Archive for the ‘DVD’ Category

Cabaret – 30th Anniversary Special Edition [1972] [DVD]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B000068C3U

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £4.07

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Editorial Review: Amazon.co.uk Review
Cabaret is one of those film musicals whose cultural and stylistic influence extend well beyond the cinema. It confirmed Bob Fosse’s status as one of the boldest choreographers of the 20th century and gave Liza Minnelli an early peak in a film career which would never scale such heights again. Minnelli is both the film’s strength–on its own merits her performance is an Oscar-winning tour de force–and weakness. The real Sally Bowles was a third-rate performer and just one of a rich gallery of characters; here, the constant allowances for Minnelli’s star turns and mannerisms ultimately throw the story off balance. But the source material is impeccable: Kander and Ebb’s stage show, based on the autobiographical stories of Christopher Isherwood, has long since been acknowledged a classic. The songs, augmented by some new numbers in the film, are ageless.

Joel Grey from the original Broadway production is the Emcee, the master of ceremonies who, with his Kit Kat Klub girls, provides a depraved Greek chorus satirising the rise of the Nazi regime and the lazy complacency of the 1930s Berlin cabaret-goers. The “divine decadence” tag is only part of the story, though. Cabaret still works a sinister, uncomfortable magic which sets it apart as a uniquely powerful film musical.

On the DVD:Cabaret‘s 30th Anniversary Special Edition is packed with extras which include a scratchy “making of” documentary from 1972 and a retrospective from 1997, the latter featuring reminiscences from the cast. There’s also the original theatrical trailer, though in the absence of the late director Fosse the lack of some kind of commentary is a disappointment. The picture itself, presented in widescreen 16:9 letterbox format with a Dolby Digital 2.0 stereo soundtrack, gleams as sharply, visually and aurally, as it did on its first release. –Piers Ford

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Merlin – Series 2 Vol.2 [DVD]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B002SZQCC0

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £12.88

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Casablanca [1942] [DVD]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B00004I9PZ

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £1.85

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Editorial Review: Amazon.co.uk Review
A truly perfect movie, the 1942 Casablanca still wows viewers today, and for good reason. Its unique story of a love triangle set against terribly high stakes in the war against a monster is sophisticated instead of outlandish, intriguing instead of garish. Humphrey Bogart plays the allegedly apolitical club owner in unoccupied French territory that is nevertheless crawling with Nazis; Ingrid Bergman is the lover who mysteriously deserted him in Paris; and Paul Heinreid is her heroic, slightly bewildered husband. Claude Rains, Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre, and Conrad Veidt are among what may be the best supporting cast in the history of Hollywood films. This is certainly among the most spirited and ennobling movies ever made.–Tom Keogh

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The Saddle Club Vol.1 [DVD] [2001]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B001TEKJYI

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £4.53

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Doctor Who – The Complete BBC Series 1 Box Set [2005] [DVD]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B0009AK57Y

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £11.96

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Editorial Review: Amazon.co.uk Review
It was always going to be a risk for the BBC to revamp Doctor Who–few television programmes inspire as much rabid and cultish adoration. With the 2005 series, however, the BBC have really outdone themselves. Their updated Doctor Who is a revelation: a cult science fiction series that has real mass appeal, and works for both children and their parents. Christopher Eccleston is an inspired and charismatic Doctor–he leaps around the sets with an unrestrained glee, like he’s a child running amok in a toy shop. His enthusiasm in downright infectious. His sidekick Rose (Billie Piper) adds a real human touch, particularly as she gradually and believably matures from in-over-her-head city kid to tough-minded interplanetary hero. Much of the credit must go to writer Russell Davies, who has a much-practiced knack for finding popular appeal without dumbing-down his ideas, and who appears to have let his imagination run riot. Even the special effects, whilst not of a big-budget cinematic quality, still manage to strike a balance between cheesiness and realism. Thrilling, funny and thoroughly entertaining, this Doctor Who is a hero for the new millennium. –Robert Burrow

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IP Man [DVD] [2008]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B001W9EUBI

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £10.98

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The Forsyte Saga – Complete Series 1-7 Box Set [DVD] [1967]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B0002CH7NO

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £17.77

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Editorial Review: Amazon.co.uk Review
The Forsyte Saga is often cited as the first television miniseries; it wasn’t, but there’s no question that it was a singular, powerful cultural phenomenon that deservedly got under the skin of European viewers in 1967. Today the 26-episode production, based on several novels and short stories by John Galsworthy, is a more timeless enterprise than many of the protracted British TV dramas that have followed. While it would be wrong to consider The Forsyte Saga high art, it’s certainly a mesmerizing and inspired mix of theater, sprawling Victorian narrative, thinking man’s soap opera, and some finely tuned, 1960s black-and-white production values that (especially when shot outdoors) are strikingly handsome.

