DVD Blog on MSN Movies - Videodrone

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Hiroshi Inagake’s epic story charts the education of a samurai master

By SeanAx Jun 27, 2012 10:09AM

"The Samurai Trilogy" (Criterion), Hiroshi Inagake’s three-film adaptation of Eiji Yoshikawa's epic novel, debuted the same year as Kurosawa's "The Seven Samurai" and was one of the most popular cinematic exports of its era. Musashi Miyamoto was a real life swordsman elevated to the stature of almost mythic historical hero and this series embraces the mythic dimensions with a removed, distant style that elevates the character to tragic hero.

 

Toshiro Mifune enters "Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto" (1954) as a brash and ambitious peasant who desires fame and power as a swordsman. His dreams of glory in war sour when his army is routed and he becomes hunted by the authorities, but with the “tough love” attentions of a kindly but severe monk helps him develop from a hot-tempered outlaw to thoughtful swordsman. Inagake’s somber color epic is very different from the energetic action of Kurosawa’s films. The sword fights and battles are more theatrical, staged in long takes that emphasize form and movement over action, and Mifune brings a sad, almost tragic quality to the samurai warrior Miyamoto, whose dedication proscribes him to a lonely life on the road.

 

While "Samurai I" can stand on its own, it is more properly the first act of an epic story and it takes on greater stature in in light of the rest of Inagaki’s stately, contemplative epic. "Samurai II: Duel at Ichijoji Temple" (1955) takes up where it leaves off, with samurai-in-training Miyamoto is now a wandering swordsman who defeats a succession of students from a local school of martial arts and becomes marked for death by the school elders and attacked in a series of cowardly ambushes. Meanwhile he earns himself an arch-enemy, an ambitious young swordsman named Kojiro Sasaki (Koji Tsuruta), and faces an internal struggle with his conflicted love for the virginal Otsu (Kaoru Yachigusa). Inagaki manages the rather complicated plot with unexpected ease while he charts Musashi’s education in compassion and humility, while enriching his color palette to give his studio bound locations the quality and delicacy of paintings. The dramatic centerpiece of the films, an epic pre-dawn battle where 40 swordsman ambush Musashi, uses the dark and the landscape to great dramatic effect as figures seep in and out of the picture.

 

"Samurai III: Duel at Ganryu Island" (1956) offers Miyamoto as the mature samurai master and Mifune is the very model of confidence and humility. The legendary swordsman takes on a quest is to save an isolated village from rampaging brigands but remains haunted by the memory of Otsu, while the ruthless and increasingly jealous Kojiro Sasaki plots his final showdown with Miyamoto. Inagaki weaves the web of subplots into a series of grand confrontations, among them the most exciting battles of the trilogy: Musashi’s skirmish with the army of cutthroats while the village erupts in a fiery inferno around him, and the sunset duel between Musashi and Kojiro on an isolated beach, the two warriors taking on mythic dimensions silhouetted against the sun setting over the surf. Inagaki’s delicate use of color throughout the series becomes most pronounced in this final sequence, where the glow of orange and red adds dramatic flourish to the twilit battle.


 

Inagaki’s reserved, restrained style and Mifune’s melancholy performance, his granite face and stocky stance the very essence of somber wisdom and sad assurance, bring a gravity and seriousness to the drama that ultimately illuminates the personal cost of Musashi’s supreme skill.

 

The three films are presented on two discs on Blu-ray and three discs DVD, with new video interviews with translator and historian William Scott Wilson about the real-life Musashi Miyamoto, the inspiration for the hero of the films, and a booklet with essays by film historian Stephen Prince and translator William Scott Wilson. You can read Stephen Prince's essay here.

 

For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs, Blu-rays and streaming video for June 26


 

Plus 'Quartet' with Maggie Smith, 'Brass Teapot,' 'The Last Exorcism Part II,' and more

By SeanAx 44 minutes ago

"Stoker" (Fox), the American debut of South Korean director Park Chan-wook ("Oldboy"), stars Mia Wasikowska, Matthew Goode, and Nicole Kidman as an uneasy family with a dark legacy. Videodrone's review is here.

 

"Jack the Giant Slayer" (New Line), Bryan Singer's entry in the fairy tale-as-big-screen-a​dventure-spectacle moviemaking, stars Nicholas Hoult as the titular Jack, Ewan McGregor as a dashing knight who leads the charge up the beanstalk to save the princess (Eleanor Tomlinson), Stanley Tucci doing villain duty as the snide turncoat, and Ian McShane and Bill Nighy. It also reunites Singer with longtime collaborators Christopher McQuarrie (who takes a hand in the screenplay) and John Ottman (music and editing).

