Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

DVD & Blu-ray: Inglourious Basterds

Inglourious Basterds DVDQuentin Tarantino’s latest film Inglourious Basterds (Universal)Ā is a World War II drama set in Nazi-occupied France and available on DVD and Blu-ray in different versions.

The story involves a young Jewish woman (Melanie Laurent) who escapes the slaughter of her family by a ‘Jew hunting’ Nazi (Christophe Waltz); a group of commandos known as ‘The Basterds’ led by a Southern lieutenant (Brad Pitt); a British agent (Michael Fassbender) behind enemy lines; a Nazi war hero (Daniel Bruhl) who has become a film star; an German actress double agent (Diane Kruger) and the Nazi high command of Hitler (Martin Wuttke) and Goebbels (Sylvester Groth).

Although itĀ premiĆØredĀ toĀ decidedly mixed reactions at the Cannes film festival back in May, it is one of the most pleasurable cinematic experiences of the year.

Whilst not in the same league as his first two films, it is absorbing, well crafted filmmaking laced with considerable wit and style. From the bravura opening sequence – a homage toĀ The Good, The Bad and The Ugly – involving a Nazi having a drink with a French farmer, isĀ a master class in tensionĀ and sets up the rest of the story beautifully.

Much of the film involves characters talking for extended periods and there is a notable lack of conventional action sequences, but this is actually a strength rather than a weakness.

The main reason for this is that the pool of characters here are some of the best Tarantino has ever written and his uncanny eye for the right actor has paid rich dividends here.

It is being sold as a World War II action movie starring Brad Pitt, but this is a much more European flavoured film with a diverse and expertly cast ensemble.

Pitt does well as the head of the JewishĀ commandosĀ but the real stand outs are Christophe Waltz, who is marvellous as the multi-lingual SS offficer nicknamed ‘The Jew Hunter’ and Melanie Laurent as Shosanna Dreyfus, his Jewish nemeis who ends up owning a cinema in Paris.

One sequence between them, set in a restaurant, is superbly played with an underlying menace and tension that is tweaked quite brilliantly.

To some it will be just more ‘Tarantino speak’, but the context, the use of music and extremeĀ close upsĀ all give it a different texture from what you might expect.

The rest of the cast all do sterling work but special praise must go to Michael Fassbender and Mike Myers for their only scene together – a wonderfully played military briefing which is hilarious, although it could be a litmus test for those who love or hate this film.

Going in you might expect this to be mostly about the Basterds killing Nazis, but that is only one slice of the pie, with the real juice of the film being a revenge tale in which even celluloid itself is drafted into the plot.

Whilst much of the discussion about the film will inevitably centre around the director and his reputation, it is worth mentioning the wonderful technical work across the board.

Click here to buy Inglourious Basterds on Blu-ray

The production values are first rate, with the studio based scenes (shot atĀ Babelsberg Studio outside Berlin) mixed seamlessly with location work and the production design byĀ David Wasco is complemented beautifully by the costumes byĀ Anna Sheppard.

The cinematography by Robert Richardson is beautifully composed and when combined with Tarantino’s style and Sally Menke’s editing makes for some wonderfully snappy and memorable sequences.

Music has always been a strong point in Tarantino’s previous films as he has made a point of never using an original composer and instead inserting previously recorded pieces.

Along with snippets of his belovedĀ Ennio Morricone, he makes great use of David Bowie’sĀ Cat People (Putting Out Fire), the music fromĀ The Entity and even a blast of Elmer Bernstein’s theme toĀ Zulu Dawn.

For longtime fans of the director, look out for the now trademark scenes involving feet, a Mexican stand off, close ups of food (think cream rather thanĀ Big Kahuna burgers) and numerous references to films throughout.

At 153 minutes maybe some of it could have been cut a little bit more (one sequence in a bar seems to have been trimmed slightly since Cannes) but the fact is that I never looked at my watch during the film – it had me absorbed and each chapter rolling into the next was a pleasure.

Mainstream audiences may get put off by the use of subtitles (attractive yellow ones as it turns out) used in much of the multi-lingual cast and the fact that Brad Pitt is in it less than the marketing is letting on.

This is a film that exists very much in its own world, as you will see when it gets to the climax, but it is such a rich and lovingly created one that avoids the pitfalls of many movies set in World War II.

It is as much about our perceptions and fantasies of that war than it is about the actual war itself. In terms of where this fits into the director’s career, I don’t think Quentin Tarantino will ever top the expectations Pulp Fiction forced on him.

Buy the Inglourious Basterds Special Edition on Blu-ray

Since the enormous critical and commercial success of that film he seemed to be indulged atĀ Miramax (which, to be fair,Ā his success helped shape) and perhaps he hasn’t had the creative tension down the years that he needed.

His last couple of films – despite undoubted qualities – seemed to be showing an artist retreating into his own self-referential head.

Grindhouse marked the point where he seemed to be chasing his own pop culture tail and this was paralleled by the commercial misfires at the newly formedĀ Weinstein Company.

With this film they have partnered with Universal and interestingly this is the first time Tarantino has worked with a major studio as writer-director. Maybe this has given him a new sense of responsibility and helped him creatively.

Certainly Inglourious Basterds is a refreshing change of pace from the crime and exploitation influenced work he had been doing of late.

The single-disc DVD release which offers the following features:

  • 2.40:1 Anamorphic Widescreen
  • English and Hungarian DD5.1 Surround
  • English SDH, Arabic, Danish, Finnish, Hungarian, Icelandic, Norwegian and Swedish subtitles
  • Extended and Alternate Scenes
  • Nation’s Pride – the film within the film can be seen in its entirety
  • Inglourious Basterds Trailers

And here are the Blu-ray Disc details:

  • 1080P 2.40:1 Widescreen
  • English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio
  • French and Spanish (Latin American) 5.1 DTS Surround
  • English SDH, French and Spanish (Latin American) subtitles
  • Extended and Alternate Scenes
  • Nation’s Pride – the film within the film can be seen in its entirety
  • Featurettes on Nation’s Pride
  • Roundtable discussion with Quentin Tarantino, Brad Pitt and film historian/critic Elvis Mitchell
  • A conversation with veteran actor Rod Taylor
  • Film Poster Gallery Tour with Elvis MitchellĀ and more

Considering the audio specs, the UK release should be similar to the US version with extras also featuring:

  • Domestic and International Trailers
  • The Original Inglorious Bastards – a salute to the original 1978 film
  • Rod Taylor on Victoria Bitters, the Australian beer
  • Quentin Tarantino’s Camera Angel
  • Hi Sallys – Gag Reel
  • Inglourious Basterds Poster Gallery

There is also a limited edition Blu-ray Disc which has the following:

  • Collectable special finish slipcase and includes:
  • Inpack 4 Stoltz Der Nation poster images
  • 3 Bridget Von Hammersmack Film Poster images
  • Replica image of the Japanese Teaser Poster
  • Exclusive James Goodridge key art print
  • Momma Landa’s Old Fashion Austrian Strudel Recipe.

