Your guide to our coverage of the new DVD/Blu-ray releases
Here's what's new on DVD and Blu-ray this week as featured on Videodrone
Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs for September 27
New Releases:
'Transformers: Dark of the Moon' - Giant Robot Redux
'Carlos' – The Making of a Terrorist Superstar
Foreign Affairs: 'Viva Riva!,' 'The Stool Pigeon' and more from Italy, China, South Korea, India and elsewhere
The New Release Rack: 'Transformers,' 'Carlos,' 'The Ledge'
TV on DVD:
'The Hour' – Cold War and Hot News at the BBC
TV on DVD Channel Guide: "Queer at Folk" U.K., "How to Make It in America," plus new seasons of "How I Met Your Mother" and every "CSI" franchise and many more
The Cool and the Collectible:
Cult Watch: Basket Case of Blood
Cool, Classic and Collectible: Silent 'Treasures' – 'The West' and 'The Phantom Carriage,' plus films from Italy's Fernando di Leo, India's Ritwik Ghatak and Ma and Pa Kettle
Blu-ray Debuts:
'Ben-Hur' Turns 50 with a Lavish New Box Set
'Footloose' Style Guide (with an exclusive clip)
Blu-ray Round-up: Buster Keaton comedies and Guillermo del Toro's 'Mimic: The Director's Cut'
Coming up next week:
"Fast Five" (Universal)
"Scream 4" (Anchor Bay)
"Submarine" (Anchor Bay)
"African Cats" (Disney)
"Amer" (Olive)
"Buck" (IFC)
"Jig" (Screen Media)
"Alfred Hitchcock: The Essentials Collection" (Universal)
"The Pee-Wee Herman Show On Broadway" (Image)
"Friday the 13th: The Ultimate Collection" (Paramount)
"Prohibition" (PBS/Paramount)
"The Walking Dead: Special Edition" (Anchor Bay)
"Planet Earth: Six Disc Special Edition" (BBC)
"The Honeymooners Lost Episodes: The Complete Restored Series" (MPI)
"Friday Night Lights: The Complete Series" (Universal)
"Bored to Death: The Complete Second Season" (HBO)
"In Treatment: The Complete Third Season" (HBO)
"Beavis And Butt-Head: Mike Judge’s Most Wanted" (Paramount)
"The Lion King" (Blu-ray) (Disney)
"Pulp Fiction" (Blu-ray) (Lionsgate)
"Jackie Brown" (Blu-ray) (Lionsgate)
"Pee-wee's Big Adventure" (Blu-ray) (Warner)
"Salò, or 120 Days of Sodom" (Blu-ray) (Criterion)
"Harakiri" (Blu-ray) (Criterion)
| Tags: | Week in review |
Plus 'Ben-Hur,' 'The Blood Trilogy,' 'Footloose' and more
"Ben-Hur: 50th Anniversary Ultimate Collector’s Edition" (Warner) is the latest Oscar-winning epic to the Blu-ray treatment in a newly-remastered HD edition. Videodrone's review is here. "The Blood Trilogy" (Image) features the Blu-ray debut of three grindhouse gore classics from Herschel Gordon Lewis and "Basket Case" (Image) is Frank Henenlotters ingenious indie horror debut. Videodrone reviews them both here. "Footloose" (Paramount) gets its HD debut as the remake is set to hit theaters. See Videodrone's coverage (with an exclusive clip from the new edition) here.
Kino continues rolling out Keaton on Blu-ray with "Buster Keaton: Go West / Battling Butler" (Kino). "Go West" (1925) is a (for Keaton) subdued sentimental comedy about a city boy gone west and his attachment to a cute little heifer. And by that I mean an actual cow, a big-eyed bovine ostracized from the herd. They hardly smile at one another, but this inseparable pair is utterly charming and more convincing than the contrived romance between Keaton and the Rancher’s daughter, the official romantic interest of the film. Keaton eschews his usual brand of spirited physical gags and elaborate set pieces for the quiet sentimental comedy, and even the climactic urban cattle drive through downtown Los Angeles becomes a gently surreal spectacle: curious cattle wander from shop to shop without breaking so much as a teacup and Keaton shoos then out like they were children lost children.
