
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…)
Hey! Not only is Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie (Shout Factory, Rated PG-13, Blu-Rsy-$29.93 SRP) finally available in high definition, but the fine folks at Shout Factory have managed (yet again!) to do what was once seen as an impossible fulfillment of fan wishes by including the mythical deleted host segments from the film (Storm shelter! Original ending!), as well as bonus riff sections of This Island Earth. The inclusion of a new making-of featurette, a spotlight on This Island Earth, and the original EPK featurette is just icing on the cake.
While the 12″-scale premium figures from Sideshow and Hot Toys are reliably impressive in their own right, there’s something downright stunning – in both quality and size – to the brand new arrival in Hot Toys’ Avengers figure line: The Green Goliath himself, The Incredible Hulk ($299.99). Standing over 18″ tall and featuring an incredible bulk, the figure has the distinction amongst the other characters in the line of having plenty of visible flesh present – meaning joints can’t be easily hidden behind clothing. So what did they do? The covered the arms and torso in a flexible rubber skin, all expertly sculpted and painted. And yes, it also features a damned fine likeness to the hulked Mark Ruffalo, plus their adjustable PERS eye system. Overall? This figure is truly incredible.


I’ve become almost a broken record when singing the praises of the high definition restorations Disney is doing for the Blu-Ray releases of their classic animated titles, but they remain consistently top-notch, and such is the case with the positively great-looking The Many Adventures Of Winnie The Pooh (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$36.99 SRP). It just looks… well… GREAT. Bonus materials include mini-shorts, a behind-the-scenes featurette, and a music video. I can only hope they’re giving the same care and attention to a nice new edition of The Black Cauldron.
To praise the beautiful lyricism of a Studio Ghibli film seems almost to be a bit redundant, especially when it’s always consistently true – case in point being the latest import to the US, From Up On Poppy Hill (New Video, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$34.95 SRP). Set against the backdrop of Yokohama, Japan’s 1963 preparations to host the Olympics after its post WWII recovery, a burgeoning friendship between a pair of high school students is threatened by a secret from the past. Suffice to say, just see this. Bonus materials include both the original and US audio versions, featurettes, a music video, TV spots, and trailers.
I know the wait has been painful, but you can get your John Luther fix with Luther 3 (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), as Idris Elba’s cop is called to another case just as members of his own team want to take him down. Add a vigilante killer into the mix, and all morality starts slipping into gray. Bonus materials include a making-of featurette.
Fans will have to wait a bit longer for the next complete season set, but you can make the wait a bit easier with Regular Show: Fright Pack (Cartoon Network, Not Rated, DVD-$19.82 SRP), which brings together 8 complete episodes plus a special villains gallery.
It’s taken me a few years to get warmed up to Parks And Recreation (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) – in fact, it’s taken until the 5th season. I’m not entirely sure why the show had never really clicked for me… Perhaps it was its awkward Office vibe at the start, or that it finally seems to have come into its own. Regardless – Now? Tis great. Bonus materials include extended episodes, deleted scenes, webisodes, promos, Patton Oswalt’s filibuster, and en epic gag reel.
Combine magicians and heist movie tropes and you’ve basically got a nice little weekend’s entertainment in Now You See Me (Summit, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which combines the aforementioned illusionists on a spectacular crime spree with a hidden agenda. Plus it has Morgan Freeman. You can always watch Morgan Freeman. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and deleted scenes.
It’s always sunnier when another season of It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) arrives, and the 9th season is just as weird and wacky as one would hope, as the Paddy’s Pub gang get into more of their usual odd adventures. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, featurettes, and a gag reel.
A genre classic makes its long-awaited high definition debut with the arrival of the original version of The Fly (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), which looks and sounds pretty damn good, and comes with an audio commentary, the Biography episode on Vincent Price, a retrospective special, and Fox Movietone News.
The folks at Mill Creek prove once again that they are wizards at providing the most entertainment for your limited budget with another quartet of their multi-film collections – the 12-movie American Horror Stories, the 12-movie The Best Of The Worst, the 12-movie Dawn Of The Immortals, and the 12-movie Taboo Tales (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP each).