The running time of the extras on Blu-ray is 90 mins.

> Buy Inglourious Basterds on DVD, Blu-ray Disc or the Limited Edition Blu-ray Disc
> Inglourious Basterds at the IMDb

Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

UK DVD & Blu-ray Releases: Monday 7th December 2009

UK DVD & Blu-ray Picks 07-12-09

Inglourious Basterds (Universal): Quentin Tarantino’s latest film is a World War II drama set in Nazi-occupied France starringĀ Brad Pitt,Ā Christophe Waltz,Ā Melanie Laurent,Ā Michael Fassbender andĀ Diane Kruger.Ā [Read the full review here…]

Mid-August Lunch (Artificial Eye): An Italian comedy-drama about a middle aged man (Gianni Di Gregorio, who also directed) who finds himself looking after his mother and several other older women in a small Roman flat. [Read the full review here…]

The Hangover (Warner): One if the surprise hits of the summer was this comedy from director Todd Phillips about three groomsmen (Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms and Zach Galifianakis)Ā who lose their about-to-be-wed buddy (Justin Bartha) in Las Vegas. [Read the full review here…]

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ALSO OUT

American Pie Presents: The Book of Love (Universal) [Buy on DVD]
Bandslam (E1 Entertainment) [Buy on Blu-ray / Buy on DVD]
G.I. JOE: The Rise of Cobra (Paramount) [Buy on Blu-ray / Buy on DVD]
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (Warner) [Buy on Blu-ray / Buy on DVD]
Microcosmos (Second Sight) [Buy on Blu-ray / Buy on DVD]
Secondhand Lions (EIV) [Buy on Blu-ray / Buy on DVD]
Shorts (Warner) [Buy on Blu-ray / Buy on DVD]
The Bronx Warriors Trilogy (Shameless)
The Tudors Season 3 (Sony) [Buy on Blu-ray / Buy on DVD]

> Browse more DVD & Blu-ray releases at Amazon UK and Play
> UK cinema releases for Friday 4th December 2009 (including Me and Orson Welles, The Box, The Descent Part 2 and Planet 51)

Categories
Amusing Interesting Trailers

North By Northwest Trailer

The original trailer for North By Northwest (out recently on Blu-ray) was introduced by Alfred Hitchcock and done in the manner of a travel show.

Can you imagine directors today being this funny?

Categories
Amusing Random

Casino: The F**k Version

When I first saw Casino I remember thinking that it contained more f-words than any movie I had seen and someone has done this f-only edit of the film.

Interestingly there is a Wikipedia entry for ‘films that most frequently use the word f**k’

The world record for most uses of the word is a 2005 documentary called (appropriately) Fuck with 824 uses of the word, which works out at 8.86 per minute.

When it comes to feature films, Summer of Sam (1999) follows with 435 and then Nil By Mouth (1997) with 428.

Casino comes in on 398 and then Alpha Dog (2007) with 367.

Categories
Cinema

UK Cinema Releases: Friday 4th December 2009

Cinema Releases 04-12-09

NATIONAL RELEASES

Me and Orson Welles (cinemaNX Distibution): A period drama set in 1937 about a teenager (Zac Efron) who joins the Mercury Theatre production of “Julius Ceasar” directed by a young Orson Welles (Christian McKay). Directed by Richard Linklater and co-starring Claire Danes, it was shot in the Isle of Man back in the spring of 2008 and lingered on the shelf after failing to get a distributor at various festivals. However, production company CinemaNX have decided to release it themselves (a rarity for a national release) sharing print and ad costs with Vue Entertainment. It could do decent business given Efron’s appeal to teen audiences and the critical plaudits lavished on McKay’s portrayal of Welles. [Nationwide / PG]

The Box (Icon): Director Richard Kelly returns from the disastrous Southland Tales with this tale of a suburban couple (James Marsden and Cameron Diaz) who receive a box as a gift and then are told by a mysterious stranger (Frank Langella) that if they press the button on it, they will get $1 million. The catch is that someone, somewhere in the world will die as a result. After some decidedly mixed reviews, this seems likely to meet the fate of Kelly’s last film rather than his first, 2001’s Donnie Darko. [Nationwide / 15]

The Descent: Part 2 (Warner Bros/Pathe): The sequel to the 2005 horror film, sees the sole survivor (Shauna McDonald) emerge from the Appalachian cave system where she encountered unspeakable terrors. Directed by Jon Harris, it co-stars Natalie Jackson Mendoza, Krysten Cummings, Joshua Dallas. [Nationwide / 18]

Planet 51 (Entertainment): Ā Another 3D animated film hits UK multiplexes and this one involves the inhabitants of Planet 51, who Ā live in fear of alien invasion, which is realised when an astronaut arrives from Earth. Directed by Jorge Blanco and Javier Abad, it features the voices of Dwayne Johnson, Sean William Scott, Jessica Biel and Justin Long. [Nationwide / PG]

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IN LIMITED RELEASE

Cracks (Optimum Releasing): A look at the lives and relationships among girls at an elite British boarding school starring Eva Green and directed by Jordan Scott. [ C’Worlds Chelsea & Haymarket, Odeon Wimbledon & Selected Cinemas nationwideĀ / 15]

Departures (Arrow Films): A newly unemployed cellist takes a job preparing the dead for funerals in this Japanese film which won the Best Foreign Film Oscar earlier this year. [Odeon Covent Gdn, Renoir & Key Cities from 8 Jan 2010 / 12A]

Disgrace (ICA Films): Based on the novel by J.M. Coetzee this adaptation is the story of a Cape Town professor (John Malkovich) who moves to the Eastern Cape after an affair with a student, where he gets caught up in a mess of post-apartheid politics. [ICA Cinema and selected cities / 15]

The Girlfriend Experience (Revolver Entertainment): An experimental drama about a high-end Manhattan call girl (played by Sasha Grey),Ā set in the autumn of 2008. Directed by Steven Soderbergh with his low budget hat on [Selected UK cities / 15].

The Merry Gentleman (The Works): A drama about a woman (Kelly Macdonald)Ā who leaves an abusive relationship to begin a new life in a new city, where she forms a relationship with a suicidal hit man (Michael Keaton, who also directs) and an alcoholic detective (Tom Bastounes). [Cineworld Shaftesbury Avenue & Key Cities / 15]

> Get local cinema show times for your area via Google Movies
> UK cinema releases for December 2009
> UK DVD & Blu-ray picks for this week including Including Life and The Miners’ Campaign Tapes (W/C Monday 30th November 2009)

Categories
Lists News

Sight and Sound’s Top Films of 2009

Sight and Sound - January 2010British film magazine Sight and Sound have published their top 10 films of 2009.

