), which features the classic game in a nice, plastic, foldable board/case with tile storage and rotateability. One day – one day soon… I will play Hodgman. And lose. Badly. If you want some Scrabble on the go, though, there’s a touch screen Pocket Pogo Scrabble (Hasbro, $19.99 SRP), which is an electronic, portable version of the game.
Many other artists have gotten lavish retrospective collections in recent years, and the spotlight has finally turned to the great Steve Ditko with the appropriately titled Art Of Steve Ditko (IDW, $29.99 SRP), a big ol’ hardcover volume that has copious amounts of artwork and insight on the JD Salinger of comicdom.
For years, I’ve quietly lusted after the fantastical prop-quality ray guns that Weta has been manufacturing in extremely limited quantities. Sadly, they’ve just been a bit beyond my economic grasp – and it seems they’ve been that way for more than just me. Well, those sweet folks at Weta have decided to make a Dr. Grordbort gun that just about everyone can afford – swapping out metal for plastic, but crafting it so that they only way you can tell the difference is that the Righteous Bison ($99.99) weighs a heck of a lot less. Will there be more? Let’s hope so!
When new editions of previously released titles come out, it’s always difficult to determine whether there is a significant difference in image/sound quality or bonus features to make a re-purchase worth it. And sometimes, it’s an easy decision – and that’s the case with Black Adder Remastered: The Ultimate Edition (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$79.98 SRP) and Fawlty Towers: The Complete Collection Remastered (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP). On the new Black Adder set – in addition to all of the previously available material – the set adds the newly-produced, in-depth anniversary documentary Blackadder Rides Again, as well as an hour-plus clutch of unedited interviews recorded for the documentary. Not only are the episodes completely remastered and looking better than ever on the new Fawlty set, but John Cleese has recorded new commentaries in addition to brand new interviews with the cast, including the previously unavailable Connie Booth, outtakes, the previously available director’s commentaries, and the Torquay Tourist Guide documentary short.
Paramount jumped into the spiffy-edition high-def game a few months back with a pair of high demand catalogue titles which certainly do show off the medium to its fullest – Mel Gibson’s Braveheart and Ridley Scott’s Gladiator (Paramount, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP each) – under the “Sapphire Series” banner. Braveheart comes with an audio commentary, timelines, dimensional battlefields, a retrospective documentary, historical featurettes, and a look at the writing process. Gladiator sports an audio commentary, deleted scenes, behind-the-scenes featurettes, storyboard/ design galleries, and more.
On a similar note, I’m not entirely sure why it didn’t get a snazzy high-def release as well, but Chinatown (Paramount, Rated R, DVD-$19.99 SRP) has been graced with a fully remastered 2-disc entry into Paramount’s “Centennial Collection”, featuring an audio commentary, making-of featurettes, an appreciation, and a look at the history involved. Hopefully this will make its way to Blu-Ray soon.
Those of you only familiar with Steve Coogan for his occasional American film work are in for a world of wonderful comedy that’s now contained in the easy-to-snag Steve Coogan Collection (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$129.98 SRP). Much of the content on the 13-disc set has been unavailable in the US until now. So what do you get? Well, you get Knowing Me, Knowing You (plus the holiday special Knowing Me, Knowing Yule), the complete I’m Alan Partridge, Saxondale, Dr. Terrible’s House Of Horrible, Coogan’s Run, Paul and Pauline Calf’s Video Diaries, Paul and Pauline Calf’s Cheese and Ham Sandwich, and The Tony Ferrino Phenomenon – not to mention loads of bonus features. This is the set to get.
Be sure to live a life full of stereotypes, and be the nerdy guy (or gal) you want to be with pride by sipping your favorite cold-weather beverage from a Laboratory Beaker Mug ($9.99). Yes. That’s right. It’s a beaker. With a mug handle. And you know you want one.
Those fans that have only experience the butchered editions of weird and wonderful The Mighty Boosh that have been running on Adult Swim need to run – not walk – to their favorite DVD emporium and snag copies of the new-to-the-US unexpurgated editions of The Mighty Boosh seasons 1-3 that have now been collected into the massive Mighty Boosh Special Edition DVD set (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$79.98 SRP). The 7-disc set is loaded with all of the bonus features from the separate releases – including featurettes, commentaries, bloopers, & oddities – plus an exclusive 7th disc with a documentary, a Q& A, deleted scenes & outtakes from the pilot, the Paramount channel Zookeeper sketches, Bob Fossil Audio, Live Night links, and more.
