DVD Reviews
Welcome back today we have some good some bad and some down right ugly movies reviewed today these include a classic looney tunes DVD ,The Next Big thing a sort of documentary about? Canadian comics need I say more.I suggest you give the Groovie Goolies DVD a wide bearth unless you are in to pain management as this is seriously hard going.
The final two reviews today are a Japanese Ultraman cartoon (maybe for kids or big kids) and finally my personal favorite today is [tag]Elvis Presley[/tag] the Ed Sullivan shows a must have for Elvis fans and also pretty good for? anyone as a? holiday gift unless they are under 20 or in to Trash metal.?
Hope you enjoy todays bag?
Get The Latest Movies To Rent From Blockbuster Video Unlimited DVD Rentals delivered to your door first month is only $9.99.
Looney Tunes – Spotlight Collection Volume Four
13 Nov 2006 at 2:10am
Highly Recommended I distinctly remember my brother gravely intoning, “Arise! Sir Loin of Beef!” and then creasing me over my top plate with his metal Mod Squad lunch box. Ah, the glory years when nobody cared about kids, and they could watch whatever the hell they wanted. What more can be said in a review about the Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoons? It’s a lot like a term paper I once had on Hitchcock’s Psycho probably the most written about movie in film studies. What do you add? Simply put, the shorts included in Looney Tunes Spotlight Collection Volume 4 are among a canon of animation that stands as the premiere American cartoons. I have favorites all over the animation map: I love anything Disney; Fleischer’s early Popeyes are works of genius; Harveytoons’ Casper is still a sweet, gentle childhood memory. But I would guess that the majority of cartoon fans would agree that th…Read the entire review?
Next Big Thing
13 Nov 2006 at 2:10am
Rent It The Show:Apart from hockey and beer Canada’s next biggest export is comics. At least that’s what you’d be led to believe if you had just watched The Next Big Thing. This reality TV-like documentary/show follows six comedians through a whirlwind tour of clubs and shows across a trio of cities. Since the back of the DVD states “6 comics. 3 Cities. 1 Dream.” I think you can pretty much figure out what this release is all about.
Depending on your level of awareness with up and coming Canadian comics you may recognize some of these contenders or you may not. I actually fell into the “not” category, though after watching I realized that I had seen Shaun Majumder before in Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle (he only played a bit part as Kumar’s brother, but still). Despite not really being aware of who these people were, seeing them work the comedic strip and tak…Read the entire review
?
Groovie Goolies: Saturday Mourning Collection
13 Nov 2006 at 2:10am
Skip It THE SHOWIf you’re of a certain age, you probably recall “The Groovie Goolies,” a cartoon series that originally aired in 1970-71 and was rerun for years thereafter. It featured Dracula, Frankenstein’s Monster, the Werewolf, the Mummy, and other no-longer-scary characters, all living in a castle together and cracking jokes, “Laugh-In”-style. They played in a band, too, and each episode featured a couple of musical numbers.
Maybe you’re smiling and nodding your head now, fondly remembering this classic cartoon from your youth. Those were certainly my impressions as I embarked on watching it again now. So it is with heavy heart that I must break the news to you: THIS SHOW IS SO BAD AS TO BE UNBEARABLE.
Seriously, I defy you to watch an entire 22-minute episode, let alone all 16 included on the “Saturday ‘Mourning’ Collection” just released on DVD. It’s a pun-based series, in case y…Read the entire review
?
Ultraman – Series One, Volume Two12 Nov 2006 at 11:21pm
Recommended Excitement that Ultraman (1966-67) – the seminal Japanese superhero/tokusatsu (“visual effects”) TV show of the 1960s – was coming to DVD was severely tempered by problematic, hugely disappointing transfers. Volume Two of this collection, featuring the remaining 19 shows, addresses some of the problems and though the collection is still far from perfect, these issues are less the major distraction that they were before.?
A follow-up of sorts to the Outer Limits/X-Files-like Ultra Q (1965), Ultraman (Urutoraman: Kuso tokusatsu shirizu, or “Ultraman – A Special Effects Fantasy Series”) follows the adventures of the Science Patrol, an elite quasi-police force/scientific investigation team whose futuristic…Read the entire review
?
Elvis Presley – The Ed Sullivan Shows12 Nov 2006 at 7:39pm
Highly Recommended When I received the three screener discs for Elvis Presley: The Ed Sullivan Shows, they were mailed to me without any packaging, so I had no idea what was on them; I just assumed they contained the three historic appearances Elvis made on the old The Ed Sullivan Show in 1956 and 1957. If somewhere in the back of my mind I wondered why a couple of five or ten minute clips from those three shows needed to be spread out on three discs, I’m sure I just assumed that a load of extras would round the presentation out. I was more than pleasantly surprised to see, after putting the first disc in, that these were the entire, complete Ed Sullivan episodes uncut, with all of the performers that appeared on the nights Elvis was scheduled, included. Now this is what vintage TV lovers have been waiting for: a [tag]DVD[/tag] release that respects what TV lovers want: more TV. We want complete…Read the entire review?
Get FREE SHIPPING and 5 DVDs for only $0.49 from Columbia House! Buy your favorite DVD’s and watch your top movies again and again.
Buy your favorite DVD’s and watch your top movies again and again.Categories: DVD Reviews and Blu Ray Reviews Tags: cartoons, DVD, dvd-release, DVD-Rentals, Elvis-Presley, movie-reviews
DVD Reviews
Latest movie and DVD's reviews including the Person to Person ,The Nun of Monza,The Law Of Ueki, and Kyra Kyra Maoh..