 

"[A]n impressive cast and an action-packed second half make the film suited to anyone eager for an escapist fantasy outing," recommends MSN film critic Kate Erbland. ""Jack the Giant Slayer" struggles to find proper pacing and tone for its first half, bogged down by Singer's apparent eagerness to get up the stalk and into the action while also attempting to get his audience invested in a multitude of characters. It's all much better (and much more entertaining) once the herd has been thinned and we can focus on the characters and plots that are truly engaging."

 

Blu-ray, Blu-ray 3D, and DVD, with deleted scenes, a gag reel, and an UltraViolet digital copy for download and instant streaming. The Blu-ray editions feature the "Becoming a Giant Slayer" mode, which allows you to branch off to see featurettes and other supplements while watching the movie (hosted by Nicholas Holt). Also On Demand

 

"Quartet" (Anchor Bay), the directorial debut of Dustin Hoffman, takes us into more grown-up territory, with Maggie Smith as flamoyant opera diva who moves into a home for retired musicians just as they prepare for a fundraising concert. Tom Courtney is her former husband and Pauline Collins and Billy Connolly fill out the foursome of the title. "All these very conventional setups and machinations being what they are, the movie actually becomes an active pleasure once the players are finally set in their places," recommends MSN film critic Glenn Kenny. "The writing -- the movie was scripted by Ronald Harwood, who won an Oscar for "The Pianist," and he adapted it from his own play -- is sharper and wittier and more generally astute than you get in almost every other help-the-aged picture that comes along these days."

 

Blu-ray and DVD, with commentary by director Dustin Hoffman and a collection of short featurettes. Also On Demand and at Redbox

 

"The Brass Teapot" (Magnolia) stars Juno Temple and Michael Angarano as a young couple who discover a magical brass teapot that pays off every time they hurt themselves, which pits their greed against their well-being. MSN film critic Kate Erbland writes that "Bolstered by charming chemistry between its leads, "The Brass Teapot" is a fun enough watch, but for a film that attempts to speak on such big topics as morality, greed, and fidelity, it has little lasting value." Blu-ray and DVD, with director commentary, featurettes, interviews, and deleted scenes.


Click on "More" below to continue reading

 
Tags: Reviews

Videodrone's take on the biggest, best, coolest and culty-ist releases of the week

By SeanAx 50 minutes ago

New Releases:

"Stoker" (Fox), the American debut of South Korean director Park Chan-wook ("Oldboy"), plays like a vampire movie without a vampire, at least not one in the mythic sense of the term. Mia Wasikowska is dreamy and uneasy as a teenage girl in a family who discovers her dark family legacy and Park directs with elegance and eerie suggestion, layering the film in atmosphere and texture you can almost reach out and touch. Matthew Goode and Nicole Kidman co-star. Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand. Videodrone's review is here.

 

Bryan Singer directs "Jack the Giant Slayer" (New Line), a fairy tale transformed into a big-budget adventure spectacle moviemaking with Nicholas Hoult as the titular Jack and Ewan McGregor as a dashing knight. Blu-ray, Blu-ray 3D, DVD, and On Demand. Reviewed on Videodrone here.

 

More grown-up is "Quartet" (Anchor Bay), the directorial debut of Dustin Hoffman with a cast of British veterans (Maggie Smith, Tom Courtney, Pauline Collins, and Billy Connelly) as retired musicians. Blu-ray, DVD, On Demand and at Redbox

 

"The Brass Teapot" (Magnolia, Blu-ray and DVD) is a black comedy about a young couple (Juno Temple and Michael Angarano) with a modern magic lamp, "21 & Over" (Fox, Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand), gets humor out of binge-drinking antics, and "Movie 43" (Fox, Blu-ray and DVD) features big stars behaving badly in a skit feature.

 

Horrors this week include "The Last Exorcism Part II" (Sony, Blu-ray, DVD, On Demand and at Redbox) and "American Mary" (Xlrator, Blu-ray and DVD). And from France comes the comedy "Let My People Go!" (Zeitgeist, DVD), which stirs gay and Jewish clichés into a cultural satire.

 

Most releases are also available as digital download and VOD via iTunes, Amazon, and other web retailers and video services.