In the first DVD release from the venerable UK music quiz show, The Best Of Never Mind The Buzzcocks (Channel 4, Not Rated, £19.99 SRP) collects the most memorable moments from Simon Amstell’s hosting stint, plus a pair of specials and a look back from Simon and Phill Jupitus. It’s also the only place one can see footage from the unaired Russell Brand episode that was pulled after the whole Andrew Sachs affair.
It takes place at the holidays, so it makes perfect viewing during the season – and it contains what I consider the finest performance by John Candy ever put to film. What’s more, Planes, Trains and Automobiles (Paramount, Rated R, DVD-$14.98 SRP) has been given a new “Those Aren’t Pillows!” special edition, featuring a making-of retrospective, a spotlight on John Hughes, a deleted scene, and a tribute to the late, great Mr. Candy. Get it. Watch it. Enjoy it.
Yes, I know I’m a little close to the material – but you know what? I’d still recommend you pick up a copy of Shootin’ The Sh*t with Kevin Smith: The Best of SModcast (Titan Books, $14.95 SRP). It may seem an odd proposition to read transcripts of the Kevin & Scott Mosier’s podcast, but the strength of the material means the comedy translates to the printed page quite nicely. Go. Buy it.
Yes, it really has been 100 episodes since the squarepanted sponge of Bikini Bottom first made his way onto our TV screens. How do I know this? Because there’s now an uber-deluxe box set titled Spongebob Squarepants: The First 100 Episodes (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$99.99 SRP), which is exactly that – 14 discs in a lucite holder, containing those titular episodes. Not only that, there’s also audio commentaries, featurettes, a music video, and even an in-depth, candid documentary on the show’s origin and evolution from the production team., It’s almost as good as getting the Krabby Patty formula.
And if you’ve made it all the way through the massive box set of the yellow one’s first 100 episodes, it’s time to move into fresh material with Spongebob Squarepants: Season 6: Volume 1 (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP), which contains 24 episodes of Krabby goodness, plus 7 shorts and the Spongebob History Song.
How about a cold-weather marathon of classic movies, courtesy of Turner Classic Movies? That’s exactly what you’ll get with their themed Turner Classic Movies Greatest Classic Films Collections (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$27.98 SRP each), each featuring a quartet of flicks under a common heading. On Family, you get Lassie Come Home, Flipper, National Velvet, & The Incredible Mr. Limpet. Hitchcock Thrillers presents Suspicion, The Wrong Man, I Confess, & Strangers On A Train. Comedy delivers A Night At The Opera, Father Of The Bride, The Long Long Trailer, & Arsenic And Old Lace. Finally, Holiday brings Christmas In Connecticut, A Christmas Carol, The Shop Around The Corner, & It Happened On 5th Avenue. My only disappointment with these otherwise wonderful sets is that Warners decided to put them on the loathsome double-sided flipper discs.
It’s all coming to a close, with the Blu-Ray release of the penultimate, 5th season of Lost (ABC Studios, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.99 SRP) signaling that the mystery is about to get answers. Right? Well, who knows, really. Regardless, this is the season that showed us a future off the island – and a need to get back. Bonus features include behind-the-scenes featurettes, deleted scenes, audio commentaries, bloopers, and the Blu-Ray exclusive Lost University and reflections from the cast & crew on 100 episodes.
Many, many years ago, I was quite disappointed when the Harry Potter films began hitting DVD. What could have been wondrous, information and goodie-packed special editions were instead rather superficial, cursory releases that left a bad taste in the mouth for lost opportunities. Fast-forward and, as the franchise rapidly comes to a close on screen and the smell of money is in the air, Warners has decided to give the films the editions they deserve – the “Ultimate Editions”, in fact. Gracing shelves this holiday season are Harry Potter & The Sorcerer’s Stone: Ultimate Edition and Harry Potter & The Chamber Of Secrets: Ultimate Edition (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP each). Each 4-disc set contains not only the original theatrical editions, but extended cuts, as well, in addition to all of the bonus materials contained on the previous releases. What’s most special, however, is the inclusion on each set of a feature-length documentary detailing various aspects of the Potter films, from characters and actors to special effects and the music. When all 8 “Ultimate Editions” are finally released, they will have what amounts to a whopping, comprehensive overview of the whole shabang. Add to that deleted scenes, TV spots, trailers, and more, and fans have at long last gotten the editions they’ve been waiting for.