"Battling Butler" (1926) features Keaton in the familiar role of the meek son of affluence, who is sent away by his father to toughen up and ends up mistaken for a boxing champion, a charade he carries on to impress a rustic girl. It's one of Keaton's weaker stories but features creative gags, physical invention and, of course, the greatest stone-faced takes in silent cinema. Features a bonus 1923 comedy short also called "Go West" but featuring a cast of monkeys, a rare 60-minute audio recording of Keaton, galleries of stills and excerpts from an unproduced Keaton screenplay.
"Mimic: The Director's Cut" (Lionsgate) is Guillermo del Toro's reworking of his American film debut, a sly little horror about insects that have evolved in the sewers and subway tunnels to become human predators, thanks to a growth spurt and an ingenious adaptive mechanism that allows them to mimic human forms in the creepiest ways. The studio reworked the film slightly for release and del Toro, now quite the Hollywood genre auteur, has gone back to restore seven minutes of deleted scenes and re-edit certain sequences. ""Mimic" starts out smart and stays that way for almost two hours of non-stop scares," writes Glenn Erickson at DVD Savant, who finds that "In this longer version del Toro is able to suggest more interesting ideas…" The Blu-ray only release features all new supplements, including an introduction and commentary to this cut by del Toro, three featurettes and more deleted scenes. Also includes a bonus digital copy.
"Torso" (Blue Underground), a gruesome 1973 giallo from Italian horror director Sergio Martino, is a body count film about a masked maniac murdering and mutilating beautiful young college girls. When four co-eds (including Suzy Kendall and Tina Aumont) head off to a villa in the country, he decides to follow, and with a title like "Torso" you can imagine how well that turns out for them. There's some vague "Psycho" backstory involving a hazy childhood trauma but it's really all about the spectacle of sadistic, unmotivated violence. Martino has none of the grace of Dario Argento and executes (an appropriate term) the violence with a blunt viciousness, but it's still more stylish than most of the American slasher movie counterparts of the seventies. The Blu-ray features both the American cut and the uncut Italian version, in both Italian and English language versions (the uncut version features some scenes in Italian only, as they were never dubbed into English). Also features an interview with director Martino, the alternate U.S. credits, trailers and other promotional supplements.
Best Buy Exclusives:
Here are three Blu-ray debuts available exclusively (for the time being) from Best Buy: "Airplane!" (Paramount), arguably one of the funniest movies ever made (and featuring commentary, trivia and a "Long Haul Version" with deleted scenes), "The Naked Gun" (Best Buy Exclusive) from "Airplane!" co-creator David Zucker (with commentary) and "Planes, Trains and Automobiles" (Paramount) with Steve Martin, John Candy and lots of supplements.
For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs for September 27
Plus films from Italy's Fernando di Leo, India's Ritwik Ghatak and Ma and Pa Kettle
"Treasures 5: The West, 1898-1938" (Image), a collection of features, shorts, documentaries, newsreels, travelogues and fragments from the silent and early sound eras, is more about preservation and education than simple entertainment, but it is entertaining as well as revealing. It's a record of the American West as it was transforming from frontier to modern world, as viewed through fictional representations and documentary recordings. The fictions are generally (but not exclusively) westerns, from Broncho Billy and Tom Mix shorts to a Clara Bow comedy (yes, the silent cinema's "It" girl brings her sexy, seductive ways to the Yukon frontier in the delightful "Mantrap") but the non-fiction films include a marvelous scope of offerings. The span of formats presents a visual record that makes the case for film preservation better than any lecture. It's a treat for any fan of archival cinema, film history or visual documents of the early 20th century and a must for any silent film aficionado. Like me.
Dave Kehr, in his weekly home video column at The New York Times, celebrates the virtues and pleasures of this three-disc set more eloquently than I can: " the “Treasures” sets offer an invaluable glimpse of that monumental yet increasingly inaccessible achievement that was American moviemaking in the 20th century."