 

TV on Disc:

The Sundance original series "Rectify" (Anchor Bay) follows a week in the life of a man released into the world after spending 19 years -- over half of his life -- on death row. Created by actor and award-winning filmmaker Ray McKinnon, this isn't a murder mystery -- the suspicion of his guilt hangs over him like a cloud any we don't get any easy answers -- it's a character drama and it's one of the best shows of 2013. Six episodes on DVD with supplements.

 

"The Wild West" (BBC), a British co-production with Discover Channel from 2006, looks at the true stories behind General George Custer, Wyatt Earp, and Billy the Kid. "Call the Midwife: Season Two" (BBC, Blu-ray and DVD) continues the hit BBC series with 8 episodes, all with footage unseen in the American run.

 

"Body of Proof: The Complete Third Season" (ABC, DVD) presents the final season of the crime procedural with Dana Delaney as a forensic pathologist. Also arriving are the most recent runs of the comedies "Wilfred: The Complete Season Two" (Fox, Blu-ray and DVD) from FX and "Drop Dead Diva: The Complete Fourth Season" (Sony, DVD) from Lifetime, among others.

 

"Jungle Book: The Adventures of Mowgli" (Shout Factory, DVD) collects the entire 1989 animated series from Japan on six disc.

 

Cool and Classic:

"Marketa Lazarova" (Criterion) is the (re)discovery of the year so far, a 1967 immersion into a medieval culture of warring feudal lords, a film of primal imagery, poetic filmmaking, and ephemeral storytelling that looks hewn out of the stone and wood and the very earth from where it was shot. It is amazing, and the Criterion edition comes from a superb restoration and features a rich collection of supplemental interviews to give American viewers background and context. Blu-ray and DVD.

 

Joe Dante directs "The Howling" (Shout Factory), a werewolf horror with dark humor, a pack mentality, and an earthy, feral sensibility (not mention Dante's love of old Hollywood thrillers and stars), and it gets the special edition treatment for Blu-ray and DVD.

 

"Safety Last" (Criterion) is the most famous of Harold Lloyd's silent comedies (it's the one with Harold hanging from the clock above the streets of Los Angeles) and "Things to Come" (Criterion) is the visually impressive (if dramatically stodgy) 1936 film version of the H.G. Wells novel. Both on Blu-ray and DVD from new digital film transfers, with supplements.

 

"Hard Times" (Twilight Time, Blu-ray), the directorial debut of Walter Hill, sends Charles Bronson bare-knuckle-brawling his way through Depression-era New Orleans. It hold up quite well, but I can't say the same for "Lifeforce" (Shout Factory, Blu-ray+DVD Combo), an undernourished science-fiction horror from Tobe Hooper about energy vampires from space.

 

Two early thirties films starring Bette Davis -- "Of Human Bondage" (Kino Classics) and "Hell's House" (Kino Classics) -- are newly remastered from archival prints preserved by the Library of Congress and released on Blu-ray and DVD.

 

Streams and Channels:

The newest arrivals on Netflix are usually the most popular but not always the best, as "Branded" (2012), a sci-fi thriller about corporate mind control starring Ed Stoppard, Leelee Sobieski, and Jeffrey Tambor, and "Super" (2011), a grimy superhero satire with Rainn Wilson as a costumed nutcase, attest.

 

But for great badness, check out "Miami Connection" (1987), a gonzo B-movie from the eighties about a synth-rock band of Taekwondo black belts versus a gang of drug-dealing motorcycle Ninjas in Orlando.

 

"American Wedding" (2003), the third official film in the "American Pie" series, finds the sex-obsessed boys turned into sex-obsessed adults. More serious is "Lost and Delirious" (2001), a teen melodrama of first love which may find new audiences thanks to Jessica Pare, now finding fame in "Mad Men."

 

Also newly arrived: "Rolling Thunder" (1977), starring William Devane and Tommy Lee Jones, and the classic Bette Davis dramas "Hell's House" (1932) and "Of Human Bondage" (1934), which arrive same week as the new disc editions from Kino.

 

For instant TV, there is "Hit & Miss: Season 1" is a crime drama offbeat even for British TV -- it stars Chloë Sevigny as a transgender assassin -- and the Disney Channel sitcom "My Babysitter's a Vampire: Seasons 1 and 2."

 

New On Demand:

"Jack the Giant Slayer," the Bryan Singer production that sends Nicholas Hoult and Ewan McGregor up the beanstalk to fight giants, and "Stoker," a darkly dreamy thriller with Mia Wasikowska, Matthew Goode, and Nicole Kidman, arrive On Demand same day as disc.