They asked 60 critics for their favourites of the past year and the titles that appeared the most were then selected for their January 2010 issue.

Here is the final list (with some ties):

1. Un ProphĆØte (Dir. Jacques Audiard, France)
=2. The Hurt Locker (Dir. Kathryn Bigelow, USA)
=2. 35 Shots of Rum (Dir. Claire Denis, France)
4. The White Ribbon (Dir. Michael Haneke, Austria-Germany)
5. Let the Right One In (Dir. Tomas Alfredson, Sweden)
=6. Up (Dir. Pete Docter, USA)
=6. White Material (Dir. Claire Denis)
=8. Bright Star (Dir. Jane Campion, UK-Australia)
=8. Antichrist (Dir. Lars Von Trier, Denmark-Germany-Sweden-France-Italy)
10. Inglorious Basterds (Dir. Quentin Tarantino, USA)

With the exception of Antichrist (a sloppy, faux-controversial work) I find it hard to argue with the selection here.

As is often the case, the list can be a little out of sync with US and foreign release dates (Un ProphĆØteĀ doesn’t open in the UK until January 22nd) although that hasn’t affected this year’s selection too much.

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> Sight and Sound (Follow them on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook)
> Wikipedia on 2009 in film
> Every film that came out in the UK in 2009
>Ā My favourite films of 2008

Categories
Viral Video

Hollywood Destroys New York

A video compilation of New York being destroyed in various Hollywood movies, set to the music of George Gershwin.

[Via BuzzFeed]

Categories
Interesting News

Flop of the Decade: The Adventures of Pluto Nash

Rosario Dawson and Eddie Murphy in Pluto Nash

The Hollywood Reporter recently compiled a list of the biggest flops of the decade and the ‘winner’ was The Adventures of Pluto Nash.

This is the kind of project that gives studio executives night sweats just by thinking about it.

It was a 2002 comedy directed by Ron Underwood (who since seems to have done mostly TV) starring Eddie Murphy as the owner of a ‘lunar nightclub’.

Made for an estimated cost of $100 million it ended up grossing $4.4 million in the US. Its total worldwide gross was about $7.1 million.Ā Ouch.

It is so bad that you can’t even find a trailer for it on YouTube. Instead check out this German TV promo.

Although Murphy has had his fair share of box office misfires across the decade (Meet Dave, Imagine That) it should be noted he still has a decent box office track record (Shrek,Ā Norbit, Dr Dolittle, Daddy Day Care) – even if the films are cack.

The other flops on the list are Battlefield Earth, Land of the Lost,Ā Gigli, Town and Country, Catwoman, The Invasion, Rollerball (the 2002 remake), Grindhouse and The Spirit.

Categories
Thoughts

Student Radio Awards 2009

SRA Logo

Last week I was at the Student Radio Awards in London and the evening was a reminder of radio things past and present.

If you have listened UK radio stations like Talk Radio, TalkSPORT and Radio 2 over the last few years you may have heard me talk about films on certain shows at different times.

But my first proper experience behind the microphone was at the student radio station Insanity back in February 1998 presenting an afternoon show on a Saturday and doing roving reporting via a mobile on Matt Deegan’s weekend breakfast show.

Insanity Days

Back then it was a case of selecting CDs and learning how to work the faders after a bit of ‘training’ (i.e. a 10 minute session in which I realised how confusing a Denon Mini-Disc player was) and then basically doing a two hour show.

I have to be honest and admit that I did it because it it seemed like fun and I’d listened to a lot of radio in my first year as I didn’t have a TV.

Anyway, in early 1999 I managed to get some work experience on the Ian Collins show on Talk Radio and was lucky enough to get a shift reviewing films every week, which lasted in various forms on various shows until last year.

I also went on to do all manner of jobs in radio which included interviewing actors and filmmakers, producing sports shows and doing various podcasts.

But there is no doubt that doing student radio and facing the regular task of filling the airwaves with speech or music helped me enormously when I went into a professional environment.

One of the many nice things about the awards evening was seeing various people who’ve helped me in my radio journey:

But the real kick this year was being a judge in the Interview category.

Not only was it interesting to check out what different people had done but it was a real pleasure to see my first choice actually win.

It was an interview by Joshua Chambers of URY and featured him questioning Hilary Benn back in February about the government’s position on the use of torture in the wake of the Binyam Mohamed case.

Interestingly, the audio quality isn’t that great but if you read his written submission you’ll see an explanation that actually strengthens his entry.

I can honestly say it is one of the best audio interviews I’ve heard in a very long time, as the questions were well researched and highlighted the inconsistencies in the Government line Benn was trying to defend.

You can listen to the full interview here.

Anyway, he won and it was good to see him get presented the award by Steve Lamacq, who has done his fair share of famous interviews down the years.

SRA 2009

One thing that also struck me about the night was the good vibes transmitting themselves to the radio big cheeses in attendance (some photos are here)

People like Richard Park (Global Radio) and Andy Parfitt (BBC Radio) seemed genuinely enthused by the audience and it made a nice contrast to the gloom surrounding the industry and the world in general at the moment.

Congratulations to all the entrants, winners and organisers at the SRA for putting on the evening.

The whole event was a reminder to me about student radio – its value is not monetary, but lies in the fact that people can achieve a lot when others take the time out to help them.

Categories
Posters

Iron Man 2 poster

Iron Man 2 poster

The first poster for Iron Man 2 has been released by Marvel and Paramount.

(For non-geeks, the grey dude is War Machine).

Categories
Events News

Up in the Air premiere on Livestream

The red carpet action at the US premiĆØre of George Clooney’s new film Up in the Air was shown on Livestream earlier (above is a repeat).

Clooney plays a man employed to fire people, who spends most of his life at airports and on planes.

It is the third – and so far best – film directed by Jason Reitman with Oscar and BAFTA nominations a very strong possibility.

Clooney seemed to be getting into the spirit of things on the red carpet.

UITA Premiere on Livestream

Read my full thoughts on the film here.

> Official site for Up in the Air
> An interesting official Tweeting site for the film
> George Clooney and Jason Reitman at the IMDb

[Image via Rachel Sterne and Twitpic]

Categories
Cinema

UK Cinema Releases: December 2009

UK Cinema Releases December 2009

FRIDAY 4th DECEMBER

  • The Box (12A)/ Icon
  • Cracks (15) / Optimum Releasing
  • Me and Orson Welles (12A) / CinemaNX Distribution
  • The Descent: Part 2 (18) / Warner Bros/Pathe
  • The Girlfriend Experience (15) / Revolver
  • The Merry Gentleman (15) / The Works
  • Planet 51 (U) / Entertainment

FRIDAY 11th DECEMBER

  • Carriers (15) / Paramount
  • The Red Shoes (R/I) / Park Circus / Selected Key Cities
  • The Step Father (15) / Sony Pictures
  • Unmade Beds (15) / Soda Pictures
  • Where The Wild Things Are (PG) / Warner Bros.