And, of course, you know you’re going to be picking up Harry Potter & The Half-Blood Prince (Warner Bros., Rated PG, DVD-$34.99 SRP), the 6th film in the Potter film series, and the darkest entry yet (beyond even its finale). The 2-disc edition contains additional scenes, the JK Rowling: A Year In The Life documentary, a sneak peek at the Universal theme park attraction, a Q&A with the cast, a look behind-the-scenes, and a all-too-brief preview of the first installment of The Deathly Hallows. A Blu-Ray edition ($35.99 SRP) is also available, which includes an exclusive picture-in-picture feature with Daniel Radcliffe, featurettes, and comparisons, plus a DVD copy of the film.
The Flask – Drink conveyance of a more civilized, lushy age. Now you can combine this classic accessory of the drunkard with the lackadaisical ennui of a more modern age, courtesy of the “Meh.” Flask ($12.99). Now you can comment ironically on other’s disapproval of you”¦ in style.
I’ve looked at Hot Toys previous releases of the 12″ silver Iron Man Mark II and red & gold Mark II figures, and while I marveled at their sleek design and beautifully realized to-scale accuracy, I save my highest praise for the final release in the series – the chunky, clunky Iron Man Mark I (Sideshow/Hot Toys, $169.99). Crafted on the down-low from missile parts in a makeshift cave lab, the first iteration of the Iron Man suit was a makeshift affair – and a far more difficult suit for the sculptors at Hot Toys to realize. But they did. And it’s magnificent. Every wire and tube is captured in the reduced scale, a true wonder to behold. And yes, there’s a light up feature on the chest and arm blaster. Get this figure while you can, ’cause you’ll regret not getting it at its original price.
Even the off ones have moments of high hilarity, which is why the Blu-Ray arrival of The Mel Brooks Collection (Fox, Rated PG/R, Blu-Ray-$139.99 SRP) is most welcome. Not only does the set include special editions of The Twelve Chairs, Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein, Silent Movie, High Anxiety, History Of The World: Part I, To Be Or Not To Be, Spaceballs, and Robin Hood: Men In Tights and brand new featurettes and commentaries, but also a 120-page hardcover book. Sadly missing from the set? The Producers. A real shame.
So you still haven’t gotten your copy of Henry Selick’s stop-motion adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s Coraline? Well, you can easily rectify that with the Coraline: Limited Edition Gift Set (Universal, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$64.98 SRP). Bundled together in the set are both the Blu-Ray and standard editions of the film (with the original bonus features), as well as behind-the-scenes book and postcards.
Seeing a comedy like The Hangover (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$34.99 SRP) really drives home just how unfunny recent comedies are by comparison. With a straightforward premise – a group of friends reconstructing a Vegas bachelor party gone wrong on the morning after, just hours before the wedding – and a cast bringing their A-game, it’s worth a spin. See for yourself what a sharper script and a sharper cast can deliver. Bonus features include a Dan Band performance, additional Ken Jeong improv, a gag reel, a map of destruction, and additional missing camera shots. A Blu-Ray edition ($35.99 SRP) is also available, with exclusive picture-in-picture commentary, a cursing mash-up, and an Iron Mike online teaser.
Much like any sketch show, Robot Chicken (Adult Swim, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) is a scattershot affair – some bits are quite good (even genius), and some fall flatter than a pancake. Like that metaphor. See for yourself when you dive into the complete 4th season, which contains all 20 episodes plus the San Diego and New York Comic-Con panels, video blogs, nuggets, deleted scenes, alternate audio, and more.
Even nearly 50 years since taking the world by storm, Paul McCartney’s voice still remains a powerful instrument, and it’s always great to see him using it in front of an audience – particularly when it’s as historically significant as opening New York’s CitiField (built on the same spot as the legendary Shea Stadium). You can now see and hear that landmark concert via Paul McCartney: Good Evening New York City (Hear Music, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP). The 3-disc set features 2-CDs and the convert DVD. I’d recommend picking up the Best Buy exclusive, though, as it tacks on a bonus 4th disc featuring McCartney’s performance from atop the marquee of the Ed Sullivan Theater.