"The Phantom Carriage" (Criterion), directed by and starring Victor Sjöström, is one of the masterpieces of Swedish cinema and its reputation is well deserved. Where most of the great Swedish classics of the era were sweeping sagas set in the rugged landscape of grand outdoors (like his own "The Outlaw and His Wife"), this mix of folk tale, tragedy and redemptive melodrama is a more intimate work created in the controlled environment of the studio. Sjöström sculpts his images in light and shadow, from the squalid lives of his characters to the phantom images of Death's carriage collecting souls, and brings the performances down to level of nuance and quiet intensity that only rarely explodes in fury and self-disgust. It's remarkably modern for 1921, evoking D.W. Griffith at his most intimate and looking forward to the grace of Murnau's "Faust" and Sjöström's own American masterpieces. An international sensation, "The Phantom Carriage" brought Hollywood calling and the father of Swedish cinema answered. This was one of his final Swedish films but it is still considered his greatest.
Criterion presents its long-awaited home video debut in a superb edition on DVD and Blu-ray, beautifully mastered from a restored print from the Swedish Film Institute. Both DVD and Blu-ray feature commentary by film historian Casper Tybjerg and a choice of two scores, one lyrical and lovely score by composer/pianist Matti Bye and performed by a nine-piece ensemble (my preference), and the other by the experimental duo KTL. The generous collection of supplements includes a 16-minute interview clips of Ingmar Bergman discussing Sjöström (excerpted from the 1981 documentary "Victor Sjöström: A Portrait") and Peter Cowie's original visual essay "The Bergman Connection," which examines the film's influence on Bergman. Also features archival footage of the construction of Rasunda studio (where the film was shot) and a booklet with an essay by Paul Mayersberg.
Gangster movie specialist Fernando di Leo shifts genres for the sexploitation youth drama "To Be Twenty" (RaroVideo), about a pair of young liberated women from the provinces who hitchhike to Rome full of idealistic dreams and, after a series of erotic romps, end up mired in prostitution and criminal gangs. The film was heavily censored before release and the two-disc set features both the theatrical version and the uncensored director's cut. This set comes to DVD by way of a well-curated Italian edition featuring a documentary and a copy of the screenplay, and features a booklet with notes by Nathaniel Thompson.
"The Cloud-Capped Star" (Facets), from Indian film master Ritwik Ghatak (little seen in the U.S. but celebrated in India), is a 1960 family melodrama set in Calcutta and considered a classic of Indian cinema. Strictly Film School film critic Acquarello describes the film as "a visually sublime, idiosyncratically overripe, but provocative and deeply personal account of poverty, disillusionment, and exile" in his notes on Ritwik Ghatak. In Bengali with English subtitles, and features a video introduction and film notes by British film critic Derek Malcom.
"Ma & Pa Kettle Complete Comedy Collection" (Universal) features all ten films featuring the corny backwoods couple played by Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride. They are only supporting players in "The Egg and I" (1947), a comedy about city girl Claudette Colbert’s adventures in rural America when her husband (Fred MacMurray) indulges in his dream: chicken farming. No, it’s not a dry run for "Green Acres," simply a good-natured comedy with colorful country folk and a determined gentleman farmer who not only loves his work, but turns out to be quite good at it. The series continues with the antics of the spirited Ma Kettle, her lazy husband, their unusually responsible eldest son Tom (Richard Long), and their out-of-control brood of 15 kids in "Ma and Pa Kettle" (1949), where the family sets about refurbishing the family farm when Pa wins a slogan contest. The hijinks of this bunch are decidedly low key, your basic hick comedy written by Hollywood city slickers, but Main and Kilbride know how to sell the humor: she’s loud and loving as a mother hen with no pretensions and he’s a pleasantly irresponsible loafer who barely raises an eyebrow during his most audacious schemes to get out of working for a living. The luck of Pa continues when "Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town" (1950), Manhattan to be specific, after Pa wins another contest, and the collection is filled out with "Ma and Pa Kettle Back on the Farm" (1951), "Ma and Pa Kettle at the Fair" (1952), "Ma and Pa Kettle on Vacation" (1953), "Ma and Pa Kettle at Home" (1954) and "Ma and Pa Kettle at Waikiki" (1955), which also marked Percy Kilbride’s final film appearance. He was replaced in "The Kettles in the Ozarks" (1955) with Arthur Hunnicutt as a Kettle cousin and "The Kettles on Old MacDonald's Farm" (1957) with Parker Fennelly stepping in for Kilbride. Five discs in a standard case with hinged trays.