Categories: DVD Reviews and Blu Ray Reviews Tags: buy-DVDs, DVD-Rentals, DVDs, movie-reviews, special-edition-DVD-releases, television, top-movies
DVD Reviews
New movie releases and latest DVD reviews to buy and rent including Schramm,Strawberry Marshmallow,He Man and the Masters of the Universe Seeason 2,Fame Whore,and Lim Ching-Ying in Exorcist Master..
Categories: DVD Reviews and Blu Ray Reviews Tags: DVD-Rentals, film-releases, movie-releases, movie-reviews
DVD Reviews
Some classic movies reviewed this time with a special mention of the adaption of Charles Dickens classics Tale of Two Cities and David Copperfield by the director David O. Selznick.If you are a fan of period drama movies these are worth a look although you might not find them at your local DVD rental outlet.
There is nothing like a good classic film to watch with the family on a sunday afternoon on a cold winters day ior maybe there is? What do you think ?
Get The Latest Movies To Rent From Blockbuster Video Unlimited DVD Rentals delivered to your door first month is only $9.99.
Andy Goldsworthy – Rivers and Tides (Special Two-Disc Collector’s Edition)
29 Oct 2006 at 5:25pm
Rent ItThe Movie:
An utterly fascinating documentary that did not get the kind of audience it deserved during its release last year, filmmaker Thomas Riedelsheimer’s focus on Scottish sculptor Andy Goldsworthy in “Rivers and Tides” is never less than compelling. Goldsworthy uses various forms of nature – sticks, icicles, rocks, flowers and other various items – to create intricate and beautiful sculptures. The big thing is, that Goldsworthy actually creates these sculptures in nature, meaning that the creation is often a race against time, with the tides eventually, inevitably coming in to wash it away.
Goldsworthy discusses his philosophies that drive him to do what he does – primarily, to gain an understanding of the energy in nature and an appreciation for the constant cycle involved. One of the artist’s pieces mets within several hours. We see another float off, while others are eithe…Read the entire review
Who Wants to Kill Jessie?
29 Oct 2006 at 11:02am
Highly RecommendedReviewed by Glenn Erickson
The delightful, gentle Who Wants to Kill Jessie? is a 1966 Czech fantasy that captures a wonderful spirit of comic-book innocence. It has been making the rounds of the repertory theaters in recent years after a long life as an obscure title in science fiction reference books. Director V clav Vorl cek finds just the right note of droll foolishness to develop a one-joke idea into a satisfying screwball comedy. Peeking through the constant visual gags are some worthwhile ideas about the relationship of fantasy to human ingenuity. As its key invention is a device that can display a person’s dreams on a television screen, Who Wants to Kill Jessie? predates the computerized mind-tap concept of Wim Wenders’ Until the End of the World.
Synopsis: Read the entire review
A Tale of Two Cities
29 Oct 2006 at 11:02am
RecommendedReviewed by Glenn Erickson
A Tale of Two Cities is possibly the best of David O. Selznick’s high-toned literary adaptations of the 1930s, a tightly-constructed thriller that streamlines the majority of Charles Dickens’ complex narrative into just over two hours. Star Ronald Colman will always be identified with the noble sacrifice of Sydney Carton: “It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done …” The book has been filmed often but the near-perfect cast, makes this version the keeper. W.P. Lipscomb and S.N. Behrman’s screenplay has the emotional bite of a good silent melodrama.
Synopsis:
Banker Jarvis Lorry (Claude Gillingwater) tells Londoner Lucie Manette (Elizabeth Allan) that her father Dr. Manette …Read the entire review
David Copperfield
29 Oct 2006 at 11:02am
RecommendedReviewed by Glenn Erickson
David O. Selznick’s David Copperfield has a sterling reputation among classic film adaptations, and for the most part it earns it. The unusually large cast of characters is aligned with a beautifully chosen group of Hollywood actors. The movie’s immense popularity over the years has guaranteed many of them a permanent claim on their role identifications — Edna May Oliver’s Aunt Betsy, W.C. Fields’ Mr. Micawber. David Copperfield follows most of the contours of the story and has earned the endorsement of grade school teachers who consider it an excellent way to get children to read the Dickens original. Only then does one realize that Selznick’s adaptation is an enjoyable but bare-bones digest version of a much more intricate story, with even deeper characters.
Synopsi…Read the entire review
Marie Antoinette
29 Oct 2006 at 11:02am
RecommendedWhen Irving Thalberg died in 1936 preparations were already underway for a lavish — even by MGM standards — movie about Marie Antoinette, the queen of France beheaded in the French Revolution. It was the crowning vehicle for Irving’s wife Norma Shearer, a popular actress of the 30s who definitely benefited from her royal position in the MGM hierarchy. Bitter rival Joan Crawford complained that she had no chance at an equal shot for parts, when the ‘competition slept with the boss.’
Stefan Zweig’s 1933 Antoinette biography tempered a great many historical exaggerations of the queen’s high-flung lifestyle. She apparently never said the words “Let them eat cake,” was politically disconnected and became the victim of ugly propaganda that spread rumors that she was a depraved sex maniac, that she poisoned her own children, etc. 1
Get FREE SHIPPING and 5 DVDs for only $0.49 from Columbia House! Buy your favorite DVD’s and watch your top movies again and again.