FRIDAY 18th DECEMBER

  • Avatar / 20th Century Fox
  • St. Trinians 2 / Entertainment
  • Nine (Entertainment)

MONDAY 21st DECEMBER

  • Alvin And The Chipmunks 2 / Fox

FRIDAY 25th DECEMBER

  • Dogging: A Love Story / Vertigo Films
  • Nowhere Boy / Icon

SATURDAY 26th DECEMBER

  • Sherlock Holmes / Warner Bros.

>Ā Get local showtimes via Google Movies (just enter your postcode)
>Ā Find out about films showing near you at MyFilms

Categories
News

EA British Academy Childrens Awards

The EA British Academy Children’s Awards took place last night at the London Hilton Hotel.

They celebrate excellence in the art forms of the moving image for children – from film and television to video games and websites.

Check out the above video to find out who won in the various categories and find out more at the official Children’s BAFTA website.

Categories
Amusing Viral Video

Star Trek meets The A Team

PhamtomKnight has done a great job mashing up the latest Star Trek movie with The A-Team.

[Link via BuzzFeed]

Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

UK DVD & Blu-ray Releases: Monday 30th November 2009

DVD and Bluray Releases 30-11-2009

DVD & BLU-RAY PICKS

Life (2 Entertain): This ten-part series narrated by David Attenborough covers 130 stories from the natural world. Exploring the variety of life on Earth and the specialised strategies and extreme behaviour that living things have evolved in order to survive; what Charles Darwin termed “the struggle for existence”. Four years in the making, the series was shot entirely in high definition and it includes 10 minute ‘making of’ diaries for each episode. [Available on DVD and Blu-ray]

The Miners’ Campaign Tapes (BFI): Six short films about the 1984 Miners’ Strike have been collected on DVD and released for the first time by the BFI. The footage was originally shot at the timeĀ by a group of independent film and video makers on the picket lines and marches where they recorded the testimonies of striking miners, their families and supporters.Ā Among those that appear are Arthur Scargill, Dennis Skinner and the late Paul Foot.

The episodes include:

  1. Not Just Tea and Sandwiches
  2. The Coal Board’s Butchery
  3. Solidarity
  4. Straight Speaking
  5. The Lie Machine
  6. Only Doing Their Job?

Also included is an illustrated 22-page booklet with essays by Chris Reeves of Platform Films – discussing the making and distribution of the Tapes; by Julian Petley (co-author of Media Hits the Pits: the Media and the Coal Dispute and Shafted: the Media, the Miners’ Strike and the Aftermath and by David Peace, author of GB84, the Red Riding thrillers and The Damned Utd. [Available on DVD]

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ALSO OUT

Boom! (Second Sight) [Buy on DVD]
G-Force (Disney) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
Gambit (Second Sight) [Buy on DVD]
Jiang Hu (Palisades Tartan) [Buy on DVD]
The Proposal (Disney) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
To Hell and Back (Second Sight) [Buy on DVD]
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (Paramount) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]

>Ā Check out all the DVD & Blu-ray releases for November 2009
> Browse more DVD & Blu-ray releases atĀ Amazon UK andĀ Play
>Ā Check out the latest UK cinema releases including Paranormal Activity and Law Abiding Citizen (W/C Friday 27th November 2009)

Categories
Interesting

Sharon Tate Promotional Film

This is an MGM promotional film made in the mid-60s about a young Sharon Tate, who was then appearing in Eye of the Devil (1966).

Look out for: a young David Hemmings dancing like Austin Powers; producer John Calley; the ‘GuinnessĀ discotheques’ (whatever they were);Ā the hilarious tone of the narrator and the bit where David Niven calls Sharon a ‘fabulously good looking bird’. Feminism clearly hadn’t quite caught on yet.

A year after this was released she would marry Roman Polanski and in the summer of 1969 she was killed by the crazed followers of Charles Manson.

Categories
Amusing TV

Robin Williams talks Sarah Palin on Letterman

Robin Williams was recently on Late Night with David Letterman and had some amusing things to say about Sarah Palin, Bono, and his new movieĀ Old Dogs.

Categories
Cinema

UK Cinema Releases: Friday 27th November 2009

Paranormal Activity and Law Abiding Citizen

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NATIONAL RELEASES

Paranormal Activity (Icon): The ultra low budget horror sensation about a couple who are haunted by a ghost opened early on Wednesday and UK distributor Icon will be hoping for a repeat of its extraordinary US success.

Read about how it became a phenomenon here and check out my longer thoughts here. [Nationwide / Cert 15]

Law Abiding Citizen (Momentum Pictures): An everyday guy (Gerard Butler) decides to take justice into his own hands after a plea bargain sets his family’s killers free.

His target is the district attorney (Jamie Foxx) who orchestrated the deal. This looks like an update on Death Wish …with Gerard Butler. [Nationwide / Cert 18]

Nativity! (E1 Films): Martin Freeman (the former Office star currently appearing in those annoying anti-piracy ads) plays a school teacher putting on a nativity play.

Directed by Debbie Isitt, it is a British comedy and co-stars Alan Carr – two things which don’t bode well. [Nationwide /Cert PG]

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IN LIMITED RELEASE

Bunny and the Bull (Optimum): Another British comedy (two in one week!) and this involves a man (Edward Hogg)Ā who takes an imaginary road trip inside his apartment, based on mementos and memories of a European trek from years before.

From the makers of TV comedy The Mighty Boosh. [ Chelsea Cinema, Curzon Soho & NationwideĀ / Cert 15]

Seraphine (Metrodome): A biopic starring Yolande Moreau as the French painter Séraphine Louis, directed by Martin Provost.

It recently won the 2009 Cesar Award for Best Film. [Coronet, Curzons Renoir & Richmond, Odeon Panton St & Key Cities / Cert PG]

> Get local cinema show times for your area via Google Movies
> UK DVD & Blu-ray picks for this week including Fight Club and The Sopranos Season 1 (W/C Monday 23rd November 2009)

Categories
Cinema Thoughts

Paranormal Activity

A scene from Paranormal Activity

The ultra low budget horror sensation Paranormal Activity is sporadically effective but seems destined to join The Blair Witch Project as a flash in theĀ pan phenomenon.

The premise is simple: a well to do couple (played by Katie Featherston and Micah Sloat) think they are being haunted by a ghost at night, so they record themselves on video camera and becomeĀ increasingly unnerved by the resulting footage.

Directed by Oren Peli, the story of how this ultra low budget horror became a mainstream hit is a remarkable one.

Paranormal Activity posterBut perhaps even more striking is its similarity to another low budget sensation, The Blair Witch Project.

Both were filmed with low end cameras in the style of ‘found footage’.

The central conceit is what you are watching really happened asĀ it’s shot through the cameras the characters use.

