| # | Title | Director | Writer | Rated | Year | Studio | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | A.I. Artificial Intelligence | Steven Spielberg | Brian Aldiss, Ian Watson | PG-13 | 2001 | Dreamworks Video | Science Fiction & Fantasy |
A.I. Artificial Intelligence Steven SpielbergRated: PG-13 Writer: Brian Aldiss, Ian Watson Date Added: 16 Apr 2006 Languages: German, English, Spanish Subtitles: German, English, French, Italian, Spanish, Danish, Finnish, Greek, Hebrew, Icelandic, Croatian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Swedish, Czech, Turkish, Hungarian Sound: Dolby Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: Special Edition Summary: History will place an asterisk next to "A.I." as the film Stanley Kubrick "might" have directed. But let the record also show that Kubrick--after developing this project for some 15 years--wanted Steven Spielberg to helm this astonishing sci-fi rendition of "Pinocchio", claiming (with good reason) that it veered closer to Spielberg's kinder, gentler sensibilities. Spielberg inherited the project (based on the Brian Aldiss short story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long") after Kubrick's death in 1999, and the result is an astounding directorial hybrid. A flawed masterpiece of sorts, in which Spielberg's gift for wondrous enchantment often clashes (and sometimes melds) with Kubrick's harsher vision of humanity, the film spans near and distant futures with the fairy-tale adventures of an artificial boy named David (Haley Joel Osment), a marvel of cybernetic progress who wants only to be a real boy, loved by his mother in that happy place called home.
|
|||||||
| 7 | The Abyss | James Cameron | James Cameron | PG-13 | 1989 | Twentieth Century Fox | Science Fiction & Fantasy |
The Abyss James CameronRated: PG-13 Writer: James Cameron Date Added: 04 May 2004 Languages: English, Subtitles: English, Spanish Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Picture Format: Letterbox Comments: Box Set Summary: Meticulously crafted but also ponderous and predictable, James Cameron's 1989 deep-sea close-encounter epic reaffirms one of the oldest first principles of cinema: everything moves a lot more slowly underwater. Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, as formerly married petroleum engineers who still have some "issues" to work out, are drafted to assist a gung-ho Navy SEAL (Michael Biehn) with a top-secret recovery operation: a nuclear sub has been ambushed and sunk, under mysterious circumstances, in some of the deepest waters on earth, and the petro-techies have the only submersible craft capable of diving down that far. Every image and every performance is painstakingly sharp and detailed (and the computerized water creatures are lovely) but the movie's lumbering pace is ultimately lethal. It's the audience that ends up feeling waterlogged. For a guy who likes guns as much as Cameron (his next film after all, was the body-count masterpiece Terminator 2: Judgment Day), it's interesting that the moral balance here is weighted heavily in favor of the can-do engineers; the military types are end-justifies-the-means amoralists, just like the weasely government bureaucrats in Aliens. --David Chute
|
|||||||
| 8 | Adaptation | Spike Jonze | Susan Orlean, Charlie Kaufman | R | 2003 | Columbia Tri-Star | Comedy |
Adaptation Spike JonzeRated: R Writer: Susan Orlean, Charlie Kaufman Date Added: 04 May 2004 Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: Charlie Kaufman writes the way he lives... With Great Difficulty. His Twin Brother Donald Lives the way he writes... with foolish abandon. Susan writes about life... But can't live it. John's life is a book... Waiting to be adapted. One story... Four Lives... A million ways it can end. Summary: Twisty brilliance from screenwriter Charlie Kaufman and director Spike Jonze, the team who created Being John Malkovich. Nicolas Cage returns to form with a funny, sad, and sneaky performance as Charlie Kaufman, a self-loathing screenwriter who has been hired to adapt Susan Orlean's book The Orchid Thief into a screenplay. Frustrated and infatuated by Orlean's elegant but plotless book (which is largely a rumination on flowers), Kaufman begins to write a screenplay about himself trying to write a screenplay about The Orchid Thief, all the while hounded by his twin brother Donald (Cage again), who's cheerfully writing the kind of formulaic action movie that Kaufman finds repugnant. By its conclusion, Adaptation is the most artistically ambitious, most utterly cynical, and most uncategorizable movie ever to come out of Hollywood. Also starring Meryl Streep (as Susan Orlean), Chris Cooper, Tilda Swinton, and Brian Cox; superb performances throughout. --Bret Fetzer
|
|||||||
| 9 | The Addams Family - Volume One | Arthur Lubin, Sidney Miller, Nat Perrin, Arthur Hiller, Jerry Hopper | NR | 1964 | Comedy | ||
The Addams Family - Volume One Arthur Lubin, Sidney Miller, Nat Perrin, Arthur Hiller, Jerry HopperRated: NR Date Added: 16 Nov 2008 Subtitles: ENDsubtitles-->Summary: If "The Munsters" was a traditional family sitcom as reimagined by "Famous Monsters of Filmland" magazine, "The Addams Family" is a macabre twist on "Father Knows Best". The Munster and Addams clans made their TV debuts in 1964 and lasted two seasons before the networks buried them. The Addamses are now gloriously resurrected in this three-disc set that digs up the series' first 22 episodes (oddly, 12 shy of the complete first season). Inspired by Charles Addams's "New Yorker" cartoons, "The Addams Family" is fiendishly funny, with a dead-on cast that indelibly embodies Addams's characters. John Astin brings a demented glee to eccentric, frighteningly wealthy Gomez Addams. Carolyn Jones is bewitching as his pre-goth wife, Morticia, whom the Beatles might have had in mind when they sang, "Baby's in Black." Jackie Coogan is the electrifying Uncle Fester, with Ted Cassidy (who famously took a kick in the groin from Paul Newman in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid") is the monstrous butler Lurch, whose "You rang?" entered the pop culture lexicon. |