Of the triumvirate of Top Gear presenters, I do believe that James May has become my favorite. I think it’s because of the genuinely enthusiastic documentary series he does on the side, from looking at his childhood toys to journeying into space. James May’s Toy Stories (Channel 4, Not Rated, £19.99 SRP) brings May back to the playthings he loved as a child – like LEGOs and Airfix – but with the added twist of attempting to scale up the application while introducing the community at large to the joy of old school toys. So what are the projects? How about building a 1:1 scale Spitfire Airfix model? Or a house made entirely of LEGOs? Fun!
It’s hard to believe, but Steven Spielberg’s comic misfire 1941 (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-£14.99 SRP) is just now making its DVD debut in the UK. Many call the film a complete disaster, but it’s just so unbelievably misguided and ham-fisted that you can’t help but love what I’ve coined its “Kitchen Sink” approach to filmmaking. Newly remastered with a documentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, trailers, and more. Here’s hoping this spiffy new edition makes its way to the US soon.
To try and explain the work of Michael Kupperman is to try and comprehend the beauty of a rose, or a sonnet, or a concerto – it just exists as a perfect comic gem for all to admire. And laugh at. A lot. Don’t believe me? Go get yourself a copy of Tales Designed To Thrizzle: Volume 1 (Fantagraphics, $24.99 SRP) and see for yourself. And laugh. A lot.
For anyone who missed out on Rifftrax’s very first live theater-simulcast (or just want to re-live the awesome in the pantsless privacy of their own home), you can now get your own copy of Rifftrax Live!: Plan 9 From Outer Space (Legend Films, Not Rated, DVD-$14.95), recorded *live* in front of a studio audience in Nashville (the one in Tennessee). Bonus features include uncut commercials and a photo montage.
Yeah, I’m a sucker for the Guinness Book of World Records. There’s just something so compellingly exciting yet sad about the various and sundry attempts at dubious immortality “achieved” by the people, events, and tragedies included in the 2010 edition (Guinness, $28.95 SRP).
Most shows suffer in their sophomore season, but it’s always nice when a program bucks the trend and turns in a stellar outing – and such is the case with Mad Men: Season Two (Lionsgate, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP). Will Don Draper make it out the other side the same man? The 3-disc set features all 13 episodes plus commentaries, featurettes, and a music sampler.
It’s a juggernaut that’s still rolling along, and surely there’s a kid on your list that still plays Pokemon. For that kid on your list, there’s the Pokemon Trading Card Game: Rumble Game (The Pokemon Company, $13.95 SRP). It’s an all-in-one battle royale to be the last Pokemon standing.
Nancy Botwin moves her mini pot empire south of the border in the fourth season of Weeds (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), and the trip to Mexico doesn’t exactly make things easier – or safer. The 3-disc set features all 13 episodes, plus commentaries, featurettes, and a gag reel.
So there you have it… my humble suggestions for your holiday shopping this season. See ya next year!
Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at Quick Stop. 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 three (3) copies of each of HARRY POTTER & THE HALF-BLOOD PRINCE on both Blu-Ray & DVD.
Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at Quick Stop. 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!
CHICAGO – We’re approaching an entertainment apocalypse as the new four horsemen arrive on the hill: Redbox, Comcast, Marketeers and Spencer Pratt. In a decade, we’re going to be watching puppet shows on network TV and not even Jeff Dunham level puppet shows. But let’s give a run down of trainwrecks that will claim the lives of entertainment business models.
Redbox is a simple concept – a kiosk that allows you to rent a hot new DVD title for a $1 a day. There will be 20,000 of them across the country in grocery stores, drugstores and Wal-marts by the end of the year. They’re a mini-Blockbuster that’s doesn’t required a zit-faced dreamer to run the register. What’s the problem with Redbox? It’s killing to DVD sales market faster than Blockbuster and Netflix. Having Redbox inside Wal-Mart wrecks the impulse buying temptation of the giant sale bin. Are you going to pay $15 for Transformers 2 when you can merely rent it on the way out the store for $1? It’s getting harder for a producer to declare, “It’ll turn a profit on video!” Films are tanking on DVD that would have made a profit in the VHS rental days. Because of the limited space inside the Redbox machine, non-blockbuster films finding themselves being squeezed out. Small films are getting miniature exposure on DVD. I haven’t seen a fat ass royalty check for my deconstruction producing work on Moving Midway after it hit DVD. This lack of revenue will kill interest in any small production that doesn’t have Tyler Perry’s name in the title. The offer money will dry up for mid-level and indie films if the studios don’t see DVD as a true revenue source. Word is studios want to restructure so DVDs won’t be rentable until a month after they’ve been released for sales. The one good piece of news about Redbox is that it’s making Blockbuster CEO Keyes look like the captain of the Titanic after he had the nerve to trash talk me to his backers.