 

Also new is "Quartet" with Maggie Smith and Tom Courtenay, the comedy "21 and Over" and the horror film "The Last Exorcism Part II" (the unrated version).

 

Available same day as theatrical debut is the horror film "Maniac" with Elijah Wood (Friday, June 21) and the comedy "Breakup at a Wedding" (Tuesday, June 18), and coming advance of disc is "The Girl," a drama with Abbie Cornish and Will Patton.

 

Available from Redbox this week:

"Quartet" (Anchor Bay, Blu-ray and DVD), for the grown-ups, and "The Last Exorcism Part II" (Sony, Blu-ray and DVD), for the horror-hungry youngsters, arrive same day as video stores and retail.

 

Also arriving in Redbox kiosks this week is "Side Effects" (Universal, Blu-ray and DVD), Steven Soderbergh's medical drama-turned-psychological thriller with Jude Law and Rooney Mara (reviewed here), and "Beautiful Creatures" (Warner, Blu-ray and DVD), the first film in a new supernatural teen romance franchise (reviewed here).

 

Complete calendar of releases after the jump. Click on "More" below

 

For a calendar of upcoming releases, click here

 

An eerie American thriller from the Korean director of 'Oldboy'

By SeanAx Mon 2:59 PM

"Stoker" (Fox) - Hollywood is always drafting new talent from abroad, especially from thriving cinema cultures. From Mexico, we received an injection of new blood thanks to Guillermo Del Toro, Alfonso Cauron, and Alejandro González Iñárritu. Back in the nineties, it was the Hong Kong action stars on both sides of the camera, from Jackie Chan and Chow Yun-fat to John Woo and Corey Yuen.

 

For the past few years, South Korea has been leading the Asian wave of hit action movies, horror films, and thrillers and Hollywood has once again taken notice. 2013 marks the respective American debuts of three top South Korean directors: Kim Jee-woon ("The Good, the Bad, the Weird," "I Saw the Devil"), who made the Arnold Schwarzenegger come-back film "The Last Stand" (released earlier this year on disc and reviewed here); Bong Joon-ho ("The Host"), whose end-of-the-world thriller "Snowpiercer" is due for release later this year; and Park Chan-wook ("Oldboy," "Thirst"), director of "Stoker," a film that doesn't fit within the usual genre parameters.


I like to think of "Stoker" as a vampire movie without a vampire. At least not in the mythic sense of the term. Mia Wasikowska is dreamy and uneasy as India Stoker, a teenage girl who is preternaturally attuned to the world and disconnected from the kids around her. Matthew Goode is creepily calm and seductive as the uncle she never even knew existed until he arrives for a funeral and stays on in the family manor (he is her Uncle Charlie, in fact, an offhanded reference to Hitchcock's take on another dark uncle-niece relationship). Nicole Kidman is dizzy and disconnected as her weak and ineffectual mother. She seems to want to be there for her daughter, but she hardly seems present in the world at all.

 

Park sculpts the film, directed from an original script by Wentworth Miller, beautifully. We see the world through the heightened senses of India as she works through the loss of her father while attempting to measure this smiling, hypnotic uncle who has drifted into her life. He presents himself as her dark guardian angel, attempting to seduce India with his confidence, his power, and his violence (he seduction of the mother is more literal), but she has a more savvy understanding of the depths of his darkness.

 

There is blood and brutality and the icy threats under silent intimidation, but done with such elegance and eerie suggestion it feels like a dream. Park layers the film in atmosphere and texture, shuffling flashbacks and dreams into the present, all part of India's journey to the heart of the family legacy her father always knew she would inherit. As you can guess, I was captivated by this world and by Park's mesmerizing mix of the visceral and ethereal.


 

"Mia Wasikowska does remarkably disciplined work as India, and Park shoots her in a way that makes the bones of her statuesque body give as much of a performance as the actress herself does," agrees MSN film critic Glenn Kenny, but he's less enthralled by the eerie tale and atmosphere: "the material itself, while aspiring to some level of misterioso, is about as blunt and obvious as the hammer that figures so prominently in Park's prior "Old Boy."… There's also the slight matter of the movie's central fallacy, which is a belief that all a work of art needs in order to commune with The Irrational is merely to make no damn sense."