To try and sum up the many, many things wrong with Star Trek Into Darkness (Paramount, Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) may seem an exercise in extreme pedantry, but I choose to believe it’s just a case of profound disappointment. While I still believe JJ Abrams has no real clue how to do a Star Trek film, the far more annoying problems with this film are mainly to do with a lazy, insipid script that manages to cut corners through plot holes aplenty with a seemingly delighted cluelessness. Sad, really. So very, very sad. Bonus materials include a bevy of featurettes.
I’m sad to say, but I’ve never been more happy for a show to end than I have been for The Office (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.98 SRP) to close. What had started as a pale imitation of the UK original and managed to make itself into a sparkling comedy in its own right devolved from about season five into a sad, simpering, gurning imitation of a comedy, that seemed to be existing on the memory of fumes. So yes, glad and sad to see it go, but it’s in a better place now. Our memory. Bonus materials include audition tapes, cast farewells, deleted scenes, the finale table read, a behind-the-scenes panel discussion, and a blooper reel.
Heya, music fans! How about this week’s soundtrack roundup? You’ve got the compilation of songs and score from Kick-Ass 2 (Sony Masterworks, $12.53 SRP), Daniel Hart’s score to Ain’t Them Bodies Saints (Lakeshore, $9.99 SRP), Shigeru Umebayashi’s score to The Grandmaster (Lakeshore, $14.91 SRP), Jeff Danna’s score for the first season of Continuum (Lakeshore, $19.99 SRP), a newly remastered version of Stephen Sondheim’s A Little Night Music (Masterworks Broadway, $ SRP), Bear McCready’s score to Europa Report (Sparks & Shadows, $14.98 SRP), Rob Simonsen’s score to The Spectacular Now (Lakeshore, $19.99 SRP), and Ludwig Goransson’s score to Fruitvale Station (Lakeshore, $21.03 SRP). Whew!
It’s rather fitting that you can actually spend an actual Friday the 13th watching the high definition debut of all 12 films contained in the Friday The 13th Complete Collection (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$129.95 SRP), almost half of which have never been available in the format previously. Most of the bonus materials have been carried over from previous DVD and Blu-Ray releases, and it also sports a collectible booklet and a Camp Crystal Lake Counselor patch. The only real disappointment is they didn’t use the occasion of this release to give Part 3 a proper 3D release, which technology now allows.
And if watching that new season of Luther has you primed to watch some more of the BBC’s patented character-based crime drama, try giving a spin to Aftermath: An Inspector Banks Mystery (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP), starring Stephen Tompkinson as the titular tenacious Chief Inspector faced with a deadly crisis situation at a murder scene.
Hey, sure, let’s turn Leonardo DaVinici into a sexy warrior for the forces of truth and enlightenment in a dark age. That’s basically the premise of DaVinci’s Demons (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$54.99 SRP), which casts Leo into a turbulent, soapy actioner with polish and just enough crazy verve to make the series watchable. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, and deleted scenes.
Just when you thought things couldn’t get any crazier, the fifth season of Sons Of Anarchy (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$69.99 SRP) proves that yes, things can get crazier. Decidedly crazier. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, extended episodes, deleted scenes, featurettes, and a gag reel.
If you’ve been smurfing to see some classically animated smurfs, then the Halloween themed The Smurfs: The Legend Of Smurfy Hollow (Sony, Rated G, DVD-$6.99 SRP) is for you, as it features the big-screen 3D smurfs telling a campfire tale that is brought to life in the 2D way 80s kids like me remember fondly.
The long, tragic, and often bloody road traveled by Starz’ original sword and sandals series finally comes to an epic conclusion with Spartacus: War Of The Damned (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.95 SRP) as Spartacus’s rebel army continue their war with Rome. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, extended episodes, and featurettes.
Sometimes you get the sense that the BBC is willing to try just about anything to get an ongoing genre franchise going, which is probably why the first season of their take on Sinbad (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP) has a hard time finding its sea legs, swerving from Game Of Thrones drama to Hercules: The Legendary Journeys camp. It needs to pick a direction and commit. Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes.
Set in the transition from the stratified Edwardian class system to the societal breakdown and chaos of WWI, Tom Stoppard’s Parade’s End (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP) stars Benedict Cumberbatch as a wealthy nobleman who marries a manipulative socialite but finds his loveless marriage undermined by a young suffragette. Bonus materials include an interview with Stoppard.