Marketing departments have sucked the fun out of cinema. These are the guys who run the studio – not the creative dorks. The Marketeers don’t want to release a movie that they actually have promote creatively. They want audience recognition of the source material before a greenlight. They’re more satisfied cranking out films based on old TV shows, not so old movie or toys that their mothers want to throw out. Of course they hit paydirt on Transformers 2 since that touched on all three of those principals. They’re now developing Monopoly as a feature film? Sure Mario Puzo did it as a joke 30 years ago to prove studio executives were morons. Now the children of these executives are as dumb as daddy. Imagine the crowds going nuts when the Thimble lands on Park Place and has to pay the hotel rate! Thanks to loser in marketing, expect to be unwhelmed by Snuggie: The Movie next Christmas. When they get a creative film that isn’t based on those three elements, they tank the promotion and hope it finds an audience on DVD like Idiocracy.
Comcast buying NBC-Universal will be a worse conglomerate marriage than when AOL dry humped Time-Warner. Comcast barely has any business being in the world of cable channels. Have you seen what they’ve done to E! and G4 over the years? Versus is an extremely poor man’s version of ESPN. How can Comcast run a network, a movie studio, news channels and a dozen peacock branded cable channels? You think NBC is cheap with the Jay Leno Show? After Comcast takes over Burbank, they’ll have Jay’s set reduced to a green screen as he mocks Tyra Banks clips. What really makes me fear Comcast taking over is their insistence that Jeff Zucker won’t be replaced. He’s the man who has overseen NBC’s implosion to the point where 30 Rock lost out to Jeff Dunham’s puppets in the ratings. I’d rather hear Ryan Seacrest is the new CEO of NBC with Law and Order: Kardashians.
The final horseman of the Entertainment Apocalypse is Spencer Pratt. He gains this honor not because he’s the third biggest douchebag on reality TV. What makes Pratt so destructive is his label deal with Warner Music Group. That was the day the music died. What qualifies him to such a sweet gig? He’s the mastermind behind his talentless wife’s music. Anyone who ever had a dream of signing to a major label needs to just switch to their “safety dream.” The music industry will never recover from associating with him. Clive Davis might have had golden ears. Spencer Pratt has TB throat.
Now that we can see the major movie studios, DVD distributors, TV networks and music labels on the verge of implosions, let’s focus on the bright side of this story. Now is the time for people to just do things themselves. In the 21st Century, you can get your work seen, heard and read around the globe without paying a fortune in postage. Maybe you won’t have a massive budget to create stuff. But so what? Comcast won’t give you millions although they might loan you a green screen. As far as returns go, it’s not like the majors won’t be screwing you with every royalty statement as they prove your film hasn’t come close to making a profit. DIY will be the only hope of surviving the four horsemen. Entertain each other before the major bore you to death.
FAUX TESTAMENT
According to a Wikipedia entry, Rabbi Shmuley is really Robert Steadman, a former Methodist minister from Ohio. He was exposed as a fraud when neighbors reported that during the Christmas holidays, he doesn’t go to the movies or have Chinese food.
OPEN LETTER TO SODERBERGH
Dear Steven Soderbergh,
The next time you have a major porn star playing a hooker in an R-rated movie, would you mind giving us at least one simulated sex scene? I sat through The Girlfriend Experience after watching Sasha Grey’s early work that’s on the internet. I wanted to know if she’d become the next Traci Lords and Ginger Lynn Allen. Instead of enjoying a film that ought to be reason why DVD scientists invented the frame-advance button, I was throughly bored. Was the script based on stereo installation instructions? You had a 20 minute film padded out to 80 minutes with all the wrong things. Where was the hot shower scene? The chilling hot tub moment? Maybe you have dreams of being emulating ’70s filmmakers with your disjointed editing style, but enough! I rented a film starring a major porn star playing a hooker that was rated R and not once did I slip into Cinemax After Dark mode. Now I know how Harvey Weinstein felt when he snuck into 400 Blows thinking it was a porn film.