"Roger Corman’s Cult Classics: Vampires, Mummies & Monsters 2-Disc Special Edition" (Shout! Factory) is a grab bag of indifferent genre pictures of the seventies and eighties. "Lady Frankenstein" (1971) stars Joseph Cotten as Baron Frankenstein and Rosalba Neri as his daughter, and is presented in two different cuts. Stephanie Rothman directs the erotic "The Velvet Vampire" (1971), which features commentary by star Celeste Yarnall. "Time Walker" (1982) is a mummy movie with an alien connection and "Grotesque" (1987) is a horror film starring Linda Blair, who was hardly the mark of quality even before 1987. The two-disc set also features an interview with "Time Walker" star Kevin Brophy and producer Dimitri Villard and trailers.
And the rest:
"Herschell Gordon Lewis: The Godfather of Gore" (Image) from fellow cult horror director Frank Henenlotter, profiles the director of such sixties gore classics as "Two Thousand Maniacs." Videodrone gets and down and dirty with it here.
"Jackie Mason: One Angry Man" (SRO Entertainment) reworks the classic stage play "Twelve Angry Men" as a Broadway comedy for the comedian.
"Live From Tokyo" (MVD Visual) is a documentary on he underground music scene of Tokyo. "ZhuZhu Pets: Quest for Zhu" (Universal) is a direct to DVD feature from the TV series based on the line of toys.
"Buster Keaton: Go West / Battling Butler" (Kino) and "Footloose" (Paramount) are covered in Blu-ray but also get new DVD editions.
For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs for September 27
MSN has an exclusive clip from the new set
"Ben-Hur: 50th Anniversary Ultimate Collector’s Edition" (Warner) is the latest Oscar-winning epic to the Blu-ray treatment in a newly-remastered HD edition. Yes, it is a big, lumbering epic that can barely support its own weight, but then it has the square shoulder of the even squarer Charlton Heston to hold it up. And he does, with stiff masculinity and simmering, strutting pride, as the Jewish nobleman enslaved by the Romans (and specifically by his boyhood chum, Stephen Boyd).
Get a look behind the scenes of the film's legendary chariot race sequence in the MSN exclusive clip below, after the jump
Soberly show-offy and humorless, this super-production is a triumph of craft over art, spectacle over drama, and William Wyler is the perfect craftsman for the job. The roaring sea battle and the show stopping chariot race -- two of the most spectacular scenes of epic action ever mounted on Hollywood -- were helmed by unheralded second-unit superstar Andrew Marton and legendary stunt coordinator Yakima Canutt. They look as good as ever, even in the age of CGI, because digital still hasn't quite matched the presence of physical action. Jack Hawkins, Sam Jaffe, Frank Thring, Haya Harareet, Hugh Griffith, Martha Scott, and Cathy O’Donnell co-star. It won 11 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director (William Wyler ), Best Actor (Charlton Heston), and Best Supporting Actor (Hugh Griffith).
The film, restored from the original 65mm camera negative (complete with Overture and Entr’acte music) and presented in the MGM Camera 65 aspect ratio of 2.6:1 (the widest ever used theatrically), is spread across two discs on Blu-ray and features commentary by film historian T. Gene Hatcher with scene specific comments from Charlton Heston (Hatcher fills in the dead spots left by Heston when he recorded the track years before) and a music-only track showcasing Miklos Rozsa’s Oscar winning score.
Plus Jason Priestly is "Fitz" and new seasons of "How I Met Your Mother," every "CSI" franchise and many more
"The Hour" (BBC), a BBC mini-series set in the fifties, is an odd but intriguing hybrid of journalism drama and Cold War conspiracy thriller starring Ben Whishaw, Romola Garai and Dominic West star. Videodrone's review is here.