|||||||
| 10 | The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. - The Complete Series | Larry Shaw, Michael Schultz, James A. Contner, Win Phelps, Kevin Bright, Joseph L. Scanlan, Tom Chehak, Rob Bowman, Daniel Attias, Michael Caffey, Bryan Spicer, Joe Napolitano, Greg Beeman, Fred Gerber, Andy Tennant, Michael Lange | NR | 1993 | Warner Home Video | Westerns | |
The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. - The Complete Series Larry Shaw, Michael Schultz, James A. Contner, Win Phelps, Kevin Bright, Joseph L. Scanlan, Tom Chehak, Rob Bowman, Daniel Attias, Michael Caffey, Bryan Spicer, Joe Napolitano, Greg Beeman, Fred Gerber, Andy Tennant, Michael LangeRated: NR Date Added: 22 Feb 2007 Languages: English Subtitles: English, Spanish Sound: Dolby Comments: Smile. You're about to meet your new hero. Summary: The world's favorite western/sci-fi/comedy/action cult hit rides again! Here on 8 discs is the complete series about Brisco (Bruce Campbell), a tough-as-rawhide cowpoke, debonair ladies' man and Harvard-educated smarty-britches who roams from Frisco to Jalisco in pursuit of outlaws who killed his father...and in search of a mysterious orb possessing out-of-this world powers. Hot lead and cool anachronisms await Brisco as he and his sidekicks - including Comet, the intellectual equine who doesn't know he's a horse - fight for justice in the way, way, way-out West. Put your boots in your stirrups, your tongue in your cheek and join the fun. Let's play cowboys and aliens. |
|||||||
| 11 | The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension | W.D. Richter | Earl Mac Rauch | PG | 1984 | MGM/UA Video | Science Fiction & Fantasy |
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension W.D. RichterRated: PG Writer: Earl Mac Rauch Date Added: 05 Jul 2005 Subtitles: ENDsubtitles-->Sound: Dolby Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: Beings from Another Dimension have invaded your world. Summary: "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai: Across the 8th Dimension" is one of the most agreeably insane movies ever made. Peter Weller stars as Buckaroo, an acclaimed neurosurgeon, particle physicist, and, of course, rock star. He travels with the Hong Kong Cavaliers, a band of hard-rocking scientists who are also really good dressers. Buckaroo's interdimensional experiments with his Operation Overthruster throw him (and the Earth) straight into the middle of an alien war, and before you know it, he's got just a few hours to save the world. Confused? Hang on, we're only 10 minutes into the movie. "Buckaroo Banzai" hurls you right into the middle of its comic-book universe and keeps going at a breakneck pace. It's chock-full of overlapping jokes (even as we're trying to make sense of Dr. Lizardo's hospital room, a voice calmly announces that "lithium is no longer available on credit" over the PA system), hilarious throwaway dialogue ("You're like Jerry Lewis: you give me hope to carry on."), and weirdness just for the sheer joy of it ("Why is there a watermelon there?" "I'll tell you later."). You'll want to watch it at least twice--there's just no way to catch everything the first time around. Ellen Barkin has a terrific time doing a dead-on film noir moll parody as Penny Priddy, and John Lithgow turns in a brilliant manic performance as Dr. Lizardo/John Whorfin. There is no reason not to own this movie unless you are cold and dead inside. Laugh while you can, Monkey Boys. "--Ali Davis"
|
|||||||
| 12 | Aeon Flux | Karyn Kusama | PG-13 | 2005 | Paramount Home Video | Science Fiction & Fantasy | |
Aeon Flux Karyn KusamaRated: PG-13 Date Added: 27 Feb 2007 Languages: English Subtitles: Spanish Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Picture Format: Widescreen Comments: The Perfect World Meets The Perfect Assassin Summary: Like the animated series it's based on, "Aeon Flux" is the kind of sci-fi that's best appreciated by the MTV generation. It's a serious attempt at stylized, futuristic action/adventure (the title character, played by Charlize Theron, is essentially a female James Bond for the cyberpunk era) and taken for what it is, it's not all that bad. The action takes place in the year 2415, four centuries after a virus nearly decimated the human race, leaving only five million survivors in a utopian city called Bregna. Aeon belongs to the Monicans, a secret rebel resistance force that is struggling to destroy the Goodchild regime led by its namesake, Trevor Goodchild (Martin Csokas), the ruler of Bregna and a descendant of the man who found a cure for the deadly virus. As instructed by the Handler (Frances McDormand, gamely playing along in ridiculous sci-fi regalia), Aeon is assigned to assassinate Goodchild, but there are deeper secrets to be discovered, and conspiracies to be foiled. This leads director Karyn Kusama (who fared much better with her debut feature "Girlfight") to indulge in all sorts of routine action and fast-paced gunplay, but the elusive pleasures of "Aeon Flux" are mostly found in the sleek athleticism of Theron and costar Sophie Okonedo (as a fellow Monican), who commit themselves 100% to roles that are dramatically flat yet physically dynamic. Other highlights include Aeon's high-tech gadgetry (including an eyeball that doubles as a microsocope) and the amusing sight of Pete Postlethwaite in a costume resembling a construction-site disposal tube, but "Flux" fans may wonder what happened to the surreal, chromium sheen future that gave the MTV series its visionary appeal. As a live-action feature, "Aeon Flux" is a miscalculated exercise in cheesy style and dour tone, but it's entertaining enough to earn a small cadre of admirers. "--Jeff Shannon"