 

Blu-ray and DVD, the supplements on the Blu-ray release only: the featurette "An Exclusive Look: A Filmmakers Journey," three short theatrical behind-the-scenes featurettes, a musical performance from the "Red Carpet Premiere," and deleted scenes. The Blu-ray also includes a Digital HD UltraViolet digital copy for download and instant streaming.

 

Also VOD, digital download, and On Demand


For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs, Blu-rays and streaming video for week of June 18

 

Veteran movie producer Lynda Obst explains it all in an excerpt from her book 'Sleepless in Hollywood'

By SeanAx Mon 8:57 AM

We all know that DVD sales have dropped drastically since the heyday of the mid-2000s, and Blu-ray hasn't come close to making up the difference. Streaming media and VOD has cut into disc rentals and thousands of rental stores have shuttered in the last eight years, resulting in huge drop in disc sales for rental libraries. Digital copies are challenging individual sales. It's changed the way we collect and watch movies at home.

 

It also changed the way Hollywood makes movies, and the kinds of movies that get made, says Lynda Obst, a veteran Hollywood producer with such credits as "The Fisher King," "Sleepless in Seattle," and "How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days" (okay, so they weren't all classics).

 

Bing: "Sleepless in Hollywood" by Lynda Obst

 

In an excerpt from her new book "Sleepless in Hollywood: Tales from the New Abnormal in the Movie Business" featured at Salon, she lays out the economics of Hollywood and the business model shaken by the loss of disc sale revenues, in a conversation with producer Peter Chermin:

 

This was, literally, a Great Contraction. Something drastic had happened to our industry, and this was it. Surely there were other factors: Young males were disappearing into video games; there were hundreds of home entertainment choices available for nesting families; the Net. But slicing a huge chunk of reliable profits right out of the bottom line forever?
 
This was mind-boggling to me, and I’ve been in the business for thirty years. Peter continued as I absorbed the depths and roots of what I was starting to think of as the Great Contraction. “Which means if nothing else changed, they would all be losing money. That’s how serious the DVD downturn is. At best, it could cut their profit in half for new movies.”

 

Which brings up a question: what was the business model before disc? Or even before glory days of VHS home video rentals?

 

I guess you'll have to buy the book for that. In the meantime, I can now justify my disc purchases as my contribution to saving Hollywood.


You can read the complete excerpt here.

 

"Sleepless in Hollywood: Tales from the New Abnormal in the Movie Business" by Lynda Obst is published by Simon & Schuster, Inc.

 

Plus 'The Loving Story,' 'Mumia,' American poets, and more

By SeanAx Sun 12:34 PM

These are all DVD and VOD only, unless otherwise noted.

 

"Brooklyn Castle" (Millennium), which won the Audience Award at the 2012 SXSW Film Festival, profiles the championship-caliber inner-city chess program in New York as it was on the verge of even greater glory when the program budget was suddenly slashed. "There is no cinematic way to show a chess game," confesses Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert. "But you can photograph eyes and smiles, and the pride on parents’ faces. And Rochelle’s glow as she’s presented with the title of master, and the four-year college scholarship awarded by the same tournament." More reviews here. Also available on Netflix.

 

"The Loving Story" (Docurama) recounts the landmark civil rights case surrounding the marriage of Richard and Mildred Loving, an interracial union that was ruled illegal by a Virginia judge in 1958, a case that they spent nine years fighting all the way to the Supreme Court. "But there are other reasons to watch this film besides feel-good expediency," writes New York Times TV critic Alessandra Stanley. "The improbably named Lovings, Mildred and Richard, make a compelling couple, and not just because she is half-black, half-Native American and he is good ol’ boy white. In a rich collection of 16-millimeter film, old news clips and still photographs, the Lovings don’t look like two people caught up in a cause, they seem like two people caught up in each other." The film debuted on HBO in 2012. More reviews here.

 

Theatrical:

"Mumia: Long Distance Revolutionary" (First Run), a portrait of the Black Panther Mumia Abu-Jamam jailed for the shooting of a Philadelphia police officer, is "More a deification than a documentary," writes Philadelphia Inquirer film critic Steven Rea. "[Director} Vittoria offers lots of context - about the Black Panthers (Abu-Jamal was a member), MOVE (Abu-Jamal, a Philadelphia radio reporter, covered the group and its combative history with police and city officials), George Wallace, and Frank Rizzo - the events of Dec. 9, 1981, are barely examined." Includes the short film "Manufacturing Guilt."

