Saturday, February 02, 2008

More Muppet Madness Coming To DVD

MUPPETCENTRAL.COM: The Muppet Show Season 3 arrives May 20
Disney plans to release the Season Three 4-Disc Set of The Muppet Show nine months after Season Two
By Greg James, Muppet Central - January 25, 2008

It's time to play the music. It's time to light the lights. It's time to mark your calendars!

Buena Vista Home Entertainment has just announced the release of the highly anticipated "The Muppet Show: Season Three" DVD box set. The four-disc "special edition" set will include all 24 episodes from the third season of "The Muppet Show" along with an impressive collection of bonus features. The fully-loaded DVD box set of the complete third season is planned to hit store shelves on May 20, 2008. That's less than 117 days away.

Below is a full list of the DVD features which include the classic 1968 documentary "The Muppets on Puppets" (hosted by Jim Henson and Rowlf the Dog), plus a new documentary entitled "The Making of The Muppets". Disney has also released an early glimpse at the cover art for the set, featuring the face of Fozzie Bear. Like the first two seasons, the set will feature collectible fuzzy packaging.

Episode Listing:

• Kris Kristofferson & Rita Coolidge
• Leo Sayer
• Roy Clark
• Gilda Radner
• Pearl Bailey
• Jean Stapleton
• Alice Cooper
• Loretta Lynn
• Liberace
• Marisa Berenson
• Raquel Welch
• James Coco
• Helen Reddy
• Harry Belafonte
• Lesley Ann Warren
• Danny Kaye
• Spike Milligan
• Leslie Uggams
• Elke Sommer
• Sylvester Stallone
• Roger Miller
• Roy Rogers & Dale Evans
• Lynn Redgrave
• Cheryl Ladd

Bonus Features:
• "The Making of The Muppets" documentary
• "The Muppets on Puppets" vintage documentary
• ...and much more!

Retail Specifications:
• 4-disc DVD collection
• $39.99 suggested retail price
• Release date: May 20, 2008

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Sweet! You can pre-order the set at Amazon for $35.99 and free shipping. Buy it today and keep those box sets coming... there's three more seasons to go!

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Monday, December 10, 2007

More On The Latest Version Of Blade Runner

SFFMEDIA.COM: What's new in Blade Runner: The Final Cut?
Written by John Howell - Sunday, 09 December 2007

After 25 years since its original release, a definitive version of Ridley Scott's science fiction masterwork Blade Runner, Blade Runner: The Final Cut, has arrived.

So what exactly has changed? And is it worth all the fuss?

After attending a recent screening I can report that there are significant differences, mainly improvements, between this new version and Ridley's first Director's Cut released in 1992.

First off, the unicorn dream sequence, originally introduced in the Director's Cut, has been extended. Deckard's daydream of a unicorn galloping through a forest in slow motion is a pivotal scene, clearly suggesting that Deckard, like Rachel, is a replicant. In a recent article in Wired, Ridley explained why.

“Gaff, at the end, doesn't like Deckard, and we don't really know why,” said Ridley, after being asked whether it was on paper that Deckard was a replicant. “And if you take for granted for a moment that, let's say, Deckard is Nexus 7, he probably has an unknown life span and therefore is starting to get awfully human. Gaff, just at the very end, leaves a piece of origami, which is a piece of silver paper you might find in a cigarette packet. And it's of a unicorn, right? So, the unicorn that's used in Deckard's daydream tells me that Deckard wouldn't normally talk about such a thing to anyone. If Gaff knew about that, it's Gaff's message to say, ‘I've basically read your file, mate.’”

Physically, Blade Runner has been altered to take advantage of the latest improvements in film and audio technology. The quality of the print and the audio has been significantly enhanced. A new digital print of the film was created from the original negatives, while the special effects were updated and polished. Special effects footage was scanned in at 8,000 lines per frame, which is four times the resolution used in most restorations. The dystopic Los Angeles landscape of 2019 is now more stunning than ever before. Watching flames leap skywards as a spinner flies through the darkness during the opening sequence is mesmerising.