|
|||||||
| 13 | Alfred Hitchcock - The Legend Begins | Alfred Hitchcock | NR | Mystery & Suspense | |||
Alfred Hitchcock - The Legend Begins Alfred HitchcockRated: NR Date Added: 07 Sep 2008 Subtitles: ENDsubtitles-->Summary: The best of the best! The "Best of" your favorite television shows, Cartoon Classics and a WWII documentary! Enjoy them all with these DVD Sets. Watch them all the way through, or pick and choose your favorite episodes. Tune into the details below. Enjoy these greats anytime you like when you order your DVD's today! 20 timeless films from the undisputed master of suspense! Featuring: The Lady Vanishes, The Man Who Knew Too Much, The Thirty-Nine Steps, and MORE, including a bonus documentary feature! AVAILABLE SEPARATELY: Essential Ernest; 150 Cartoon Festival - word search in our store for 'DVDs'. Ultimate Alfred Hitchcock Collection
|
|||||||
| 14 | Altered States | Ken Russell | Paddy Chayefsky, Paddy Chayefsky | R | 1980 | Warner Studios | Drama |
Altered States Ken RussellRated: R Writer: Paddy Chayefsky, Paddy Chayefsky Date Added: 04 May 2004 Languages: English, French Subtitles: English, French Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: In the basement of a university medical school Dr . Jessup floats naked in total darkness. The most terrifying experiment in the history of science is out of control... and the subject is himself Summary: It's easy to understand why the late, great screenwriter Paddy Chayefsky removed his name from the credits of Altered States and substituted the pseudonym Sidney Aaron. After all, Chayefsky was a revered dramatist whose original source novel was intended as a serious exploration of altered consciousness, inspired by the immersion-tank experiments of Dr. John Lilly in the 1970s. In the hands of maverick director Ken Russell, however, Altered States became a full-on sensory assault, using symbolic imagery and mind- blowing special effects to depict one man's physical and hallucinatory journey through the entire history of human evolution. It's a brazenly silly film redeemed by its intellectual ambition--a dazzling extravaganza that's in love with science and scientists, and eagerly willing to dive off the precipice of rationality to explore uncharted regions of mind, body, and spirit. William Hurt made his bold film debut as the psycho-physiologist who plays guinea pig to his own experiments; Blair Brown plays his equally brilliant wife, whose devotion is just strong enough to bring him back from the most altered state imaginable. From the eternal channels of sense memory to the restorative power of a loving embrace, this movie rocks you to the birth of the universe and back again. And while it's clearly not the story that Chayefsky wanted on the screen, the directorial audacity of Ken Russell makes it one heck of a memorable trip. --Jeff Shannon
|
|||||||
| 15 | Amadeus - Director's Cut | Milos Forman | Peter Shaffer, Peter Shaffer | R | 1984 | Warner Home Video | Drama |
Amadeus - Director's Cut Milos FormanRated: R Writer: Peter Shaffer, Peter Shaffer Date Added: 15 Nov 2004 Languages: English, French, Musical Score Subtitles: English, French Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: The Man... The Music... The Madness... The Murder... The Motion Picture... Summary: A note-perfect cinematic event whose immortality was assured from its opening night, Amadeus is an unlikely candidate for the director's-cut treatment. Like one of Mozart's operas, the multiple Oscar-winning theatrical version seemed perfectly formed from the outset--ideal casting, costumes, sets, cinematography, lighting, screenplay, music, music, music--so the reinstatement of an extra 20 minutes simply risks adding "too many notes." Yet though this extended cut can hardly be said to improve a picture that needed no improvement, it does at least flesh out a couple of small subplots and shed new light on certain key scenes. Here we learn why Constanze Mozart bears such ill will towards Salieri when she discovers him at her husband's deathbed, and we see deeper into the reasons why Mozart has no students. The structure of the picture is otherwise unaltered. The director's cut of Amadeus finally accords this masterful work the DVD treatment it deserves. The handsome anamorphic widescreen picture is accompanied by a choice of Dolby 5.1 or Dolby stereo sound options, and it's all contained on one side of the disc. Director Milos Forman and writer Peter Shaffer provide a chatty though sporadic commentary, but they're obviously still too mesmerized by the movie to do much more than offer the odd anecdote. The second disc contains an excellent new hour-long "making of" documentary, with contributions from Forman, Shaffer, Sir Neville Marriner, and all the main actors, taking in the scriptwriting, choice of music, casting, and problems involved in filming in Communist Czechoslovakia with half the crew and extras working for the Secret Police. --Mark Walker