 

"As Goes Janesville" (Facets) looks at the economic state of the heartland from the ground zero of Janesville, Wisconsin, after the closing of GM factory threw much of the town out of work. The disc includes both the theatrical version of the film and the shorter cut that played on the PBS documentary showcase "Independent Lens." Mike Hale reviews the latter for The New York Times.

 

Two portraits of American poets: "Ferlinghetti: A Rebirth of Wonder" (First Run), beat poet and founder of City Lights Bookstore, and "The Life and Times of Allen Ginsberg" (Docurama), getting a re-release in a two-disc special edition with six hours of bonus material.

 

"Aroused" (Ketchup) profiles 16 female stars of the adult film industry and "Charge" (Docurama) is a motorcycle doc with an environmental slant: it looks at the world's first zero-emissions grand prix.

 

TV:

"Journey of the Universe" (Shelter Island), a documentary on the relationship to humans to the cosmic origins of the universe and the Earth, won a regional Emmy award in California. The hour-long production was produced out of San Francisco but shot on the Greek island of Samos. It arrives on disc with a companion collection "Conversations of the Universe" (Shelter Island), a four-disc of interviews with scientists, historians, and environmentalists.

 

"The Ultimate Guide to the Presidents" (History), originally made for The History Channel, is the eight-part look at how the Oval Office has evolved over more than 200 years through 43 Presidents. The three-disc set includes 30 minutes of bonus footage.

 

"The Ghost Army" (PBS) profiles the secret American military squad that bluffed the Nazis by creating false images of troop movements in World War II, and "The Economic Meltdown" (PBS) is a five-part series on how the America fiscal fallout triggered a global crisis. Both originally made for PBS.

 

Foreign language:

"The Law in These Parts" (Cinema Guild), which looks at the military legal system put in place by Israel in the occupied Palestinian territories over forty years ago, won the Documentary Grand Jury Prize at Sundance. Hebrew with English subtitles. Reviews here.

 

The Mexican documentary "El Sicario (Room 164)" (Icarus) is built on an interview with an anonymous Ciudad Juarez hitman (Spanish with English subtitles) and "Vivan Las Antipodas" (Docurama) visits four antipodal pairs (locations on exact opposite sides of the Earth) to compare and contrast the cultures (English, Spanish, Shanghainese, and Tswana with English subtitles).

 

Miscellany:

Previously reviewed is "The Rolling Stones: Crossfire Hurricane" (Eagle Rock, Blu-ray and DVD), a nearly two-hour tour through a rich array of archival clips and counterpoint with new interviews by the band. More here.

 

Also note that HBO's summer documentary series is underway, with a new documentary feature debuting every Monday night through August 12 and accessible to HBO subscribers through HBO GO. "Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer," which won the World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award for Punk Spirit at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, opened the series on June 10. More here.


For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs, Blu-rays and streaming video for week of June 11

 

Roger Corman launches a subscription service on YouTube at a drive-in price

By SeanAx Sat 11:45 AM

Roger Corman, the last man standing to claim the title of King of the Bs, is also one of the most business savvy producers to build a film library. For decades, Corman has leased his library of over 400 movies to various cable, VHS, DVD, Blu-ray, and streaming services.

 

Now he's launched his own streaming service. On Thursday, June 13, Corman's Drive-In debuted as a subscription channel on YouTube. The channel debuts with 30 initial offerings, with plans to add 30 more each month, at a bargain price of $3.99 a month. You can try it out with a 14-day free trial

 

Among the first wave of Corman productions are "Cry Baby Killer" (1958), which gave Jack Nicholson his first leading role; "Piranha" (1978), directed by Joe Dante from a John Sayles script; the goofy headtrip "Brain Dead" (1990) from Adam Simon; the low-budget "Star Wars" rip-off "Star Crash" (1978) and the "Alien" knock-off "Forbidden World" (1982).

 

And there a couple that Corman himself directed as well, including the super-cheap monster movie "Attack of the Crab Monsters" (1957) and his original cult black comedy "The Little Shop of Horrors" (1960).

 

In addition to the films, Corman offers some behind-the-scenes bits (the sort you can find on the disc editions of the films) and new video shorts with Corman talking sharing stories and trivia about the films.

 

Susan King profiles the new project at Los Angeles Times.

 

Ever the promoter, Corman put together a nearly 8-minute trailer of highlights from films currently on the site and/or soon to be added. You can view the clip reel after the jump. Click on "More" below.