Unlike the spooky woods haunted by the Blair Witch, the action here is consigned to a spacious surburban house and much of it unfolds at night in the bedroom.

These sequences are the strongest with heavy doses of tension cranked up by some judicious editing and inventiveĀ use of the camera’s clock.

But ultimately the film is a something of a stretched out gimmick.

On the print I saw it on, the UK distributors Icon didn’t even alter the reference to the US distributors (Paramount Pictures) which seemed a little clumsy (or was it intentional?).

That said, it has clearly struck a chord with US audiences and will probably do well here from all the buzz and word of mouth.

I went to a late night preview at my local cinema a couple of weeks ago and although the audience was small, there were moments when people near me jolted out of their seat.

When it arrives on DVD I’m sure it will become a late night horror favourite, although like The Blair Witch Project it will be remembered more for how it was filmed and marketed, than for the actual quality of the work itself.

> Official UK site
> How Paranormal Activity topped the US box office

Categories
Directors Interviews

James Cameron on 60 Minutes


Watch CBS News Videos Online

James Cameron was on 60 Minutes over the weekend where he discussed his career and the upcoming Avatar.

Look out for the bit around the 9 minute mark when he discusses The Terminator and the original studio’s choice for the main role.

“The head of Orion, who were gonna release the film, called me up and said, ‘Are you sitting down? I’ve cast this movie’. I was at a party, and it’s, ‘are you sitting down? It’s O.J. Simpson for the Terminator!’

And I said, ‘This is the stupidest idea I’ve ever heard,’ you know. I didn’t know O.J. Simpson, I had nothing against him personally. I didn’t know he was gonna go murder his wife later and become the real Terminator”

There are also some other web extra videos which didn’t make the broadcast edit.



Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

Blu-ray: The Sopranos Season 1

The Sopranos Season 1 on BlurayThe Sopranos Season 1 gets its UK debut on Blu-ray and remains essential viewing if you don’t already own it on DVD.

One of the best and most iconic TV dramas of the last decade, it was created by David Chase and screened for six seasons on HBO from 1999 until 2007.

Set in New Jersey, where it also was shot and produced, the series revolves around mobster Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) and his struggles to balance his home and working life.

A huge ratings and critical success, it became the most financially successful cable series in history and arguably one of the landmark shows in the history of television.

It garnered several awards, including twenty-one Emmys and five Golden Globes and broke through in to popular culture with the show being parodied, analysed and discussed by many viewers across the world.

Season 1 began with Tony Soprano collapsing after suffering a panic attack which led him into therapy with Dr. Jennifer Melfi (Lorraine Bracco).

As the season develops details of Tony’s life emerge: his father and mother loom large in his personal and social development; his complex relationship with his wife Carmela (Edie Falco); his children, Meadow and Anthony Jr., who both have find out more about their father’s line of work; someone in his organization snitching to the FBI; his own family plotting against him and various behind the scenes conflicts, which gradually emerge.

The technical specs are:

  • 1.78:1
  • 1080p
  • 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio

The box set include the following episodes:

  • 46 Long
  • Denial, Anger, Acceptance
  • Meadowlands
  • College
  • Pax Soprano
  • Down Neck
  • Tennessee Moltisante
  • Boca
  • A Hit Is A Hit
  • Nobody Knows Anything
  • Isabella
  • Jeanne Cusamano

Extras appear to be appear to be a bit thin on the gound.

> Buy The Sopranos Season 1 on Blu-ray from Amazon UK
> Find out more about The Sopranos at Wikipedia

Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

Blu-ray: Fight Club

Fight Club on BlurayA Blu-ray only re-release for Fight Club (Fox) is a 10th Anniversary Edition of the the 1999 film based on the book by Chuck Palahniuk.

Directed by David Fincher it stars Edward Norton and Brad Pitt as disaffected males who bond over their disgust at (what was then) modern society by creating an underground club where men beat each other up.

Although I’m not the kind of die-hard fan to name this as one of the greatest films of the 90s (they do actually exist) it remains a skilful and intriguing mainstream film dealing with such issues as consumerism and terrorism in a sly and unnerving way.

Norton and Pitt both impress in the leads whilst Fincher brings his trademark visual flair to the screen. Apparently Fox’s owner Rupert Murdoch was appalled when he saw the film and it is hard to imagine such a project even being greenlit today by a mainstream studio.

The climax, which eerily foreshadows the events of 9/11, subject matter and subversive humour led to it causing a stir when it premiĆØred at the Venice film festival in 1999.

In time it became much more successful on DVD and now the Blu-ray release should appeal directly to its significant fanbase.

Fincher himself supervised the transfer and included some bizarre touches in the spirit of the film (e.g. the menu is not what you might expect).

The general vibe on this disc is positive with Gary Tooze of DVD Beaver saying:

This surely is the best of all editions with a vastly superior image, flawless audio and old – as well as new – extras. Like it or love it – the film is an unforgettable ride and a milestone in the careers of the director and two lead stars.

This Blu-ray surely replicates the theatrical experience better than ever before for your home theater. An impressive amount of effort has gone into this 20th Century Fox release and for anyone, even remotely, keen on the film – we are highly recommending it as the definitive way to see David Fincher’s inventive, surprising and subversive Fight Club.

He also has comparison screen shots of the DVD and Blu-ray versions here.

The technical specs are:

  • 1080P / 23.976 fps Dual-layered Blu-ray
  • Disc Size: 46,278,055,124 bytes
  • Feature: 34,166,661,120 bytes
  • Video Bitrate: 23.45 Mbps
  • Codec: MPEG4 AVC Video

The extras have some new elements which include:

  • A Hit In The Ear: Ren Klyce and the Sound Design of Fight Club (New)
  • Welcome To Fight Club
  • Angel Faces Beating
  • The Crash
  • Tyler’s Goodbye
  • Flogging Fight ClubNew Insomniac Mode: I Am Jack’s Search Index, Commentary Log, Topic Search (New)
  • Guys Choice Award (New)
  • Work: Production, Visual Effects, On Location (New)
  • Edward Norton Interview (New)
  • Commentary by David Fincher
  • Commentary by David Fincher, Brad Pitt, Edward Norton and Helena Bonham Carter
  • Commentary by Chuck Palahniuk and Jim Uhls
  • Commentary by Alex McDowell, Jeff Cronenweth, Michael Kaplan and Kevin Haug
  • Seven Deleted Scenes and Alternate Scenes
  • Theatrical Teaser, Theatrical Trailer, The Eight Rules of Fight Club
  • 12 TV Spots
  • Public Service Announcements
  • Music Video
  • Five Internet Spots
  • Promotional Gallery
  • Art Gallery

Fight Club is out now on Blu-ray from 20th Century Fox

> Buy the Fight Club Blu-ray from Amazon UK
> Fight Club at the IMDbub, david fincher

Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

UK DVD & Blu-ray Releases: Monday 23rd November 2009

UK DVD and Blu-ray Picks 23-11-09 / Fight Club / The Sopranos Season 1

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DVD & BLU-RAY PICKS

Fight Club 10th Anniversary Edition (Fox): A Blu-ray only re-release for Fight Club is a 10th Anniversary Edition of the the 1999 film based on the book by Chuck Palahniuk. Directed by David Fincher it stars Edward Norton and Brad Pitt as disaffected males who bond over their disgust at modern consumerism by creating an underground club where men beat each other up. [Read the full review here]

The Sopranos Season 1 (HBO): The first season of the iconic HBO drama starring James Gandolfini as mob boss Tony Soprano gets released on Blu-ray. [Read the full review here]

ALSO OUT

Coco Before Chanel (Optimum) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
Crossing Over (EIV) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
Grey’s Anatomy Season 4 (Disney) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (Fox) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
Land of the Lost (Universal) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
Mamma Mia! 2-Disc Special Edition (Universal) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
My Sister’s Keeper (EIV) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
Orphan (Optimum) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]
Silent Night, Deadly Night (Arrow Video) [Buy on DVD]
Terminator Salvation (Sony Pictures) [Buy on DVD / Buy on Blu-ray]

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> Check out all the DVD & Blu-ray releases for November 2009
> Browse more DVD & Blu-ray releases at Amazon UK and Play
> Check out the latest UK cinema releases including Twilight: New Moon, A Serious Man and The Informant! (W/C Friday 20th November 2009)

Categories
Behind The Scenes Interesting

Avatar: Behind the Scenes Featurette

Avatar Movie Video – Exclusive Featurette: Human Hardware

A behind the scenes look at the upcoming James Cameron film Avatar.

Categories
Images

Stanley Kubrick on the set of 2001

Stanley Kubrick on the set of 2001

An interesting photo of director Stanley Kubrick on the set of 2001.

[Via LinkMachineGo]

Categories
Amusing Viral Video

Shia LeBeouf says no a lot

Shia LeBeouf seems to say the word ‘no’ a lot in the films he has been in.

Transformers, Disturbia and Surf’s Up were all major no-fests.

Someone has even done a mash up with 2 Unlimited‘s No Limit:

Categories
Amusing Random

Christopher Walken & Julian Schnabel Cooking Together

Christopher Walken and Julian Schnabel eating and cooking together in New York on the IFC show Split Screen back in 1999.

Categories
News

Edgar Wright vs The Times

Edgar Wright in The Times

Director Edgar Wright recently penned a moving tribute to the late Edward Woodward on his blog only to see it turn up without permission in The Times.

I read a trimmed down version of it in Tuesday’s print edition and assumed that the man behind Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz and TV’s Spaced had given the go ahead for them to run it.

Only he wasn’t actually aware of it and was understandablyĀ less than happy that the newspaper had copied and re-edited his article without even asking him.

As he said on his Twitter feed:

Wright twitter

In a succession of tweets he points out that:

I took great care in writing my tribute. I didn’t ask some writer with a deadline to copy it and gut it of all feeling.

…they edited out the last time I saw him. My last remembrance of him.

I didn’t know about it until I did an interview with ‘The Last Word’ and they said “We saw your piece in the Times”.

For the record, I don’t want compensation. But an apology, a reprint of the full tribute and donation to Edward’s memorial would be nice.

In reply, another Twitter user (unloveablesteve) also points out that they give away the ending of The Wicker Man for good measure:

See also the Times tribute which gives away the end of The Wicker Man in its one-sentence summary of the plot.

Would it really have been that hard for someone at The Times to contact the director and ask for a quote, or even credit his blog without making out that he was a contributor?

The paper has since run a clarification on their website:

Times Edgar Wright clarification

All this is rather ironic given that Times editor James Harding has recently been giving his opinions on newspapers and the web.

They plan to start charging for their content in the near future as Times owner Rupert Murdoch hates ‘online theft’.

Hopefully part of their strategy won’t involve copying other people’s freely available work without credit, misleading readers and then charging them for the privilege.

Categories
Cinema

UK Cinema Releases: Friday 20th November 2009

New Moon / A Serious Man / The Informant!

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NATIONAL RELEASES

The Twilight Saga: New Moon (E1 Entertainment): The secondĀ instalmentĀ of the Twilight saga based on theĀ mega sellingĀ books byĀ StephenieĀ Meyer sees vampire Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) leave for Italy in order to protect Bella (Kristen Stewart) who is consoled by her friend Jacob (Taylor Lautner) who turns out to have secrets of his own.

If you have no idea what any of this means then you probably aren’t a teenage girl. But female fans (of whom there are many) are going to make this one of the biggest films of the year and swell the coffers of UK distributor E1 Entertainment. (Read my full thoughts on the film here). [Vue West End & Nationwide / 12A]

A Serious Man (Universal): The Coen Brothers explore the late 60s Minnesota of their childhood with this tale of a Jewish maths professor named Larry Gopnik (Michael Stuhlbarg). It explores his struggles with a hectoring wife (Sari Lennick), her annoying widower lover (Fred Melamed); a leeching brother (Richard Kind); a pothead son (Aaron Wolff ); dithering academic colleagues and a succession of perpetually useless rabbis.

After the Oscar success of No Country For Old Men, they have made one of their most personal films, a rich and superbly crafted tale with stunning technical contributions across the board. Easily one of the best films to come out this year it also ranks alongside Fargo and No Country as one of the Coens’ very best. How it does at the box office is another matter but it fully deserves Oscar and BAFTA recognition. (Read my full thoughts on the film here.) [C’World Haymarket, Curzon Soho, Odeon Covent Gdn. & Nationwide / 15]

The Informant! (Warner Bros.): Based on the so-bizarre-it-has-to-be-true story of Mark Whitacre (Matt Damon), a corporate whistle blower in the 1990s who helped expose a price fixing scam despite being a compulsive liar.