|
|||||||
| 16 | American Beauty | Sam Mendes | Alan Ball | R | 1999 | Universal Studios | Drama |
American Beauty Sam MendesRated: R Writer: Alan Ball Date Added: 04 May 2004 Languages: English, Subtitles: English Sound: DTS 5.1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: ... look closer Summary: From its first gliding aerial shot of a generic suburban street, American Beauty moves with a mesmerizing confidence and acuity epitomized by Kevin Spacey's calm narration. Spacey is Lester Burnham, a harried Everyman whose midlife awakening is the spine of the story, and his very first lines hook us with their teasing fatalism--like Sunset Boulevard's Joe Gillis, Burnham tells us his story from beyond the grave. It's an audacious start for a film that justifies that audacity. Weaving social satire, domestic tragedy, and whodunit into a single package, Alan Ball's first theatrical script dares to blur generic lines and keep us off balance, winking seamlessly from dark, scabrous comedy to deeply moving drama. The Burnham family joins the cinematic short list of great dysfunctional American families, as Lester is pitted against his manic, materialistic realtor wife, Carolyn (Annette Bening, making the most of a mostly unsympathetic role) and his sullen, contemptuous teenaged daughter, Jane (Thora Birch, utterly convincing in her edgy balance of self-absorption and wistful longing). Into their lives come two catalytic outsiders. A young cheerleader (Mena Suvari) jolts Lester into a sexual epiphany that blooms into a second adolescence. And an eerily calm young neighbor (Wes Bentley) transforms both Lester and Jane with his canny influence. Credit another big-screen newcomer, English theatrical director Sam Mendes, with expertly juggling these potentially disjunctive elements into a superb ensemble piece that achieves a stylized pace without lapsing into transparent self-indulgence. Mendes has shrewdly insured his success with a solid crew of stage veterans, yet he's also made an inspired discovery in Bentley, whose Ricky Fitts becomes a fulcrum for both plot and theme. Cinematographer Conrad Hall's sumptuous visual design further elevates the film, infusing the beige interiors of the Burnhams' lives with vivid bursts of deep crimson, the color of roses--and of blood. --Sam Sutherland
|
|||||||
| 17 | American Graffiti - Collector's Edition | George Lucas | George Lucas, Gloria Katz | PG | 1973 | Universal Studios | Comedy |
American Graffiti - Collector's Edition George LucasRated: PG Writer: George Lucas, Gloria Katz Date Added: 04 May 2004 Languages: English, French Subtitles: Spanish Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: Where were you in '62? Summary: Here's how critic Roger Ebert described the unique and lasting value of George Lucas's 1973 box-office hit, American Graffiti: "[It's] not only a great movie but a brilliant work of historical fiction; no sociological treatise could duplicate the movie's success in remembering exactly how it was to be alive at that cultural instant." The time to which Ebert and the film refers is the summer of 1962, and American Graffiti captures the look, feel, and sound of that era by chronicling one memorable night in the lives of several young Californians on the cusp of adulthood. (In essence, Lucas was making a semiautobiographical tribute to his own days as a hot-rod cruiser, and the film's phenomenal success paved the way for Star Wars.) The action is propelled by the music of Wolfman Jack's rock & roll radio show--a soundtrack of pop hits that would become as popular as the film itself. As Lucas develops several character subplots, American Graffiti becomes a flawless time capsule of meticulously re-created memory, as authentic as a documentary and vividly realized through innovative use of cinematography and sound. The once-in-a-lifetime ensemble cast members inhabit their roles so fully that they don't seem like actors at all, comprising a who's who of performers--some of whom went on to stellar careers--including Ron Howard, Richard Dreyfuss, Harrison Ford, Cindy Williams, Mackenzie Phillips, Charles Martin Smith, Candy Clark, and Paul Le Mat. A true American classic, the film ranks No. 77 on the American Film Institute's list of all-time greatest American movies. --Jeff Shannon
|
|||||||
| 18 | American Movie | Chris Smith (II) | R | 1999 | Sony Pictures | Drama | |
American Movie Chris Smith (II)Rated: R Date Added: 22 Dec 2006 Languages: English Subtitles: English, Spanish Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Picture Format: Pan & Scan Summary: Struggling filmmaker Mark Borchardt is the subject of "American Movie", and he may also be the most determined man you'll ever meet. The straggly haired, fast-talking, Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin, native lists his greatest influences as "Dawn of the Dead", "Night of the Living Dead", and "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre". He began making horror movies as a gangly adolescent, and is now set on finishing "Coven" (which he pronounces like "woven"), the "35-minute direct market thriller" he has worked on for two years. In the process, he steadfastly battles immense debt, the threat of losing his kids, and birds chirping gleefully through scenes set in the dead of winter. His mother would rather do her shopping than be an extra, his brother contends he's best suited for factory work, and his father just wants him to "watch the language."