 

This prize package includes eight Blu-ray releases and 'The Henry Fonda Collection" DVD box set

By SeanAx Sat 11:21 AM

To celebrate Father's Day, MSN and Fox Home Video are teaming up to offer you a cornucopia of goodies, classic and contemporary, from Bruce Willis in "A Good Day to Die Hard" (Blu-ray) and "Die Hard: 25th Anniversary Blu-ray Collection" to "The Henry Fonda Collection" (DVD), for movie-loving dads.


And we've got a poll going on Facebook too: who's the most badass dad in the movie?

 

The collection features eight recent Blu-ray releases and ten DVDs altogether. There's something here for every dad. Here's the rundown.

 

The Blu-rays are:

"A Good Day to Die Hard" with Bruce Willis, back for his fifth turn as John McLain, and this time he teams up with his son;

"Die Hard: 25th Anniversary Blu-ray Collection" featuring the first four "Die Hard" films and a bonus disc;

"One Hour Photo," the dark drama with Robin Williams; "The Verdict" starring Paul Newman;

"Brubaker" starring Robert Redford;

"Viva Zapata!" starring Marlon Brando;

"12 Rounds 2: Reloaded" with WWE star Randy Orton;
"The Last Ride" with Henry Thomas as Hank Williams;

 

And on DVD:

"The Henry Fonda Collection" with ten features spanning 1939 to 1958 in a compact box set of ten discs.

 

Details after the jump. Click on "More" below.

 
Tags: contest

Videodrone's take on the biggest, best, coolest and culty-ist releases of the week

By SeanAx Fri 10:16 AM

New Releases:

James Franco plays "Oz the Great and Powerful" (Disney) in the Frank L. Baum adaptation from director Sam Raimi that plays out as a prequel to the classic "The Wizard of Oz." Mila Kunis, Rachel Weisz, and Michelle Williams play the witches of Oz in this lavish production, originally released in 3D, and are more interesting characters than the shallow huckster who grows into a hero. Blu-ray, Blu-ray 3D, DVD, and VOD. Videodrone's review is here.

 

"Snitch" (Summit) is a Dwayne Johnson thriller that favors gritty crime drama over action movie superheroism. Susan Sarandon and Barry Pepper co-star. Blu-ray, DVD, On Demand, VOD, and at Redbox. Reviewed on Videodrone here.

 

"Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters" (Paramount) stars Jeremy Renner and Gemma Arterton as fairy tale character grown up into fantasy warriors dispatching wicked witches and other monsters preying on the hamlets of medieval Germany. Blu-ray, Blu-ray 3D, DVD, On Demand, VOD, and at Redbox. More from Videodrone here, including an exclusive clip from the Blu-ray extras.

 

On the indie front is Quentin Dupieux's "Wrong" (Drafthouse, Blu-ray and DVD), an absurdist tale of a man looking for his lost dog, and from the small screen comes "Betty & Coretta" (Lionsgate, DVD) with Angela Bassett and Mary J. Blige as civil rights leaders Coretta Scott King and Dr. Betty Shabazz.

 

And arriving from foreign shores is the erotic thriller "The Taste of Money" (IFC, DVD) from South Korean filmmaker Im Sang-soo, plus "11 Flowers" (First Run, DVD) from China and "The Monk" (Flatiron, DVD) with Vincent Cassel from France.

 

Most releases are also available as digital download and VOD via iTunes, Amazon, and other web retailers and video services.

 

Browse the complete New Release Rack here

  

TV on Disc:

"The Newsroom: The Complete First Season" (HBO), Aaron Sorkin's HBO original series set at a cable news channel that is remarkably idealistic and full of brilliant people who have sharp political instincts and poor impulse control, arrives a month before the second season launches. 10 episodes on Blu-ray and DVD. Videodrone's review is here.

 

"House of Cards: The Complete First Season" (Sony) brings the Netflix original series, produced by David Fincher and starring Kevin Spacey as a savagely Machiavellian politician, to disc. 13 episodes on Blu-ray and DVD. Reviewed on Videodrone here.

 

"Major Crimes: The Complete First Season" (Warner) reworks the TNT original series "The Closer" with Mary McDonnell taking charge of the crack Major Crimes squad, and I actually prefer this incarnation. 10 episodes on DVD.