Vangelis’ evocative soundtrack, remastered for The Final Cut in 5.1 Dolby Digital surround sound, sounds better than ever, complimenting the story perfectly, from the fast paced action sequences to the slow, haunting scenes in Deckard’s smoke filled apartment.

One of the most powerful aspects of Blade Runner is its bleak depiction of a dark decaying world lost in drizzle and shadow. The multicultural inhabitants struggle through busy city streets, but reside in almost empty skyscrapers, abandoned by the majority lucky enough to have left for better lives off world.

Rachel's hair has been recut and restyled. Extra footage and alterations enhance this compelling vision, including an extra shot of a crowded city street, a brief sequence of two exotic dancers wearing hockey masks, and a shot of Deckard meeting a policeman before he enters the Snake Pit.

There's also new footage of Zhora crashing through a display case after being pursued by Deckard. This scene was reshot. The original actress, Joanna Cassidy, performed the stunt herself, replacing original footage of an obvious stunt double.

Roy Batty’s death scene, where a dove is released into a bright blue sky, supposedly at night, now shows the dove flying into a night sky, with an appropriate bleak backdrop.

Some scenes, such as Deckard's first meeting with Gaff in the noodle bar, have been trimmed, as they ran too long after the removal of Deckard's voice over from the original theatrical release.

Various pieces of dialogue too have been inserted or altered. In an early scene, where Bryant and Deckard are looking over Nexus 6 profiles, Bryant now describes Leon’s job, and when he talks about replicants being caught in an electrical field, the dialogue has been changed from: "One of them got fried running though an electrical field" to "Two of them got fried running through an electrical field". This alteration fixes the problem of a sixth replicant unaccounted for in earlier versions.

In the scene where Batty confronts Tyrell, the line, "I want more life, fucker" has been replaced with "I want more life, father”. In the same scene, after Batty has killed Tyrell, he now says to Sebastian, "I'm sorry Sebastian. Come. Come."

Deckard’s conversation with a snake merchant has been rerecorded and reworked. In the 1992 Director’s Cut the dialogue is completely out of sync, making it very distracting.

Other additions include extra violence. All of the violent scenes in the International Cut that were deleted in the U.S. theatrical release have been reinserted, most unsettlingly when Roy Batty crushes Tyrell's head in his hands, gouging out his eyes. Pris's shocking and sad death scene, her arms and legs thrashing about wildly, also appears to be have been extended. Presumably censorship is not as restrictive as it had been when the film was originally released. Personally I think they could have left the level of gore as it was.

With so many previous versions, you could be forgiven for thinking that Blade Runner: The Final Cut is not worth much of our time. Some may argue that Ridley is merely tweaking a film that has already been tweaked well beyond its use by date. There’s some support for this given that Ridley Scott was quoted at the Venice Film Festival recently claiming that the science fiction genre is as dead as the western.

“There’s nothing original,” he said. “We’ve seen it all before. Been there. Done it”.

Perhaps that’s why, instead of creating a completely new science fiction film, he has merely retouched an old one.

He's a replicant you fool!You could of course hold an even more cynical view: this latest version is nothing more than a commercial exercise. Are Warner Bros. and Ridley Scott merely trying to squeeze the last drops out of loyal fans who should know better?

After viewing Blade Runner: The Final Cut in all its enhanced glory, I’d have to disagree. This is not just a patch up job attempting to cash in on a cult film. Like an oil painter retouching a masterpiece, or a novelist polishing prose, Ridley is trying to complete his vision. The film has been improved markedly using all the time, technology, and feedback Ridley had at his disposal. In an article for in New York Times, Ridley stated that he had “never paid quite so much attention to a movie, ever.”

That’s not to say that it’s flawless. Detectives in the future, for example, appear to lack some basic common sense: when Bryant shows Deckard profiles of the Nexus 6 replicants, it’s clear they know exactly what they all look like. So why didn’t Holden, whom we see in an early scene giving a Voight-Kamff test to Leon, already know that Leon was a replicant? Didn’t anyone give him the mug shots?

Equally, if Deckard really is a Nexus 7 created to work as an exterminator, why is he lacking the strength of the inferior Nexus 6 models he is chasing? He seems to spend a large part of the film being bashed to a pulp.