Above all, Forsyte is driven by its characters–perhaps to an extreme, though the two-generation storyline makes no apologies for creating compelling people whose capacity for short-sighted blundering, bursts of grace, and slow-brewing redemption make them recognizably human. Eric Porter towers over everything as Soames Forsyte, a humorless attorney whose guiding principles of measurable value cause great heartache but slowly evolve, leaving him a graying, good father, arts patron, and sympathetic repository of memory. From the cast of 150 or so, other standouts include Susan Hampshire as Soames’s troubled daughter, Nyree Dawn Porter as the wife of two very different Forsyte men, and Kenneth More as the family’s artistic black sheep. –Tom Keogh

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The Black Crowes – Cabin Fever [DVD] [2009]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B002Q5O6RU

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £9.49

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Happy Feet [DVD] [2006]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B000K7LQSS

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £2.95

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Editorial Review: Amazon.co.uk Review
For anyone who thought the Oscar-winning documentary March of the Penguins was the most marvelous cinematic moment for these nomads of the south, you haven’t seen nothing yet. Here’s an animated wonder about a penguin named Mumble who can’t sing, but can dance up a storm. George Miller, the driving force behind the Babe (and Mad Max) movies, takes another creative step in family entertainment with this big, beautiful, music-fueled film that will have kids and their parents dancing in the streets. From his first moment alive, Mumble (voiced by Elijah Woods) feels the beat and can’t stop dancing. Unfortunatly, emperor penguins are all about finding their own heart song, and dancing youngster–as cute as he is–is a misfit. Luckily, he bumps into little blue penguins, a Spanish-infused group (led by Robin Williams) and begins a series of adventures. Miller has an exceptional variety of entertainment, Busby Berkley musical numbers, amusement park thrills, exciting chase sequences (seals and orca lovers might like think otherwise), and even an environmental message that doesn’t weigh you down. Best of all, you don’t know where the movie is going in the last act, a rare occurrence these days in family entertainment. A fusion of rock songs, mashed up and otherwise are featured; this movie is as much a musical as a comedy. Mumble’s solo dance to a new version of Stevie Wonder’s “I Wish” by Fantasia, Patti and Yolanda may be the most joyful moment on camera in 2006. –Doug Thomas

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Ghostbusters / Ghostbusters 2 [DVD] [1984]

Friday, November 27th, 2009

ASIN: B000A0XTPS

Category: DVD

Price: New Prices From :- £3.78

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Editorial Review: Amazon.co.uk Review
Ghostbusters:

Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis wrote the script, but Bill Murray gets all the best lines and moments in this 1984 comedy directed by Ivan Reitman (Meatballs). The three comics, plus Ernie Hudson, play the New York City-based team that provides supernatural pest control, and Sigourney Weaver is the love interest possessed by an ancient demon. Reitman and company are full of original ideas about hobgoblins–who knew they could “slime” people with green plasma goo?–but hovering above the plot is Murray’s patented ironic view of all the action. Still a lot of fun, and an obvious model for sci-fi comedies such as Men in Black.

Ghostbusters II:

Much less fun than its predecessor, this 1989 sequel starts off on a bleak note by telling us our heroes from Ghostbusters have been on the skids for five years and Bill Murray’s lead character never did hook up with Sigourney Weaver’s lovely symphony-musician character. What’s more, she has a kid by somebody else. Everybody’s on an uphill climb, and Ghostbusters II never soars the way the first film did, despite having the same director, Ivan Reitman (Dave, Kindergarten Cop). The lame plot finds the boys attempting to prevent a disaster on New York City caused by too many bad vibes in the Big Apple. Yikes! Fortunately, screenwriters Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis have penned enough good one-liners to keep Murray busy, and if the ghostly special effects no longer surprise as they did in Ghostbusters, they’re at least inventive.–Tom Keogh, Amazon.com

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