From the high concept, low payoff folks at JJ Abrams’ Bad Robot Productions comes Revolution (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$69.97 SRP), in which the entire world is suddenly plunged into a reality devoid of any working technology, from phones and lights to planes and cars (yeah, go with it), and the world reacts by going completely insane and ruthless. So it’s up to small band of rebels to make everything right, because power to the people. Bonus materials include featurettes, webisodes, deleted scenes, a gag reel, and the Paley Fest discussion.
Sports, suburbs, and comedy collide once again in the fourth season of The League (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP), and somehow it all works, even if you don’t care about sports. Bonus materials include extended episodes, deleted scenes, a podcast, a gag reel, and more.
It’s always interesting to see where a show goes when it’s expanding from source material, particularly when Stephen King is the source. Based on The Colorado Kid, by its third season, Haven (E1, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) has proven to be its own beast, and a much more entertaining one than the shaggy dog Under The Dome. Bonus materials include webisodes, audio commentaries, featurettes, interviews, an d a blooper reel.
There’s something sublimely elegant in Matt Jeffries’ design for the original U.S.S. Enterprise 1701 (Diamond Select Toys, $59.99 SRP), and it remains so even nearly a half-century after the creation of Star Trek. The fine folks at Diamond Select Toys have done a superb job of capturing the screen-accurate look of that original model in their electronic “Starship Legends” series, featuring accent and nacelle lighting, plus a selection of original sound and dialogue clips from the show. As with all of the other ships in this series, you have the option to either use the display base, which connects to a hole on the bottom of the ship, or swap out that hole-bottom plate for a hole-less version perfect for hanging up in aerial display.

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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Hey! Not only is 
I’ve become almost a broken record when singing the praises of the high definition restorations Disney is doing for the Blu-Ray releases of their classic animated titles, but they remain consistently top-notch, and such is the case with the positively great-looking
To praise the beautiful lyricism of a Studio Ghibli film seems almost to be a bit redundant, especially when it’s always consistently true – case in point being the latest import to the US,
I know the wait has been painful, but you can get your John Luther fix with
Fans will have to wait a bit longer for the next complete season set, but you can make the wait a bit easier with
It’s taken me a few years to get warmed up to
Combine magicians and heist movie tropes and you’ve basically got a nice little weekend’s entertainment in
It’s always sunnier when another season of
A genre classic makes its long-awaited high definition debut with the arrival of the original version of
The folks at Mill Creek prove once again that they are wizards at providing the most entertainment for your limited budget with another quartet of their multi-film collections – the 12-movie
To try and sum up the many, many things wrong with
I’m sad to say, but I’ve never been more happy for a show to end than I have been for
Heya, music fans! How about this week’s soundtrack roundup? You’ve got the compilation of songs and score from
It’s rather fitting that you can actually spend an actual Friday the 13th watching the high definition debut of all 12 films contained in the
And if watching that new season of Luther has you primed to watch some more of the BBC’s patented character-based crime drama, try giving a spin to
Hey, sure, let’s turn Leonardo DaVinici into a sexy warrior for the forces of truth and enlightenment in a dark age. That’s basically the premise of
Just when you thought things couldn’t get any crazier, the fifth season of
If you’ve been smurfing to see some classically animated smurfs, then the Halloween themed
The long, tragic, and often bloody road traveled by Starz’ original sword and sandals series finally comes to an epic conclusion with
Sometimes you get the sense that the BBC is willing to try just about anything to get an ongoing genre franchise going, which is probably why the first season of their take on
Set in the transition from the stratified Edwardian class system to the societal breakdown and chaos of WWI, Tom Stoppard’s
From the high concept, low payoff folks at JJ Abrams’ Bad Robot Productions comes
Sports, suburbs, and comedy collide once again in the fourth season of
It’s always interesting to see where a show goes when it’s expanding from source material, particularly when Stephen King is the source. Based on The Colorado Kid, by its third season,
Much like the film it gets compared to most often, 
We’ve left the summer behind and I didn’t see a single firefly. I recall the summers of my youth being filled with fireflies. Well, I can alleviate some of that nostalgic disappointment with the electronic 