As a little bit of advice, Soderbergh – don’t ever make another R-rated movie about a hooker being played by a porn star if you’re not going to give me the goods. The goal of these kinds of movies is to inspire your audience to wank – not for you to perform an “I’m a genius” tugjob in the editing room. Watch a Radley Metzger film to see how it’s really done.
LIFE SKILLS
OOOPPPPSSSS
Turns out Dan Aykroyd’s vodka brand is Crystal Head. This makes no sense since he sells you the booze in a skull bottle. That’s not a head – it’s a skull. Probably someone already has the trademark on Crystal Skull so he had to go with a back up name. To me it’s Crystal Skull. If you ask the liquor store for Crystal Skull vodka, they’ll give you Dan’s brand.
THE MARK OF THE Z
Disney Treasures series has been a DVD salvation over the last decade as the Mouse House neglects their heritage on 5 different cable channels. Each Disney Treasures wave normally consists of three or four titles that vary from animated theatrical shorts to live action shows from the Disneyland TV series. For Wave 9, there’s only two boxsets and they have the same subject: Zorro! Zorro: The Complete First Season 1957-1958 and Zorro: The Complete Second Season 1958-1959 gives us all the episodes and hour long specials featuring the dashing masked hero of old California.
Guy Williams (Professor John Robinson from Lost In Space) is Don Diego de la Vega. He returns from Spain to help his dad’s ranch operation in Southern California. Turns out the colony is turning nasty as Captain Monastario and other fat cats are corrupt. Diego has very little recourse since everyone in government is on the take. In such a moment of distress, Diego fights back by putting on a black mask and outfit. He becomes Zorro, the man who fights for the little guy. He uses his sword to cut a “Z”s whenever his mark is needed. His only real help is Bernardo (Gene Sheldon). The mute servant is faithful to both Diego and Zorro. Amongst the evil soldiers that do the various heavies business is a bit of slapstick in the form of the rotund Sgt. Garcia (Henry Calvin). He’s the early version of Sgt. Schultz. He’s the guy who gets the “Z” cut into his uniform during the opening credits.
The half hour show was a major hit when it aired. Walt Disney didn’t go cheap with his series. The sets look like they were designed for a major motion picture. There’s lots of location work instead of rear projection. There’s a dashing charm to the show as it comes off as more cinematic than stage bound. Guy Williams always delivers the sword fighting action. He defines macho with or without the black mask. He rocks the mustache. Each season had 39 episodes, but they weren’t merely stand alone shows. Many times, the episodes were serialized from a big adventure. This kept the shows from falling into a tempo rut. The first season established the origins and early adventures of Zorro. The second season has more guest stars including Cesar Romero in “The Gay Caballero.” Annette Funicello pops up for a few episodes. In a preview of Williams’ next series, Jonathan Harris (Lost In Space‘s Dr. Smith) in “Zorro and the Mountain Man.” Even though the show was a sensation, it only ran for two seasons when ABC and Walt Disney had issues over certain rights. By the time it cleared up, Walt felt the Zorro craze was dying down. Instead of making a third season, he made four Zorro specials that would be part of the Walt Disney Presents series. These are on the boxsets. Each season of Zorro is spread across 6 DVDs.
There are bonus features hosted by Leonard Maltin that explore the history of the show, the wardrobe and a tribute to Guy Williams. Getting the complete Zorro collection at once is a relief after the previous Disney Treasures only contained a fraction of “Elfego Baca” and “Swamp Fox” episodes in Wave 5. If you have any interest in these sets, grab them now. There’s only 30,000 copies of each in the limited edition release. Last year’s Dr. Syn set had 39,500 copies. It sold out within weeks and is now being sold for around $200 for merely 2 DVDs. Zorro: The Complete First Season 1957-1958 and Zorro: The Complete Second Season 1958-1959 are must grabs.