|
|||||||
| 19 | Analyze This | Harold Ramis | Kenneth Lonergan, Peter Tolan | R | 1999 | Warner Studios | Comedy |
Analyze This Harold RamisRated: R Writer: Kenneth Lonergan, Peter Tolan Date Added: 04 May 2004 Languages: English, Subtitles: English Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: New York's most powerful gangster is about to get in touch with his feelings. YOU try telling him his 50 minutes are up. Summary: Cast Robert De Niro and Billy Crystal together in a film and it should be a sucker's bet as to who's going to be funnier and who's going to give the more nuanced performance. Somehow, though, De Niro walks away with most of the laughs in Analyze This, a buddy action-comedy about a mob boss (De Niro, natch) suffering from panic attacks who makes a nebbishy shrink (Crystal, natch) an offer he can't refuse--actually, it's not really an offer, it's a command. The good doctor is forced to help the gangster get in touch with his feelings. Had the brilliant TV series The Sopranos not underscored how thin and watery and shticky director-cowriter Harold Ramis's approach to such potentially rich material actually is, the movie--a hit in theaters and De Niro's biggest film ever--would seem more fresh and kicky. De Niro's definitely a hoot as the ever milder menace, and Crystal actually concentrates on giving a credible performance opposite the acting legend (alas, he doesn't turn his character's fear of his patient into inspired comedy, as Alan Arkin did in Grosse Pointe Blank). The conclusion devolves into the requisite gunplay, and Chazz Palminteri and Lisa Kudrow are criminally wasted as an opposing mob boss and Crystal's fiancée, respectively, but overall, it's breezy fun. --David Kronke
|
|||||||
| 20 | Annie Hall | Woody Allen | Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman | PG | 1977 | MGM (Video & DVD) | Comedy |
Annie Hall Woody AllenRated: PG Writer: Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman Date Added: 16 Apr 2006 Languages: English, French Subtitles: English, French, Spanish Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono Picture Format: Letterbox Comments: A nervous romance. Summary: "Annie Hall" is one of the truest, most bittersweet romances on film. In it, Allen plays a thinly disguised version of himself: Alvy Singer, a successful--if neurotic--television comedian living in Manhattan. Annie (the wholesomely luminous Dianne Keaton) is a Midwestern transplant who dabbles in photography and sings in small clubs. When the two meet, the sparks are immediate--if repressed. Alone in her apartment for the first time, Alvy and Annie navigate a minefield of self-conscious "is-this-person-someone-I'd-want-to-get-involved-with?" conversation. As they speak, subtitles flash their unspoken thoughts: the likes of "I'm not smart enough for him" and "I sound like a jerk." Despite all their caution, they connect, and we're swept up in the flush of their new romance. Allen's antic sensibility shines here in a series of flashbacks to Alvy's childhood, growing up, quite literally, under a rumbling roller coaster. His boisterous Jewish family's dinner table shares a split screen with the WASP-y Hall's tight-lipped holiday table, one Alvy has joined for the first time. His position as outsider is uncontestable he looks down the table and sizes up Annie's "Grammy Hall" as "a classic Jew-hater."
|
|||||||
| 21 | Apocalypse Now Redux | Francis Ford Coppola | John Milius, Francis Ford Coppola | R | 1979 | Paramount Home Video | Drama |
Apocalypse Now Redux Francis Ford CoppolaRated: R Writer: John Milius, Francis Ford Coppola Date Added: 04 May 2004 Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Summary: Digitally remastered with 49 minutes of previously unseen footage, Apocalypse Now Redux is the reference standard of Francis Coppola's 1979 epic. A metaphorical hallucination of the Vietnam War, the film was reconstructed by Coppola and editor Walter Murch to enrich themes and clarify the ending. On that basis Redux is a qualified success, more coherent than the original while inviting the same accusations of directorial excess. The restored "French plantation" sequence adds ghostly resonance to the war's absurdity, and Willard's theft of Colonel Kurtz's beloved surfboard adds welcomed humor to the film's nightmarish upriver journey. An encounter with Playboy Playmates seems superfluous compared to the enhanced interplay between Willard and his ill-fated boat crew, but compensation arrives in the hellish Kurtz compound, where Willard's mission--and the performances of Martin Sheen and Marlon Brando--reach even greater heights of insanity, thus validating Redux as the rightful heir to Coppola's triumphantly rampant ambition. --Jeff Shannon
|
|||||||
| 22 | Apollo 13 | Ron Howard | Jim Lovell, Jeffrey Kluger | PG | 1995 | Universal Studios | Action & Adventure |
Apollo 13 Ron HowardRated: PG Writer: Jim Lovell, Jeffrey Kluger Date Added: 19 Jun 2006 Languages: English, Spanish, French Subtitles: Spanish Sound: Dolby Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: Houston, we have a problem. Summary: NASA's worst nightmare turned into one of the space agency's most heroic moments in 1970, when the "Apollo 13" crew was forced to hobble home in a disabled capsule after an explosion seriously damaged the moon-bound spacecraft. Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, and Bill Paxton play (respectively) astronauts Jim Lovell, Jack Swigert, and Fred Haise in director Ron Howard's intense, painstakingly authentic docudrama. The "Apollo 13" crew and Houston-based mission controllers race against time and heavy odds to return the damaged spacecraft safely to Earth from a distance of 205,500 miles. Using state-of-the-art special effects and ingenious filmmaking techniques, Howard and his stellar cast and crew build nail-biting tension while maintaining close fidelity to the facts. The result is a fitting tribute to the "Apollo 13" mission and one of the biggest box-office hits of 1995. "--Jeff Shannon"
|
|||||||
| 23 | The Apostle | Robert Duvall | Robert Duvall | PG-13 | 1998 | Umvd | Drama |
The Apostle Robert DuvallRated: PG-13 Writer: Robert Duvall Date Added: 04 May 2004 Languages: English, Subtitles: Spanish, French Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround Picture Format: Letterbox Comments: The hardest soul to save was his own. Summary: Written, directed, and personally financed by Robert Duvall, The Apostle was the culmination of a 14-year effort on the part of its creator, who also stars as the dynamic, God-fearing Texas preacher Euliss "Sonny" Dewey. Vibrantly authentic with its use of real gospel preachers and extras carefully selected from parishes of the deep South, the film treats its complicated characters with the kind of compassion and moral complexity mainstream Hollywood wouldn't dare muster. This is especially true in the case of Sonny, who responds to his wife's infidelity with a crime of passion that sends him on a new and uncharted quest for redemption. Under the assumed identity of "The Apostle E.F.," he settles in a tiny Louisiana town to revive an old church, where he undergoes a transformation of spirit and purpose that enlivens his community. But will the law catch up to him? Does he deserve to be punished? Fueled by Duvall's powerhouse performance, The Apostle refuses to praise or condemn its fascinating central character, leaving the proper degree of forgiveness up to the viewer. Further graced with superb performances by Farrah Fawcett, Miranda Richardson, and Billy Bob Thornton, the film is clearly Duvall's labor of love. --Jeff Shannon
|
|||||||
| 24 | Aristocrats | Paul Provenza | 2005 | Lions Gate Home Ent. | Comedy | ||
Aristocrats Paul ProvenzaRated: Date Added: 12 May 2007 Subtitles: ENDsubtitles-->Sound: Stereo Comments: No Nudity No Violence Unspeakable Obscenity Summary: Comedy veterans and co-creators Penn Jillette and Paul Provenza capitalize on their insider status and invite over 100 of their closest friends--who happen to be some of the biggest names in entertainment, from George Carlin, Whoopi Goldberg and Drew Carey to Gilbert Gottfried, Bob Saget, Paul Reiser and Sarah Silverman--to reminisce, analyze, deconstruct and deliver their own versions of the world's dirtiest joke, an old burlesque too extreme to be performed in public, called "The Aristocrats."