 

"Killing Lincoln" (Fox, Blu-ray and DVD) is the docudrama originally produced for the National Geographic Channel and "After People" (History) collects four speculative documentaries on DVD. Also arriving this week: "Wedding Band: The Complete First Season" (Fox, DVD), "Burn Notice: Season Six" (Fox, DVD) and "Perry Mason: The Ninth and Final Season, Vol. 1" (Paramount, DVD)

 

Flip through the TV on Disc Channel Guide here

  

Cool and Classic:

"Enter the Dragon: 40th Anniversary" (Warner) is a new edition of the film that elevated martial arts star Bruce Lee to the status of international icon, and the last film that Lee completed before his untimely death. Blu-ray and DVD with new supplements. Videodrone's review is here.

 

Ingmar Bergman's "Wild Strawberries" (Criterion), a road movie transformed into a contemplative journey of an aging professor into his unexamined past, debuts on Blu-ray in a new restored digital film transfer. Reviewed on Videodrone here.

 

"At Long Last Love" (Fox) is the disc debut of Peter Bogdanovich's musical which flopped on release but is getting a second look in a new cut on Blu-ray and DVD.

 

"Richard Pryor – No Pryor Restraint: Life in Concert" (Shout Factory) is a substantial package with all three concert films of the pioneering comedian and seven CDs of live performances, and "Rockshow" (Eagle Vision) delivers the 1980 Paul McCartney and Wings concert film on Blu-ray and DVD.

 

From Disney comes three Blu-ray+DVD Combo Pack double features, including "Atlantis: The Lost Empire / Milo's Return" (Disney), and on the cult side, James Vanbebber’s "The Manson Family" (Severin) debuts on Blu-ray.

 

The MOD movies wrap this week looks at "Sitting Pretty" (20th Century Fox Cinema Archives), "A Guy Named Joe" (Warner Archive), and other classics making their disc debut.

 

All of the Cool and Classic here

  

Streams and Channels:

"Upstream Color" (2013), the latest low-budget / big-ideas headtrip from filmmaker Shane Carruth, hits Netflix mere weeks after its disc release. Not so much recommended as simply new is "Tyler Perry's Madea's Witness Protection" (Lionsgate), which pairs Madea (Tyler Perry) up with Eugene Levy. Far less mainstream is "Kaboom" (2010) from queer icon Gregg Araki.

 

Reaching back a few more years, there's the romantic thriller "The Deep End" (2001) with Tilda Swinton, the heist film "The Score" (2001) with Robert DeNiro and Edward Norton, and "At Close Range" (1986) with Sean Penn and Christopher Walken.

 

And for instant TV there is the ABC Family Channel series "Pretty Little Liars: Season 3," "Private Practice: Season 6" (which is the final season of the medical series), and "The Glades: Season 3."

 

HBO's summer documentary series begins this week with "Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer," a portrait of the art collective tried on charges of religious hatred in Russia. More on the series at Channeling Movies.

 

Browse more streaming and/or cable offerings here

  

New On Demand:

"Snitch," starring Dwayne Johnson as a blue collar guy who goes undercover in a drug ring to save his son from prison, and "Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters," the revisionist fairy tale as action fantasy with Jeremy Renner and Gemma Arterton, are available same day as disc and VOD.

 

Available on Friday, June 14, same day as theaters, is "Berberian Sound Studio," an unusual tribute to the art of Italian horror filmmaking starring Toby Jones. Also making the rounds in theaters is "As Cool As I Am," a comedy with Claire Danes and James Marsden.

 

Arriving before disc is the comedy anthology "Movie 43" with an all-star cast but poor reviews, and the horror film "Twixt" from Francis Ford Coppola. 

 

Available from Redbox this week:

"Snitch" (Summit, Blu-ray and DVD) with Dwayne Johnson and "Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters" (Paramount, Blu-ray and DVD) with Jeremy Renner and Gemma Arterton, are available same day as video stores and VOD.

 

Also arriving in Redbox kiosks this week: "Cloud Atlas" (Warner, Blu-ray and DVD), the sprawling, dazzling, ambitious collaboration between "Matrix" makers Lana and Andy Wachowski and Germany's Tom Tykwer, and "Frankie Go Boom" (Universal, DVD), a comedy about sibling rivalry and practical joking gone awry starring Charlie Hunnam and Chris O'Dowd.

 

For a calendar of upcoming releases, click here

 

about the blogger

Sean Axmaker, Videodrone blogger

Sean Axmaker is MSN's DVD columnist and the editor of Parallax View. He writes for Turner Classic Movies Online and his work has appeared in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Seattle Weekly, The Stranger, Senses of Cinema, Asian Cult Cinema, Psychotronic Video and "The Scarecrow Video Guide."

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