Stylishly directed by Steven Soderbergh, it is smart, funny and evocative of the 1990s. Matt Damon is superb in the lead role and look out for some fine supporting performances from the likes of Melanie Lynskey and Scott Bakula. [Nationwide / 15]

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IN LIMITED RELEASE

Glorious 39 (Momentum Pictures): A mysterious tale set around a traditional British family on the eve of World War Two, starring Romola Garia, Bill Nighy, Julie Christie and directed by Steven Poliakoff. Ā [Odeon West End & Key Cities fromĀ November 27th / 12A)

The First Day Of The Rest Of Your Life (Metrodome): A sprawling French drama centered around five keys days in a family’s life directed by RĆ©mi BezanƧon. [Apollo PiccadillyĀ Circus, Genesis Mile End & Key Cities / 15]

Machan (Yume Pictures): Hindi film about a love story with a terrorist angle starring Saif Ali Khan, Kareena Kapoor and Vivek Oberoi. [Empire Leicester Square / 15]

The Sea Wall (Axiom): A drama about a teenage girl who has an affair with a worldly older man in 1920s French Indo-China based on a Marguerite Duras novel. Isabelle Huppert stars. [Apollo Picc Circus, Cine Lumiere, Curzon Renoir & Key Cities]

Southern Softies (Northern Pics/Chick Ken): A travelogue by John Shuttleworth, in which he visits the Channel Islands. [GateĀ Notting Hill, Greenwich Picturehouse, Ritzy & Key Cities]

Examined Life (ICA Films): A documentary examining life with the help of modern thinkers. [ICA Cinema & selected Key Cities]

Ulysses (Contemporary Films): A re-issue for director Joseph Strick’s bold attempt to film James Joyce’s famously ‘unfilmable’ novel. [Barbican / 15]

> UK cinema releases for November 2009
> Get local showtimes via Google Movies UK
> UK DVD & Blu-ray picks for this week including Fanny and Alexander, Star Trek, Moon, For All Mankind and North By Northwest (W/C Monday 16th November 2009)

Categories
Amusing Viral Video

Lady Gaga / Christopher Walken / South Park mashup

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Hot on the heels of Christopher Walken’s spoken word rendition of Lady Gaga’s Pokerface on Friday Night With Jonathan Ross, Half Mast/Hat has done a mash up with Eric Cartman from South Park thrown in for good measure.

Categories
Animation Interesting

Nick Park on Wallace and Gromit

Animator Nick Park gives a 20 minute interview on Wallace and Gromit.

Categories
Amusing Viral Video

Reservoir Turtles

A clever trailer mashup of Reservoir Dogs and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

[Via BuzzFeed]

Categories
Cinema Thoughts

New Moon

New Moon tickets

For Twilight fans New Moon will be their equivalent of The Empire Strikes Back although for everyone else it’s going to be another teen vampire movie.

For the uninitiated the Twilight films are based on the mega-sellingĀ novels byĀ Stephenie Meyer which have been translated into over 20 languages worldwide.

There are currently four books:Ā Twilight (2005),Ā New Moon (2006),Ā Eclipse (2007) andĀ Breaking Dawn (2008) and they have a combined sale of over 25 million copies.

New Moon posterWhen someone at MTV films made the (now catastrophic) decision to pass on making the film adaptations, newcomerĀ Summit Entertainment stepped up and a lucrative film franchise was born.

The first film Twilight, directed byĀ Catherine Hardwicke,Ā came out last year and starredĀ Kristen Stewart as Bella, a teenage girl who falls in love with aĀ vampire, played byĀ Robert Pattinson.

It grossed over $383 million worldwide, making instant stars of Pattinson and Stewart and also causing wild scenes of fandom at various premieres around the world.

I interviewed Pattinson last year and the resulting podcast was one of the most popular things on this site as Twilight fans downloaded it in droves.

At the premiere later that evening, the massed ranks of teenage girls screaming at him and the cast was something like The Beatles at Shea Stadium in 1965.

The new film is expected to do even better: a ‘fan event’ attended by the stars last week in Battersea (complete with red carpet interviews) was so big some radio stations even mistook it for a premiere.

I got a sneak peak of New Moon yesterday at a press screening in London and the audience mostly consisted of media folk (like me), teenage girls and their parents.

The story involves Edward having to go away, Bella discovering new things about her friend Jacob (Taylor Lautner) and a mysterious vampire from the past named Aro (Michael Sheen).

Bearing in mind that I am way out of the target demographic for this material, here are my main thoughts:

  • It is slightly more expansive in terms of the locations (the action even shifts to Italy at one point)
  • Technically, it is an improvement on the original as the supernatural action is more convincingly done.
  • The narrative drags here and there but mostly moves along in a brisk and accessible fashion.
  • Fans of Edward may be a little disappointed that he isn’t in the story for long stretches.
  • Anna Kendrick is funny – she should be given a larger role next time.
  • For people unfamiliar with the books, brush up on Wikipedia or some things are going to leave you a little confused.
  • As a middle story (like The Empire Strikes Back) it leaves a few threads to be tantalisingly picked up on in the next film.
  • The last line of the film is clever as it pushes all the buttons of the audience …all at once.

My basic take is that this is essentially another reasonably well made fantasy film – a franchise like Star Wars or Harry Potter but moulded especially for teenage girls.

But despite the lack of genuine magic, there is no doubt that it will dominate the box office this month and make those publishers and executives who originally turned it down continue to tear their hair out.

Categories
Behind The Scenes Interesting

Maurice Sendak and Spike Jonze discuss Where The Wild Things Are

Author Maurice Sendak and director Spike Jonze discuss the upcoming adaptation of Where The Wild Things Are which opens in UK cinemas on Friday 11th December.

Categories
Amusing Viral Video

Nicolas Cage on crack

This viral video for Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans is actually quite a good taster of the film’s gleeful insanity.

I love the fact that it directs you to a site called luckycrackpipe.com

Read my full thoughts on the film here.

N.B. If Cage’s lawyers are reading this, the title of the post clearly refers to his character in the film being on crack. Happy? Good.

Categories
News

Edward Woodward (1930-2009)

Veteran British actor Edward Woodward has died at the age of 79.

He’ll be best remembered on film for the lead role in The Wicker Man, as the police officer who ventures to a mysterious Scottish island.

As someone growing up in the 1980s, The Equalizer was a show I’d always sneak down to watch and, in retrospect, there was something pleasingly surreal about an ageing English actor becoming a star on US prime time TV.

His most recent role of note was in Hot Fuzz:

Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

Blu-ray Pick: North By Northwest

North By Northwest Blu-ray

Alfred Hitchcock‘s classic thrillerĀ North by Northwest is finally available on Blu-ray.

The espionage caper starring Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint and James Mason has been newly remastered in 1080p from original VistaVision film elements.

One of Hitchcock’s finest and most purely enjoyable films, this suspenseful cross-continental chase has equal doses of tension and wit wrapped up in an insane plot.

Memorable for the chemistry between Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint, the famous crop-dusting sequence and the climax on Mount Rushmore, it influenced a generation of filmmakers and along with Psycho, Rear Window and Vertigo stands as one of his signature works.

As usual with Hitchcock at his peak, it can be enjoyed as slick entertainment and rigorously examined for intellectual meaning – chin-stroking academics and French intellectuals will no doubt have a field day with the references to Cold War paranoia, Freud and other motifs that litter Hitchcock’s films.

Grant is perhaps the best he’s ever been as the breezy protagonist, mixing charm and unease (Mad Men fans should note that he’s a Manhattan advertising executive) whilst Saint is pitch perfect as the icy Hitchcock blonde.

The arrival of North by Northwest on Blu-ray is significant as it is the first of Hitchcock’s films to get the full HD re-release treatment.

Although originally released by MGM, Warner Bros now have the distribution rights and they have scanned the original VistaVision production elements in an 8K resolution.