"Queer as Folk (Original U.K. Series): The Complete Collection" (Acorn) presents the entire run of the groundbreaking British series created by Russell T. Davies. Set in the gay culture of Manchester, the series was a minor phenomenon in Britain, very successful and not without some controversy, and also launched the careers of Aidan Gillen ("Game of Thrones") and Charlie Hunnam ("Sons of Anarchy") and spawned an American remake. For survey of the initial press response to the show, here's a piece from The Independent from 1999. The three-disc set also includes the featurette "What the Folk…?," deleted scenes with commentary, interviews and a 20-page booklet.
"How to Make It in America: The Complete First Season" (HBO), the half-hour dramedy from HBO, plays a bit like the flip side of "Entourage": guys on the streets of New York to hit the American Dream. Ben and Cam (Bryan Greenburg and Victor Rasuk) want to skip over the hard part and jump right in to the big time. It's not a matter of laziness -- these guys are constantly on the hustle as they try to put together their own hip fashion line with New York style -- simply ambition. But for all the show's attempt at street smart storylines and Big Apple atmosphere, with characters bouncing between living large and going broke, it's still a fantasy of living on wits, talent and smooth talk in the margins between art and commerce while leveraging the commerce of art. Lake Bell, Eddie Kaye Thomas, Scott "Kid Cudi" Mescudi, Shannyn Sossamon and Luis Guzman co-star. Eight episodes on two discs in a three-panel digipak, with cast and crew commentary on every episode, featurettes and deleted scenes. The second season begins on HBO in October.
Jason Priestly stars in "Call Me Fitz: The Complete First Season" (eOne), a black comedy made for Canadian cable about womanizing, morally bankrupt used car salesman who ends up working for a new guy on the lot who claims to be his conscience and is determined to make this unapologetic reprobate repent, or at least ease off on his worst instincts. Of course you know, this means war. 13 episodes on three discs, plus featurettes.
Another season:
"How I Met Your Mother: The Complete Season Six" (Fox) is still working toward that fateful meeting. Maybe. But while Ted (Josh Radnor) looks (this season, it looks like Jennifer Morrison may be the one), Marshall and Lily (Jason Segel and Alyson Hannigan) try to have baby and Barney (Neil Patrick Harris) continues his quest to conquer as many women as possible. Cobie Smulders co-stars and Katy Perry guest stars. 24 episodes on three discs, plus commentary on four episodes, deleted scenes and featurettes.
The entire "CSI" franchise rolls out last season's line-up "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation – The Eleventh Season" (Paramount) marks the final season for Laurence Fishburne as Dr. Ray Langston, who stars the season off recovering from a stabbing by a serial killer, and features a guest shot by Justin Bieber. 22 episodes on six discs, with commentary on two episodes, featurettes and deleted scenes.
"CSI: Miami – The Ninth Season" (Paramount), the far sunnier spin-off headlined by David Caruso, is back with Emily Procter, Adam Rodriguez, Rex Linn and the rest. 22 episodes on six discs, with commentary on two episodes, featurettes and deleted scenes. "CSI: New York - The Seventh Season" (Paramount) brings Sela Ward on to the team led by Gary Sinise's Detective Mac Taylor and features guest appearances by John Larroquette and Peter Fonda. 22 episodes on six discs plus featurettes. All collected in space-saving standard cases with tightly-packed hinged trays.
Also continuing on: "The Middle: The Complete Second Season" (Warner) with Patricia Heaton and Neil Flynn as overwhelmed parents in middle American (24 episodes on three discs), HBO's "Hung: The Complete Second Season" (HBO), the comedy of a part-time gigolo starring Thomas Jane, Jane Adams and Anne Heche (10 episode on two discs on DVD and Blu-ray, plus commentary, deleted scenes and a featurette), "Army Wives: The Complete Fifth Season" (ABC) from the Lifetime Network (13 episodes on three discs, plus a featurette and deleted scenes) and the animated "The Cleveland Show: The Complete Season Two" (Fox) (22 episodes on four discs, plus commentary and featurettes).
And on the vintage side... Who loves ya, baby? "Kojak: Season Two" (Shout! Factory) presents 24 episodes of the Telly Savalas cop show on six discs .
