Last week, we announced the release of the big screen version of one of the Hasbro toy company's most beloved franchises, G.I. Joe; it's only fitting that this week we announce the release of the animated series' complete collection. And it's impressive. On top of that, we've got a couple of hot new releases as well, including Pixar's Up and the indie hit Ballast. Sci-fi fans will enjoy the high definition re-release of Logan's Run, while baseball fans will find literally hours upon hours of entertainment in the Official World Series Film Collection. To round out the rest of the list, we've got another animated series collection, a highly rated Michael Mann thriller, the "ultimate" cut of Watchmen, and a new edition of another Pixar classic, Monsters, Inc. Check the article for details on these new releases!
Up
Another year, another home run for Pixar. That's pretty much been the case for the past several years; four of the six Pixar films nominated for the Best Animated Feature Oscar since the award was introduced in 2001 have won it, including last year's Wall-E. This year's offering from the powerhouse studio is Up, the story of an elderly balloon salesman and a young Wilderness Explorer who embark on an epic adventure in the salesman's house, which has been rigged to fly with thousands of balloons. On the surface, Up might seem less playful than Pixar's other offerings, whose main protagonists have ranged from bugs and cars to fish and robots. However, critics fell in love with the film, propelling it to Certified Fresh status and elevating it to one of the best Tomatometer-rated movies of the year at 98%. We know many of you have been waiting for this DVD, so be sure to pick it up this week!
Ballast
A critical darling and a fest favorite, Lance Hammer's Ballast, an immersive and transportive drama about a family in rural Mississippi, follows the lead of indie auteurs like David Gordon Greene (George Washington) and Jeff Nichols (Shotgun Stories) who took the model of the small town epic and gave it a modern context. Hammer's sturdy mastery of tone and the subtlety of his script make it hard to believe this is his feature writing/directing debut. He clearly identified the strongest feature of these small town sagas - their simplicity - and certainly struck that with the clarity of a bell. Many didn't have access to the theatrical run of Ballast, so this is your big chance; pick it up on DVD or Blu-Ray this week.
The Ugly Truth
What aimed to be raunchy rom/com for the ladies turns out be a weirdly anti-feminist misfire. Trying blithely to rebrand Judd Apatow's genital humor for the girly set while mistakenly keeping the cookie-cutter formula too close to the Kitchenaides,
Justice League: The Complete Series
If you were a fan of the animated Justice League series that aired on television during the early 2000s, but never got around to picking up any of the individually packaged seasons, then Warner Brothers has just solved your dilemma for you. This week, they release the complete collection of Justice League on DVD, along with all of the special features that each of the previous releases contained. The one extra item you get with this collection (aside from the convenience of having everything packaged together) is a short discussion with the producers of the show about what it was like to adapt the series for new fans. Does it make it worth your time to resell all of your individual editions and pick this one up? Maybe, maybe not, but this is probably more for those who never picked up the initial releases and would like to own the whole collection anyway.
Logan's Run - Blu-Ray
"Don't trust anyone over 30," the old saying goes. However, in the sci-fi semi-classic Logan's Run, that isn't a problem, since everyone over 30 is dead. The film is the story of a future society that offers unfathomable pleasures to its populace, before offing them to prevent overpopulation; however, some try to avoid their fate, and these "runners" attempt to flee to a mythical "sanctuary" outside of the realm. This solid bit of countercultural sci-fi -- released a year before Star Wars -- gets the Blu-Ray treatment this week, with commentary from director Michael Anderson, star Michael York, and costume designer Bill Thomas, as well as a short making-of doc.
Heat - Blu-Ray
Michael Mann's visceral, morally complex crime thriller Heat is exceptional in many ways. But two things particularly stand out: it's got one of the best shootouts in movie history, as well as one of the best displays of acting firepower -- namely, the diner scene between Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. Heat is dense and epic, but its army of well-developed characters make it one of the best crime films of the 1990s. The Blu-ray release is loaded with extras, including commentary from Mann and several documentaries, a lengthy making-of featurette, a short doc about the scene between Pacino and De Niro, and a look at the film's locations.
Watchmen: The Ultimate Cut
Earlier this year, 300 director Zack Snyder dared to bring one of the most beloved graphic novels of the 80s to the big screen, and fans everywhere held their breaths. What resulted was a mixed reaction, with some saying Snyder was as faithful as he could have been to the source material, while others decried this same faithfulness as one of the major failures of the film. Whatever stance you maintained in the debate, you'll get your chance to see Watchmen "as it was meant to be seen," in the form of Snyder's director's cut. The Ultimate Cut is a 5-disc box set that trumps all the previous editions that have come out this year by including the Tales of the Black Freighter, as well as some of the sacrificed side stories. There's an entire disc dedicated to a bunch of extra featurettes, as well as two more containing the motion comic version of the story.