|
|||||||
| 25 | Arlington Road | Mark Pellington | Ehren Kruger | R | 1999 | Columbia/Tristar Studios | Drama |
Arlington Road Mark PellingtonRated: R Writer: Ehren Kruger Date Added: 04 May 2004 Languages: English, Subtitles: English Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: Fear Thy Neighbor Summary: It's easy to understand why Arlington Road sat on the studio shelf for nearly a year. No, the film isn't awful; rather, it's an extremely edgy and ultimately bleak thriller that offers no clear-cut heroes or villains. In other words, Hollywood had no idea how to sell it. Director Mark Pellington's underrated directorial debut, Going All the Way, suffered the same fate, essentially because the filmmaker's presentation of suburban America often shifts dramatically within the same film. Characters are usually miserable and bordering on meltdown, no situation is straightforward, and things usually end badly. Arlington Road begins as an astute study of suburban paranoia. Michael Faraday (a face-pinched Jeff Bridges, who spends most of the film on the brink of tears) is a college professor who teaches American history courses on terrorism. He's been a conspiracy freak since his wife, an FBI agent, was killed during a botched raid that feels like a thinly fictionalized reference to the Waco tragedy. After saving the life of his next-door neighbor's child, he initially befriends the family (Tim Robbins and Joan Cusack), but soon believes the husband is a terrorist. The first half of the film mocks Faraday: he has no real evidence and is not the most stable of protagonists. Despite the fact that it was government paranoia that got his wife killed, Faraday repeats the same type of behavior. Pellington shifts gears in the second half, however, and for awhile, it seems that the film has simultaneously sunk into a cheap, high-octane brand of Hollywood entertainment and undermined its own point. Arlington Road, though, possesses a stunning ending that's a real gut punch, one that may leave you needing a second viewing to catch all of its smartly executed setup. --Dave McCoy
|
|||||||
| 26 | Army of Darkness | Sam Raimi | Sam Raimi, Ivan Raimi | R | 1993 | Anchor Bay Entertainment | Horror |
Army of Darkness Sam RaimiRated: R Writer: Sam Raimi, Ivan Raimi Date Added: 26 Feb 2005 Languages: German Subtitles: French, English Sound: MPEG-1 2.0 Picture Format: Pan And Scan Comments: Trapped in time. Surrounded by evil. Low on gas Summary: ARMY OF DARKNESS: EVIL DEAD III is Director Sam Raimi's fourth film. ARMY OF DARKNESS: EVIL DEAD III begins where EVIL DEAD II left off. Our hero Ash gets time warped back to the middle ages. He has to join forces with king Artuhr in order to get back to his own time. Ash must do this by finding the book of the dead. But in order to take the book from the graveyard its in you must recite some magic words if you just take the book the Dead shall walk again and band together and take it back with force. Ash forgets the words . So Ash, king Arthur, and the good people of Arthur's kingdom must make an army to stop the Evil Dead so Ash can get back to his own time! SOUND: DOLBY DIGITAL 5.1 SOURROUNDVIDEO: 1.85:1 ANAMORPHIC WIDESCREEN 1.33:1 FULL SCREENFEATURES: ORIGINAL ENDING ( as an extra.) 20 mn FEATURETTE THEATRICAL TRAILER TALENT BIOSIf you love Action comedy or horror or evil dead buy this movie! This End to the EVIL DEAD trilogy is great especially the ending. it has to have one of the collest endings i'v ever seen.