BritTV:
"Gavin & Stacey: The Complete Collection" (BBC) features all three seasons (plus the Christmas Special!) of the BAFTA-winning comedy of true love, from first meeting to married life, in a box set of five discs in three standard cases (one per season, of course). James Corden and Ruth Jones write and star as the titular couple, just a couple of normal kids from crazy families who fall in love. The first season was released a couple of years ago but this marks the debut the rest of the seasons, which are also available separately as "Gavin & Stacey: Season Two" (BBC) and "Gavin & Stacey: The Christmas Special and Season Three" (BBC).Also includes commentary on select episodes, interview, featurettes, outtakes and other supplements.
Colin Firth stars in the 1986 miniseries "Lost Empires" (Acorn), based on the novel by J.B. Priestly about a young man who joins his uncle's touring theatrical troupe. It's one of his earlier leading roles and the series features Laurence Olivier in a small role.
"New Tricks: Season Five" (Acorn), the British "Cold Case File" squad of aging cops and old-school attitude, presents 8 more episodes on three discs. And yeah, it's a lot of fun. "Art of the Western World" (Athena) is a nine-episode art history lesson from historian Michael Woods.
And the rest:
"Holly's World: The Complete Seasons 1 & 2" (MPI) and "Kendra: Seasons 2 & 3" (MPI) are evidence that there is life after being one of "The Girls Next Door" in the Playboy Mansion… if reality TV is your idea of life.
"The Looney Tunes Show: Season 1, Vol. 1" (Warner) features four episodes from the new Cartoon Network animated series with Bugs and Daffy. "Adventure Time: My Two Favorite People" (Warner), the first collection from of the Cartoon network series, features twelve episodes from the first two seasons. "Jeff Dunham: Controlled Chaos" (Paramount) is the latest stand-up concert special from the popular ventriloquist.
For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs for September 27
Grindhouse Gore from Frank Henenlotter and H.G. Lewis
Herschell Gordon Lewis was filmmaker with the mind of a promoter, which only makes sense coming from his background of marketing and salesmanship. But when he saw an opportunity, he pounced. After jumping into filmmaking with a series of "nudie cutie" sexploitation films, he and producer David F. Friedman inaugurated an entirely new genre of exploitation filmmaking with their “Blood” trilogy: the “gore” film. "The Blood Trilogy" (Image) presents all three film in the Blu-ray debut in all their scruffy, cheap glory. "Blood Feast" (1963), a bloody comedy of an Egyptian cultist who caters a party with a buffet of human parts, and "Color Me Blood Red" (1965), a comic gore film of mad painter who discovers a new shade of crimson in blood and starts slicing up his models for more paint, bookend the trilogy and are as arch and awkward as they are shamelessly grotesque.
But between the two films he made his grotesque masterpiece "Two Thousand Maniacs" (1964). The tale of Southern Civil War ghosts returning for revenge (“Oh the South’s gonna rise again…” ) is too quirky to be easily dismissed and too outrageous and unreal to be taken seriously. The mix of hillbilly humor and sadistic, sick horror creates a unique ambiance, and the odd hush that falls on the crowds when their revenge doesn’t bring the expected satisfaction adds an unexpected tone of regret, if the unsettled dead can have such feelings. One of the film's selling points was Connie Mason, a Playboy centerfold making her acting debut. Which is the only explanation for her casting, because it certainly isn't acting. And no, she stays fully clothed. Three films on one disc, presented in widescreen theatrical format (16x9) for the first time on home video, with commentary for each film by director Herschell Gordon Lewis and producer David F. Friedman, outtakes, vintage shorts and galleries of exploitation art.
Frank Henenlotter came from another generation of horror director, reared on the exploitation films of Lewis and others but with more on his mind than simply cashing in. He shot "Basket Case" (Image), his gruesome little 1982 cult indie-horror of brotherly love, on location in New York to get just the right sleazy 42nd Street atmosphere. Kevin VanHentenryck shuffles through the low budget exercise in grotesquery and gore with a guilty conscience as the "normal" brother sent by his deformed Siamese twin to take revenge on the doctors who separated the two and left the blobby brother to die. Most of the effects are shrewdly just off screen, with spurts of blood and gnarly hand dragging the character out of view to feed our imaginations, and a few bloody corpses left in the aftermath (an exception is a pre-Freddy multiple impalement with scalpels). The DIY effects of "Basket Case" may look naively amateur today but there’s a loving B-movie attitude and a genuine sense of character to the “monster,” the misshapen, fleshy, snaggle-toothed Belial. The Blu-ray debut is presented in the original Academy ratio (the pre-widescreen 1.33:1), as intended by Henenlotter, and features a new video introduction from Henenlotter along with commentary, outtakes, trailers and other supplements from the DVD edition.