The resulting presentation has a much improved depth of field and clarity which has prompted highly positive reviews from The Digital Bits and DVD Beaver (the latter has screen shot comparisons of the Blu-ray and DVD versions).

The extras on the Blu-ray are as follows:

  • 1080P Widescreen
  • English 5.1 Dolby TrueHD
  • French, German, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese DD1.0 Mono
  • Subtitles (Film & Extras except commentary): English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Castilian, Portuguese, Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish
  • Commentary by Ernest Lehman
  • Cary Grant: A Class Apart (2003 TCM Documentary)
  • Documentary – The Master’s Touch: Hitchcock’s Signature Style (NEW)
  • Documentary: North by Northwest: One for the Ages (NEW)
  • Music only track (DD5.1)
  • Destination Hitchcock: The Making of North by Northwest hosted by Eva Marie Saint
  • Stills Gallery
  • Trailers
  • TV Spot
  • A Guided Tour with Alfred Hitchcock
  • Theatrical Trailer

* No DVD release is currently scheduled for the UK market *

> Buy North By NorthWest on Blu-ray at Amazon UK
> North By Northwest at the IMDb
> Find out more about Alfred Hitchcock at Wikipedia

Categories
blu-ray

Blu-ray Pick: Moon

Moon Bluray
Click the image to buy the Blu-ray of Moon at Amazon UK

Moon is a futuristic sci-fi thriller about an astronaut stationed on a lunar mining station with only a robot for company until strange things start to happen.

It isn’t often that you get an intelligent low-budget sci-fi film, but this first-time effort by director Duncan Jones is highly impressive.

Set in the near future, Sam Rockwell stars as an astronaut who works on the moon harvesting helium-3 for a company who have helped reverse the planet’s energy crisis.

To say too much more about the plot would give away too much as it takes off in interesting and unexpected directions.

The script by Jones and Nathan Parker taps into the vein of more cerebral sci-fi classics like Solaris (both versions), 2001 and Silent Running.

Given the budgetary limitations, it looks terrific with clever use of sets and special effects, butĀ the biggest highlight of all is Rockwell who gives a remarkable performance in what is largely a one man show.

Kevin Spacey also provides nice support as the voice of the base computer GERTY.

The Blu-ray Disc is coded for all regions (A, B and C) and the extra features include:

  • 1080P 2.40:1 Widescreen
  • English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio
  • Thai DD5.1
  • English, English HOH, Hindi, Indonesian/Bahasa and Thai subtitles
  • Commentary with Writer/Director Duncan Jones, Director of Photography Gary Shaw, Concept Designer Gavin Rothery and Production Designer Tony Noble
  • Commentary with Writer/Director Duncan Jones and Producer Stuart Fenegan
  • “Whistle” a Short Film by Duncan Jones
  • The Making of Moon
  • Creating the Visual Effects
  • Science Center Q&A with Director Duncan Jones
  • Filmmaker’s Q&A at the Sundance Film Festival
  • GERTY Table Tennis Easter Egg

Moon is out now on DVD and Blu-ray Disc from Sony

> Buy Moon on DVD and Blu-ray from Amazon
> Moon at the IMDb
> Visit the official site for the DVD and Blu-ray release

Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

Blu-ray Pick: For All Mankind

For All Mankind is the classic 1989 documentary directed by Al Reinhert and assembled from footage shot on the Apollo lunar missions.

From 1968 to 1972 US astronauts flew in to outer space and to the moon. They were told by NASA to shoot as much footage as they could on 16mm cameras.

However, all the footage remained in the vaults untilĀ Reinert persuaded the space agency to let him make a documentary.

For All Mankind Bluray

Along with and editor Susan Korda, Reinhart sifted through over six million feet of film footage, and 80 hours of NASA interviews to create this truly remarkable film.

Interestingly the narrative movement is like one space mission, even though it is actually a collage of all of the Apollo lunar landing missions.

The archive footage is remarkable and neatly inter cut with the voices of the astronauts themselves including Jim Lovell, Michael Collins, Charles Conrad, Jack Swigert, and Ken Mattingly, sourced from interviews and mission recordings.

The soundtrack was originally composed in 1983 by Brian Eno and released as Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks. Because of delays the film didn’t surface until 1989 and by then some of the album tracks had been replaced with pieces by Eno and other artists.

It is available on DVD (Ā£19.99 RRP) and Blu-ray Disc (Ā£24.99 RRP) with the following features:

  • A new, restored high-definition transfer, supervised and approved by director Al Reinert
  • Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack, remastered from the original sound stems
  • Audio commentary featuring Reinert and Apollo 17 commander Eugene A. Cernan, the last man to set foot on the moon
  • An Accidental Gift: The Making of “For All Mankind,” a new documentary featuring interviews with Reinert, Apollo 12 and Skylab astronaut Alan Bean, and NASA archive specialists
  • A gallery of Bean’s artwork, inspired by his life as an astronaut, with commentary and a filmed introduction
  • NASA audio highlights and liftoff footage
  • Optional on-screen identification of astronauts and mission control specialists
  • New optional English subtitles (SDH) for the hearing impaired
  • A luxurious booklet, featuring essays, credits, stills, a new interview with Brian Eno, and more

For All Mankind is out now on DVD and Blu-ray Disc from Eureka/Masters of Cinema

> Buy it on DVD and Blu-ray Disc from Amazon UK
> For All Mankind at the IMDb
> Find out more about the Apollo lunar missions at Wikipedia

Categories
blu-ray DVD & Blu-ray

UK Blu-ray Releases: Monday 16th November 2009

Blu-ray Picks 16-11-09

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UK BLU-RAY PICKS

For All Mankind (Eureka/Masters of Cinema): A re-release of the classic 1989 documentary directed by Al Reinhert, which was assembled from the NASA archives. Featuring extraordinary footageĀ of the Apollo lunar missions from 1968 to 1972, the hypnotic score was by Brian Eno. [Read the full review here]

Moon (Sony): Another moon-themed release, this classy futuristic sci-fi thriller stars Sam Rockwell an astronaut stationed on a mining station on the moon. Directed by Duncan Jones, it received considerable critical acclaim. [Read the full review here]

North By Northwest (Warner Bros.): The 50th anniversary re-release of Alfred Hitchcock’s espionage caper starring Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint and James Mason has been newly remastered in 1080p from original VistaVision film elements. [Read the full review here]

ALSO OUT

Rome: The Complete Series (Warner)
The Green Mile (Warner)
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (Second Sight)
The Towering Inferno (Warner)
Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure (Disney)

>Ā Check out all the DVD & Blu-ray releases for November 2009
> Browse more Blu-ray releases atĀ Amazon UK andĀ Play
>Ā Check out the latest UK cinema releases including 2012, Taking Woodstock and The White Ribbon (W/C Friday 13th November 2009)