|
|||||||
| 27 | Arrested Development - Season One | Stephen Marro | Stephen Marro | NR | 2003 | Fox Home Entertainme | Comedy |
Arrested Development - Season One Stephen MarroRated: NR Writer: Stephen Marro Date Added: 07 Mar 2005 Subtitles: ENDsubtitles-->Summary: Winner of the Outstanding Comedy Series Emmy its first year out, Arrested Development is the kind of sitcom that gives you hope for television. A mockumentary-style exploration of the beleaguered Bluth family, it's one of those idiosyncratic shows that doesn't rely on a laugh track or a studio audience; it's shot more like a TV drama, albeit with an omniscient narrator (executive producer Ron Howard) overseeing the proceedings. Holding the Bluths together just barely is son Michael Bluth (Jason Bateman), the only normal guy in a family that's chock full of nuts. Hardworking and sensible, Michael's certain he's going to be given control of his family's Enron-style corporation upon the retirement of his father (Jeffrey Tambor). The fact that he's passed over instead for his mother (Jessica Walter) is only a blip when compared to his father's immediate arrest for dubious accounting practices, and the resulting freeze on the family's previously limitless wealth. Bereft of money, and even less family love, the Bluths have to band together in their moment of need--not easy when everyone's looking out for number 1. In addition to his scabrous parents, Michael has to contend with his lothario older brother (Will Arnett), his basically useless younger brother (Tony Hale), his greedy twin sister (Portia DeRossi), and her sexually ambiguous husband (David Cross). Michael's only comrade in sanity is his son George Michael (Michael Cera), but then again, the teenage boy harbors a secret crush on his cousin (Alia Shawkat). A peerless ensemble led by the brilliant Bateman (who ever knew he could be this good?), all the actors are pitch-perfect in their roles, delivering the dryly funny, sometimes absurdist dialogue with the speed and flair of classic farce. The unusual tone of Arrested Development takes a bit of getting used to--it's far different from anything you'll see on TV, even HBO--but once you buy in to the Bluths' innumerable dysfunctions, you'll be laughing your head off for hours.--Mark Englehart
|
|||||||
| 28 | Arrested Development - Season Two | NR | 2004 | Fox Home Entertainme | Comedy | ||
Arrested Development - Season TwoRated: NR Date Added: 05 Nov 2005 Languages: English, Subtitles: English, Spanish, French Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: Box set Summary: The axe of cancellation dangled perilously over "Arrested Development" during its second season, but the award-winning comedy fought against fate to deliver a hilarious if scattershot 18 episodes (reduced from the original show order of 22), and stayed alive for the beginning of a third season. Most likely, the creators and actors knew the clock was ticking down, so they didn't hesitate to throw their all into these manic, hilarious episodes, which have only the thinnest of plot arcs but an electrifying energy that makes them hard to resist. Some of the story antics were more of the same: good son Michael (Jason Bateman) tries to keep his company afloat, but is often foiled by older brother Gob (Will Arnett); the precarious marriage of Lindsay (Portia de Rossi) and Tobias (David Cross) undergoes a trial separation; and young George-Michael (Michael Cera) fights his attraction to his cousin Maeby (Alia Shawkat). Other show developments, though, were new and stunningly, uproariously bizarre: Buster (Tony Hale) joins the army, but later finds his hand bitten off by a seal (yes, a real seal), and Oscar (Jeffrey Tambor), the hippie brother of jailed George Sr. (also Tambor), rekindles an affair with sister-in-law Lucille (Jessica Walter), which may have resulted in Buster's conception years ago.
|
|||||||
| 29 | Assisted Living | Elliot Greenebaum | Elliot Greenebaum | R | 2003 | Hart Sharp Video | Comedy |
Assisted Living Elliot GreenebaumRated: R Writer: Elliot Greenebaum Date Added: 03 Dec 2006 Subtitles: ENDsubtitles-->Summary: "Assisted Living" chronicles a day in the life of Todd, a janitor who spends his days smoking pot and interacting with the residents for his own entertainment. Todd's detachment from his surroundings is compromised only by his unlikely friendship with Mrs. Pearlman, a resident who begins to confuse him with her son. On this particular day, Todd must choose whether or not to play the part. "Assisted Living" is shot and staged in a real nursing home and gains much of its unique effect and style from the participation of actual residents and staff members. During much of the film, it is impossible to distinguish between what is real and what is fiction.