Monsters, Inc. - 4-Disc Blu-Ray
In conjunction with their latest new release, Up, Pixar is also dropping a high definition version of one of their beloved classics, namely Monsters, Inc.. This unique take on the "monster under the bed" convention features the voice work of Billy Crystal and John Goodman, who star as Mike and Sulley, two monsters who inadvertently allow a human child to cross over into the monster realm, thereby inciting a panic (children, you see, are thought to be toxic). Like many of its Pixar peers, Monsters, Inc. garnered widespread critical acclaim, earning a 95% on the Tomatometer and Certified Fresh status, and made boatloads of money at the box office. And being that Pixar's offerings are top notch, the Blu-Ray treatment works to its advantage, showing off the immaculate detail poured into the artwork and animation. This 4-disc edition will feature several new extras, including a look at the Monsters, Inc.-themed ride in Tokyo Disneyland, a filmmakers' roundtable, and other featurettes.
The Official World Series Film Collection
With yet another World Series now in the books, and with months to go before pitchers and catchers report to spring training, baseball fans may feel a slight sense of deprivation. Fear not, fans of the national pastime: The Official World Series Film Collection, a 20-DVD box set, should tide you over. Relive the great moments of the fall classic, from the 1940s to today, and take a gander at some of the greats (Willie Mays, Mickey Mantle, Sandy Koufax, and Bob Gibson, among many others) performing on the biggest stage in all of baseball. This massive set comes with a 58-page book with a forward by Bob Costas.
G.I. Joe - A Real American Hero: Complete Collectors Set
If Stephen Sommers' big screen adaptation of this beloved toy/cartoon/comic franchise earlier this year (and the subsequent DVD release of the film) did little to excite you, then perhaps this throwback to the toons of the 80s will. This week, we get a giant foot locker's worth of classic G.I. Joe, the Complete Collectors Set, which includes not only every episode from the animated television series, but a Hummer-load full of bonus features and nifty extras. The bonus features include stuff like the famous PSAs, old Hasbro TV commercials, a fan film, and a slew of featurettes, while the extra goodies include an informative booklet, a 1GB flash drive with mini-comics loaded onto it, and temporary tattoos. Sure, the episodes might be a tad laughable if you were to watch them now, but the nostalgia factor cannot be dismissed, and this collection is a must for any hardcore fan.
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AntonChigurh writes: on Nov 09 2009 05:35 PM Watchmen has been out a week already, and I wont waste money buying it again. It's sad that a piece of garbage like the ugly truth even has to be released at all and ballast is buried for almost a year before it can be viewed to those who don't live near art house theater's. (Reply to this) |
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WallEField writes: on Nov 09 2009 06:11 PM Umm, Star Trek anyone? (Reply to this) |
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ARTaylor writes: on Nov 09 2009 06:13 PM If I had a job and thus money I would definitely get Up. It was definitely worth every minute. And best of all nothing in the movie requires being seen in 3D, that just enhanced it. It's not like Monsters vs Aliens where things pop out of the screen just to pop out. I've read that if you already have Justice League the new version isn't worth the upgrade for one disc. And since I already have it I won't be getting that. I should go through them again, if my XBox hadn't Red Ringed on me and I could watch DVDs. Try as I might I just can't get into Watchmen, either the movie or the graphic novel. I might rent the Ultimate version just to try it out. But I doubt I'll be buying it. (Reply to this) |
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tomwaitsjr writes: on Nov 09 2009 06:15 PM I hated the cartoon TALES OF THE BLACK FREIGHTER. Horrible. Predictible. Stupid. (Reply to this) |
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Mr. Bo Ziffer writes: on Nov 09 2009 06:25 PM As much as I liked Watchmen, I don't think I can shell out any more money for the Ultimate Cut. I liked the Director's Cut, and don't need the animated side story in it. What I don't know about what's in the Ultimate Cut won't hurt me. Luckily, my little sister wants to see Up, so I have an excuse to watch it with her. My friends can't seem to wrap their heads around a guy my age watching Pixar cartoons. This saves me the "embarassment". (Reply to this) |
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Throw An Onion writes: on Nov 09 2009 06:34 PM Obviously Watchmen wasn't going to please everyone and they obviously had to cut some stuff out but cutting the squid is what killed it for me. You cannot pull something as epic as the squid from the story. Instead of removing the squid why not cut out all the sex scenes that turned this into nothing more than a typical action porn film. Disclaimer: I have read the graphic novel obviously all the hooking up was in the book but seriously it is unnecessary. So please aspiring filmmakers if you want to make an action movie don't resort to cheap gimmicks to draw in the crowd. Namely getting actors to take their clothes off or removing giant sea life..... (Reply to this) |