On DVD only is the new documentary "Herschell Gordon Lewis: The Godfather of Gore" (Image), an affectionate portrait from directors Frank Henenlotter (a cult movie historian as well as a director) and Jimmy Maslon and producer Mike Vraney. Features an hour of deleted scenes, a trailer reel of Lewis films, a gallery of exploitation art and an archival nudie cutie short.
All three releases are produced by Something Weird Video and distributed in partnership with Image Entertainment.
For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs for September 27
Kevin Bacon talks about his hair and eighties style from the original 'Footloose'
The original 1984, MTV-driven "Footloose" (Paramount) debuts on Blu-ray in advance of the upcoming remake.
Kevin Bacon kicks up his heals in the dance rebellion teen drama as the big city kid with pop-music in the blood who moves to a small Midwestern town that the local minister (John Lithgow) has proclaimed a dancing-free zone. Naturally, the minister’s wild child daughter (Lori Singer) joins Bacon on his campaign to let the dance begin again. Let’s hear it for the boy!
The film gets a new DVD edition along with the Blu-ray debut, both with commentary tracks (one by star Kevin Bacon, another by producer Craig Zadan and writer Dean Pitchford), new interviews with Kevin Bacon and co-star Sarah Jessica Parker, new featurettes and Kevin Bacon’s Screen Test. The Blu-ray also features the previously released featurettes "Footloose: A Modern Musical" and "Songs That Tell a Story."
MSN has an exclusive clip from the new interview featurette "Let's Dance: Kevin Bacon on Footloose," where Bacon discusses how they settled in his distinctive hair style in the film.
For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs for September 27
And a whole rack of foreign films
Michael Bay, the king of visually incoherent action spectacle, downshifts his mixmaster editing style for "Transformers: Dark of the Moon" (Paramount). Videodrone's review is here. "Carlos" (Criterion), Olivier Assayass' epic account of the life and myth of real-life terrorist Carlos the Jackal, is a mesmerizing portrait of committed activist who transforms himself into a media-hungry rock star of an international terrorist. Videodrone's review is here.
"Viva Riva!" (Music Box), an award-winning African crime thriller set in Kinsasha, Congo, offers a fresh eye on the culture of the impoverished African city. Hong Kong director Dante Lam returns to the gangster genre with "The Stool Pigeon" (Well Go USA) and "The Shaft" (Global Lens) observes the mining culture in modern China. More on these and other international releases in the Foreign Affairs round-up here.
"Is "The Ledge" (IFC) a thriller laced with heady ideas or a faux-philosophical tract with a few little tassels of suspense tied on?" asks Movieline film critic Stephanie Zacharek. She settles on the latter. Charlie Hunnam, Liv Tyler and Patrick Wilson star in the romantic triangle that ends up with a man on the ledge of a hotel, and Terrence Howard is the cop supposed to talk the man down.
Guardian film critic Peter Bradshaw praises "The Hide" (Breaking Glass), from director Marek Losey (grandson of Joseph Losey), which he describes as a "claustrophobic, tense, ultra-low-budget British film with a neat final twist." Alex MacQueen and Phil Campbell star.
And the rest:
Scott Speedman, Emily Hampshire and Jay Baruchel are the "Good Neighbors" (Magnolia) who come together when a string of murders hits their community.
Leslie Bibb is "Miss Nobody" (Inception), a secretary who finds a talent for murdering her way up the corporate ladder. And Sean William Scott is the "American Loser" (Lionsgate) who tries to pull it together when he meets Gretchen Mol.
"Go For It" (Lionsgate) is a dance drama with Aimee Garcia and "Dead Cert" (Shout! Factory) is a vampire film in the London underworld of East End gangsters.
For more releases, see Hot Tips and Top Picks: DVDs for September 27
| Tags: | Reviews |
about the 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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