BLU-RAY HEAVEN
Food, Inc – Blu-ray is the scariest documentary of the year. Ever wonder what it takes for the food to end up in the supermarket? Forget those tales of Old McDonald’s farm. This movie takes us through the real process of chicken, hamburgers, corn and soybeans. It peeks around the agri-stock factories that can barely be called farms. They’re merely cogs on the conveyor belt for servicing the billions served at McDonalds. Wonder why every other week there’s an e-coli outbreak in the news whether it be peanuts, spinach or hamburger? The reason becomes evident in the race to create cheaper food. What’s frightening is that the makers don’t even have to explain “what goes in a hotdog” to gross you out. The biggest revelation is the politics of soybeans. Monsanto created a pesticide and then a genetically altered soybean that could survive that pesticide. Their patented soybean seeds are completely controlled by the company. Monsanto will destroy any farmer that dares to reuse their spare seeds in an upcoming planting season. They will destroy any farmer whose natural soybeans accidentally become hybrids through pollination. Monsanto comes off as the Goldman-Sachs of agriculture with their former employees sneaking into important government gigs. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas worked for Monsanto as a lawyer. That connection didn’t cause him to recuse himself from an important Monsanto case. In fact he wrote the majority opinion for his old boss. Luckily this is not a complete doom and gloom flick. There is hope in farmers that want to raise livestock the right way. You might want to watch this film on a weekend since your natural impulse will be to hit the nearest farmers market for veggies that come straight from the field. The bonus features include deleted scenes and a Nightline episode. In the 1080p vision, you’ll get an eyeful of details from inside chicken shacks and killing floors.
The Answer Man – Blu-ray has Jeff Daniel playing the author of Me and God. The book dealt with his conversation with the big guy and was a sensation two decades ago. Now he’s a slight recluse and a major jerk. Throwing his back out leads him to the eager hands of Lauren Graham (Gilmore Girls). She’s struggling as a single mom. She takes a liking to Daniels without knowing about his book. Is he going to be open to more than a spine straightening? Can he handle a kid without getting crabby? It’s a casually paced romantic comedy that doesn’t overplay its hand thanks to the leads. Kat Dennings pops up. The Blu-ray allows her to glow on the screen. The bonus features include a commentary track with Graham and a documentary about how the film came about.
THE DVD SHELF
Disney Mickey’s Magical Christmas: Snowed In at the House of Mouse is an hour long holiday special at Mickey’s nightclub. There’s plenty of winter themed shorts including iconic Disney characters. Donald and his nephews belt out snowman. They break out the old “Pluto’s Christmas Tree” cartoon with Pluto and Mickey battling Chip N Dale over a pine tree. They include the Mickey Mouse version of A Christmas Carol with Scrooge McDuck playing Scrooge. How did he luck into that gig? The big bonus is the premiere episode of House of Mouse. A nice holiday distraction for the kids and Disneyphiles.
JAG: The Ninth Season is the penultimate season of the Naval law show. The season opens with the resolution of “A Tangled Webb” episode. David James Elliot and Catherine Bell are stuck in Paraguay hunting down Sadik the terrorist. There’s a lot of emotions being stirred up in the jungle between Elliot and Bell. “Shifting Sands” has Elliot messed up when he returns to D.C. and finds his resignation has been processed. Is he out of a job? “The One Who Got Away” puts the unit in the middle of a North Korean hot spot. “Touchdown” has an airlift out of Libya. “People v. SecNav” places Elliot inside the terrifying International Criminal Court as he defends America against the world. There’s 23 episodes spread over 6 DVDs.
The Untouchables Season Three, Volume Two brings more raw justice from Eliot Ness and his crew of gangbusters. “Takeover” has John Banner (Hogan’s Heroes‘ Sgt. Schultz) running a non-alcoholic brewery. But who can be satisfied making near beer? Enter Robert Loggia (The Sopranos) and his secret how to put the kick back in the lager. The ultimate thrill is seeing Leonard Nimoy as a hitman. “The Stryker Brothers” are a trio of bottom feeders that impress the mob with their skills. The youngest brother is Frank Sutton (Gomer Pyle‘s Sgt. Carter). “Element of Danger” has Lee Marvin cutting dope. Lee looks like a natural when facing off with Robert Stack. “The Case Against Eliot Ness” makes Sid Haig a hitman. “The Contract” puts a hit on Frank Sutton as he’s now Smiley Barris. “The Monkey Wrench” goes ape with Claude Akins (Battle for the Planet of the Apes) being nutty in Chi-Town. This boxset has 12 glorious black and white episodes on 3 DVDs.
Nash Bridges The Third Season firmly establishes Don Johnson as the title character and not merely an extension of his role on Miami Vice. He’s lost that brooding feeling. And how can one brood when their cruising around San Francisco with Cheech Marin? The contact high off smelling his shirt ought to put a buzzed smile on your face. “Lost and Found” introduces the Kelly Hu (Top Chef Masters) as Inspector Michelle Chan. She’s deep cover in a stolen car ring. Nash needs her help to locate stolen military weapons. Cheech’s car gets blown up real good in the opening. Willie Nelson pops up as a convict sprung from San Quentin to nab his old partner in “Payback.” The smoke cloud over the trailer when Cheech and Wille practiced their lines together must blocked the sun from touching the Golden Gate Bridge. There’s music replacement, but somehow the lack of songs makes me not confuse this with Vice.