|
|||||||
| 30 | At Last the 1948 Show | Ian Fordyce | Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graham Chapman, | NR | 1967 | Tango Entertainment | Comedy |
At Last the 1948 Show Ian FordyceRated: NR Writer: Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graham Chapman, Date Added: 16 Apr 2006 Subtitles: ENDsubtitles-->Summary: Just two series were made before it became no more and it became a revolution that was destined to change the face of TV comedy forever 'At Last The 1948 Show' (actually broadcast in 1967). Bursting onto the nation's small screens in an explosion of unrelated and often surreal sketches, its main perpetrators were John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Marty Feldman and Tim Brooke-Taylor and what 'At Last The 1948 Show' began the inestimable Monty Python would one day finish in mind-blowing style.... This 2 DVD set features the recently rediscovered episodes of the classic 'At Last The 1948 Show' series. |
|||||||
| 31 | Attack of the Killer Tomatoes! | John De Bello | John De Bello, Costa Dillon | PG | 1978 | Buena Vista | Comedy |
Attack of the Killer Tomatoes! John De BelloRated: PG Writer: John De Bello, Costa Dillon Date Added: 04 May 2004 Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround Picture Format: Pan And Scan Summary: Movies with "wacky" titles are almost never any good, and Attack of the Killer Tomatoes! was intentionally made to be an instant golden turkey. Despite that, and the grade-Z production values, this is a regularly funny film. You need to be a fan of the kind of low-budget horror movie it's spoofing, and you need to be very forgiving of the technical ineptness and frequent clunkers, but it works. The story? Well, tomatoes attack, basically. Jack Riley and the San Diego Chicken are in it, and that genuinely alarming helicopter crash you see in an early scene was a real accident. Seen now, the whole ratty affair brings back agreeable memories of the circa-1978 college-movie/midnight-cinema era, when seeing this film was virtually unavoidable. The sequel, Return of the Killer Tomatoes! (with a young George Clooney), is actually an even funnier film. Director John De Bello would continue to squeeze the Tomatoes franchise for years to come. --Robert Horton
|
|||||||
| 32 | August Rush | Kirsten Sheridan | PG | 2007 | Warner Home Video | Drama | |
August Rush Kirsten SheridanRated: PG Date Added: 04 Apr 2008 Languages: English, French, Spanish Subtitles: English, French, Spanish Sound: AC-3 Picture Format: Widescreen Summary: Music has long been considered a universal language with the power to bring people together, but can the simple act of playing music possibly unite a child with a mother and father who live in two different cities and don't even know of the child's existence? Having shared one extraordinary night, classical cellist Lyla Novacek (Keri Russell) and Irish singer and songwriter Louis Connelly (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) were a union meant to be that was torn apart by circumstances and a protective father (William Sadler). After eleven years, both Lyla and Louis have given up performing only to find that they are unhappy and searching for a sense of fulfillment that will ultimately lead both artists back to music and performing. Evan (Freddie Highmore) is an 11-year old orphan who's grown up hearing music in everything around him and is convinced that his real parents want him and will find him with the help of music. Driven by his innate musical genius and a powerful compulsion to perform before the world, Evan runs away from the orphanage and is initially taken in by a street man known as Wizard (Robin Williams) who encourages his musical talent and renames him August Rush and, later, by a local priest who arranges for August to receive a Julliard education. August is a child prodigy who excels beyond even the wildest expectations and earns the opportunity of a lifetime--a chance to perform in front of an enormous audience in New York's Central Park. The question is; can his performance possibly reach the audience August really craves? While elements of this film are completely unbelievable (take August's instant prowess on the guitar or his immediate and sophisticated grasp of musical notation and musical theory), the message of the universality of music and the notion that "the music is all around us, all you have to do is listen" is both compelling and powerful. "--Tami Horiuchi"
|
|||||||
| 33 | Austin Powers - International Man of Mystery - New Line Platinum Series | Jay Roach | Mike Myers | PG-13 | 1997 | New Line Home Video | Comedy |
Austin Powers - International Man of Mystery - New Line Platinum Series Jay RoachRated: PG-13 Writer: Mike Myers Date Added: 04 May 2004 Subtitles: ENDsubtitles-->Sound: Dolby Comments: If he were any cooler, he'd still be frozen, baby! Summary: If you don't think Austin Powers is one of the funniest movies of the 1990s, maybe you should be packed into a cryogenic time-chamber and sent back to the decade whence you came. Perhaps it was the 1960s--the shag-a-delic decade when London hipster Austin Powers scored with gorgeous chicks as a fashion photographer by day, crime-fighting international man of mystery by night. Yeah, baby, yeah! But when Powers's arch nemesis, Dr. Evil, puts himself into a deep-freeze and travels via time-machine to the late 1990s, Powers must follow him and foil Evil's nefarious scheme of global domination. Mike Myers plays dual roles as Powers and Dr. Evil, with Elizabeth Hurley as his present-day sidekick and karate- kicking paramour. A hilarious spoof of '60s spy movies, this colorful comedy actually gets funnier with successive viewings, making it a perfect home video for gloomy days and randy nights. Oh, behave! --Jeff Shannon
|
|||||||
| 34 | The Aviator | Martin Scorsese | John Logan | PG-13 | 2004 | Warner Home Video | Drama |
The Aviator Martin ScorseseRated: PG-13 Writer: John Logan Date Added: 14 Jul 2005 Languages: English, French, Subtitles: English, Spanish, French Sound: Dolby Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Comments: Some men dream the future. He built it. Summary: From Hollywood's legendary Cocoanut Grove to the pioneering conquest of the wild blue yonder, Martin Scorsese's "The Aviator" celebrates old-school filmmaking at its finest. We say "old school" only because Scorsese's love of golden-age Hollywood is evident in his approach to his subject--Howard Hughes in his prime (played by Leonardo DiCaprio in his)--and especially in his technical mastery of the medium reflecting his love for classical filmmaking of the studio era. Even when he's using state-of-the-art digital trickery for the film's exciting flight scenes (including one of the most spectacular crashes ever filmed), Scorsese's meticulous attention to art direction and costume design suggests an impassioned pursuit of craftsmanship from a bygone era; every frame seems to glow with gilded detail. And while DiCaprio bears little physical resemblance to Hughes during the film's 20-year span (late 1920s to late '40s), he efficiently captures the eccentric millionaire's golden-boy essence, and his tragic descent into obsessive-compulsive seclusion. Bolstered by Cate Blanchett's uncannily accurate portrayal of Katharine Hepburn as Hughes' most beloved lover, "The Aviator" is easily Scorsese's most accessible film, inviting mainstream popularity without compromising Scorsese's artistic reputation. As compelling crowd-pleasers go, it's a class act from start to finish. "--Jeff Shannon"
|
|||||||