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Throw An Onion writes: on Nov 09 2009 06:36 PM Up was a great film and deserves an Academy Award for Best Picture. Give the best Animated Film to Cloudy with a Chance. (Reply to this) |
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DanielthePhantasm XIX writes: on Nov 09 2009 06:52 PM up was great be rent or buying (Reply to this) |
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Dan B. writes: on Nov 09 2009 07:05 PM In reply to this comment (#2559871) Yea, cause usually it's really hard to predict the ending of a movie based off a book. I, on the other hand am buying it. (Reply to this) |
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DanielthePhantasm XIX writes: on Nov 09 2009 07:30 PM i also think an 'ultimate cut' of watchmen unnecessary loved the book and movie (Reply to this) |
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nerdbanner writes: on Nov 09 2009 08:46 PM In reply to this comment (#2559878) Yeah... A Fake Psychic Alien Squid isn't a movie gimmick. and it SOOO accessible. You're right, you shoud make multi-million dollar films (Reply to this) |
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nerdbanner writes: on Nov 09 2009 08:47 PM In reply to this comment (#2559878) Yeah... A Fake Psychic Alien Squid isn't a movie gimmick. and it SOOO accessible. You're right, you shoud make multi-million dollar films (Reply to this) |
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nerdbanner writes: on Nov 09 2009 08:49 PM In reply to this comment (#2559878) Yeah... A Fake Psychic Alien Squid isn't a movie gimmick. and it SOOO accessible. You're right, you should make multi-million dollar films (Reply to this) |
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adu writes: on Nov 09 2009 09:19 PM are there any other scenes in the ultimate cut other than the animated black freighter? (Reply to this) |
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ledawg1138 writes: on Nov 09 2009 09:53 PM "Heat" is still one of my all time favorite films. So, ledawg's happy. "Watchmen: The Ultimate Cut: This Time You Won't Replace The Movie"...until "Watchman: The Final Cut"...then "Watchmen: The Final Directors Cut"...then "Watchmen: The Final Directors Ultimate Edition: This Time It's For Real". (Reply to this) |
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ledawg1138 writes: on Nov 09 2009 10:04 PM In reply to this comment (#2559945) Oh, and "Up". "Up" is great too. But first, I'm getting "Heat". (Reply to this) |
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Throw An Onion writes: on Nov 09 2009 10:16 PM In reply to this comment (#2559922) If you feel the need to post your opinion three times to make your point i don't think your opinion carries much weight. Not that anyone ever listens or agrees with any opinions posted on here in the first place..... Zach Snyder tried to make Watchmen more accessible to a mainstream audience but unfortunately didn't realize that something like Watchmen isn't for the typical action movie crowd. The book was better left untouched by Hollywood. Snyder did as good of a job as anyone could have done with the material but still didn't come close to doing the graphic novel justice......\ As for the Giant Squid. It isn't a movie gimmick its classic. Obviously too confusing for the general public...... (Reply to this) |
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Shane S. writes: on Nov 10 2009 12:27 AM In reply to this comment (#2559878) The sex scenes served their purpose, which was to show you that these two characters basically had a superhero fetish. You weren't supposed to be turned on or titillated by the sex scenes; as a matter of fact, I think you were supposed to be disturbed and maybe laugh a bit at how serious the movie seemed to take it. Snyder may have missed the mark a bit on that, but I understood what he was trying to do. As for me, I think I will at least rent the Ultimate Cut because I didn't watch Tales of the Black Freighter. I didn't want to until I could see it integrated into the movie. I remember when I read the comic the two stories seemed to feed off each other and lend each other weight, so maybe it will improve the viewing experience of both. Here's hoping. (Reply to this) |
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blattman writes: on Nov 10 2009 12:42 AM In reply to this comment (#2559871) I felt the same way about that part of the graphic novel. You hope it is going to go somewhere, and you wait, but nothing much happens. Kind of a waste of time for a great story. (Reply to this) |
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blattman writes: on Nov 10 2009 12:46 AM In reply to this comment (#2559871) I felt the same way about that part of the graphic novel. You hope it is going to go somewhere, and you wait, but nothing much happens. Kind of a waste of time for a great story. As for Logans Run, I read the book and loved it. The movie completely sucks compared to the source material. It is in dire need of a remake to truly great. (Reply to this) |
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