7th Heaven: The Ninth Season gives us more antics from the minister’s family. Stephen Collins (Star Trek: The Motion Picture) can barely keep sane. He’s got kids moving back in with a baby on the way. Nothing like having a newborn in the house to keep things interesting with sleep deprived characters zombie walking into the kitchen. They’ve got new kids roaming the rooms. The twins are now in school so there’s grammar school grief. The big highlight is a singing, dancing musical episode for Valentine’s Day. There’s 2 more seasons to go. Twenty two episodes are spread over 5 DVDs in this boxset.
Gabriel Iglesias: I’m Not Fat…I’m Fluffy Live From El Paso lets the large comic explode with manic routines that revolve around food, his girlfriend and more food. Iglesias breaks down a new level of flat that’s above “fluffy” and “damn.” He reminds us that you shouldn’t let your girlfriend spend a night alone with a bottle of wine and Cheaters on TV. The guy does an amazing set of voices on stage to create characters. He’s like Jonathan Winters without losing focus. He becomes the snide women working the hotel’s front desk at night. He might have one of the best tales of hanging with Paul Rodriguez that involves tacos, strippers and border cops. The DVD gives the 68 minute show along with an 8 minute deleted bit about his high school reunion.
The Best of Star Trek: The Original Series: Volume 2 beams down another 4 episodes from the original show. “Where No Man Has Gone Before” is the second pilot done for the series. Gary Lockwood (2001) and Sally Kellerman (Back to School) become silver eyed gods and they’re bent on taking down Captain Kirk (William Shatner). “Space Seed” is essential viewing for anyone who has seen Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan since this is the birth of Khan (Ricardo Montalban). He and his crew are defrosted from suspended animation. Turns out they weren’t nice folks back in the day. Khan wants to take over the Enterprise. “A Piece of the Action” allowed the futuristic series to dip into the props from The Untouchables. Kirk and Spock beam down into a planet that has based it’s culture on Al Capone. “Journey to Babel” brings Spock’s dad on board for a diplomatic summit. The 4 episodes on this DVD are from the remastered transfers with CGI ships replacing the old model effects. This is a good gift for people who want to learn more about the show after seeing the re-imagining Star Trek.
The Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation, Volume 2 has 4 episodes from the Riker-Picard era. “Relics” is the most important of the batch since it brings back Scotty (James Doohan) from the original series. He’s stuck on a shipwreck. “The Inner Light” has an amnesiac Picard wake up to a wife on a new planet. What is the mystery behind this other life? “Cause and Effect” gives us a space-time anomaly. “Tapestry” has Picard bite it. His only hope lies in the power of Q to let him change time. Can he afford to alter things to save his own life? It’s a fine sample of the second series voyage of the Enterprise.
One Christmas is a holiday tradition in my house because my brother was an extra in it. The film is based on a Truman Capote story. The story has a young boy going from his home in Alabama to visit relatives in New Orleans for Christmas. This is a little bit of a shock for the boy. The film has the final performance from Katharine Hepburn. Although in our house, we gather around so that Matt can tell us the heartwarming tale about how he got his haircut at the same time as Henry Winkler. They sat in neighboring barber chairs. My brother got to swap idle chitcat with the Fonz. During the trimming, Fonzie got news that his show Monty had been picked up. He was so excited to get another sitcom. This would be an amazing Christmas story except Monty got canned after only 6 of the 13 episodes aired. At least the DVD is now going to be out so we don’t have to watch the VHS that mom accidentally taped at EP speed. In DVD, we can freeze frame my brother’s big background extra moment.
Predators is the Animal Planet series about what happens when people encounter animals that aren’t ready for the petting zoo. “After the Attack” has people discussing what it was like to be nearly turned into a snack. “Up Close and Dangerous” has wilderness filmmakers recount the most temperamental of TV stars. Christian Bale wasn’t nearly as nasty as the talent that turned on these cameramen. Killer Crocs of Costa Rica follows a croc through motherhood. It’s kinda like Knocked Up for a future luggage set.
Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at Quick Stop. 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!
Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at Quick Stop. 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!