Often overlooked, the artistry that exists behind the action is explored and given a chance to shine in the latest installment of Disney’s incredible art series
While it’s not the release of 1941 I was hoping for, I suppose it is nice to have beautiful high-definition editions of Spielberg’s dinosaurs via the
Disney’s
I’ve seen plenty of documentaries, and very few of them are as entertaining as
If you’re not watching Idris Elba’s new series, then pick it up with the second release,
There might have been an interesting film to be had with the idea of presenting exactly why fans feel so betrayed by George Lucas’s handling of the Star Wars franchise over the past 15 years, but
Now only do you get 20 regular episodes in the 5th season set of
Get your man flick fix this weekend with the high definition release of
It’s been a few months, so it makes sense that we’re getting the second volume of the first season of 



It’s been a long, long, LONG wait, but the fine folks at Cinematic Titanic make a strong return with their road-tested riff of the awkward merging of both Kung-Fu AND Blaxsploitation, all wrapped in a model of poor filmmaking and worse acting… I give you
I’ve never owned a good cooking knife in my life. Usually, I’ll hack meat and vegetables with a steak knife, ’cause that’s all I’ve got. Every time I’ve tried to buy a better knife, I’ve always chosen poorly, and wound up with a quick-dulling instrument that just sends me right back to my trusty serrated hacksaws. Well, now I’ve seen the light – and it’s not metal. No, it’s
It’s not a kiddie movie, but I certainly saw it as a kid, and I still love the anarchic blackness that permeates one of the most offbeat holiday flicks to ever hit screens,
No one rants with quite the same vigor – and accessibility – as Charlie Brooker. Like a cross between Mark Twain and a riled wasps nest, Brooker’s regular column in the Guardian is an ongoing social commentary that inspires equal parts knowing laughter and sympathetic bile. Don’t believe me? Pick up the latest collection –
How sweet is it that we’re actually a dozen volumes in to the The Complete Peanuts? What seemed like it would take forever to accomplish – the presentation of the entire run of Charles Schulz’s classic strip – now seems to be flying by, as we can all dive into
If their continued collections of Peanuts weren’t enough to earn Fantagraphics the love and adoration of comics fans the world over, then their beautiful collections of the EC Segar strips starring his cantankerous, shambling sailor should secure that place within their hearts. The 4th collection –
It’s refreshing to upend the traditional romantic comedy formula and look at how unpredictable love can actually be with
While Office Space has become an instant classic and even the marginalized Idiocracy has become a cult flick, Mike Judges latest,
What do you do when you’re a network with a surprise hit on your hands? You don’t wait around for your debut season to wrap before you rush out a DVD collection featuring the first half of said season – and that’s what we’ve got with
Catch up on your TV viewing over the holiday break with both the 3rd and final season of the sci-fi show
It came and went from theaters with only the slightest of notice – a disappointment, considering it was the theatrical follow-up to Juno from screenwriter Diablo Cody. Which is a shame, as
Check another series off your running list, as we’ve come to the release of the 7th and final season of
Oh, what I wouldn’t do to put a bullet through the sadly long-lived American Pie franchise, which has now moved into
What was just about the last season of the show turned out to be just another one after it was picked up, so now you can rest easy as you partake of
It’s the second volume of
The regular episodes are often painful scattershot, but the focus of their Star Wars episodes seems to bring out the best in Seth MacFarlane & company, as you can see for yourself with
Go all the way back to the days of Wendy, Marvin, & Wonder Dog with the first volume from the premiere season of the original
I remember when
I’d like to say that Mel Brooks’
Christmas is dead and buried, so that means we start getting releases like a special edition of
It’s all hit the fan in the third season of
Wrap up the season that brought in Rob Estes, Alyssa Milano, and Lisa Rinna (and showed the door to Grant Show, Marcia Cross, & Laura Leighton) with
It’s not good cinema, but the flicks contained in
It never fails to bring a warm feeling when one of those Sunday afternoon flicks that used to permeate my youth gets all cleaned and gussied up and finds its way into high-definition. Certainly those warm feelings come from
It doesn’t happen often enough, but
David Tennant’s era as The Doctor has just come to a close, but there’s still plenty of classic Doctor adventures still in the pipeline. The newest releases to keep you warm (if the scarf isn’t enough) is the William Hartnell era
It’s not for your younger kiddies, but there’s enough inventiveness and beauty of execution to make
With the resurgence of 3-D, particularly in horror films, it was only a matter of time before the Final Destination franchise decided to go all cine-poky with
You can feel the end coming on as the 9th season of 