Flaws aside, Blade Runner: The Final Cut is a science fiction masterwork. There’s a reason Blade Runner has stood the test of time. Check it out in the theatre if you get the chance. It has a very limited release. The Blade Runner Ultimate Collector's Edition, which includes all previous versions of the film, is due out 18 December.

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Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Super-Cool Close Encounters DVD Hits Stores

Finally! A DVD release with all three cuts of the film - the original 1977 theatrical release, 1980's Special Edition, and 1998's Collector's Edition (basically the Special Edition with the mothership interior stuff removed). You can get it on standard format DVD ($28.99 + shipping at Amazon), or Blu-ray ($32.95+shipping). This is the best idea since Criterion released their laserdisc version (you could program your player to watch either the theatrical version or the Special Edition)! Filmmakers can tweak their films all they like - I just want to be able to pick the version that I want to watch!

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Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Help! Comes to DVD - Widescreen At Last!

Yes, you can finally get Richard Lester's Help! without having to watch it cropped, or needing to own a laserdisc player. The title came out yesterday as a two-disc set, garnished with interviews and documentaries. Sadly, there's no commentary, but it's widescreen, and I'll bet the transfer is a big improvement from the last release! That's exciting, because I think it's a really sharp-looking movie.

I agree with most folks that A Hard Day's Night is a lot better, but Help! is still a lot of fun, even if the Beatles were starting to lose interest in the whole movie-making thing at the time. Directing four guys frequently stoned on pot can't be fun (not to mention having to come up with another story), but I think it turned out pretty well! You can pick it up at Amazon.com for $16.95 + shipping.

PS - After seeing it for the first time, I always wanted to live in the four-house-wide flat that the guys live in at the beginning. Sunken floors are super-cool!

UPDATE: There's a great breakdown of the differences between this DVD release and the previous one at whatgoeson.com. Thanks to Bob Scott for the tip!

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Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Muppet Junkie? You've Got A Whopping Fix Coming

Season Three of Fraggle Rock will be released on Sept. 11th for $34.27 + shipping, and Sesame Street: Old School Vol. 2 is coming out Nov. 6th for $24.71 + shipping. Sweet! Hopefully we can get more skits with discarded characters like Roosevelt Franklin...

Thanks to Muppet Central for the news!

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

This July 24th... The Wolfman's Got 'Nards

A 20th anniversary, two-disc set of The Monster Squad's being released - I'm assuming this is its debut on DVD. I remember liking it at the time, but who knows how it'll seem to me now? I'll probably rent it for a nostalgia wallow.

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Saturday, June 23, 2007

No More DVD Sequels Of Disney Classics

LA TIMES: Disney classic 'toons won't get DVD sequels
In a revamping by new brass, an animation chief also is reassigned.
By Claudia Eller, Times Staff Writer - June 23, 2007

Walt Disney Co. is singing a new 'toon, no longer making DVD sequels to its classic animated films.

The change in direction reflects the philosophical imprint of John Lasseter and Ed Catmull, who took control of Disney's struggling animation operation last year after the company bought Pixar Animation Studios for $7.4 billion.

Lasseter and Catmull, who helped make Pixar into the industry's premier computer animation studio, generally dislike direct-to-video sequels because the quality of the stories and production usually pales in comparison with the originals.

The strategy is part of a larger revamping of Disney's direct-to-video operation. DisneyToon Studios will once again be overseen by the feature animation division Lasseter and Catmull now head. DisneyToon also recently moved off the Burbank lot into its own facility in Glendale.

Disney for years has been cranking out relatively inexpensive videocassette and DVD sequels to many of its best-known animated films, including new chapters of "The Lion King," "Beauty and the Beast," "Cinderella," "Bambi" and "Aladdin." Disney had a reputation for being one of the biggest spenders on direct-to-video releases.

The straight-to-video business proved to be a cash cow for studios such as Disney and Universal Pictures, which made a mint with its lucrative "The Land Before Time" franchise. Movies made expressly for DVDs are produced at much less expense than large-scale theatrical releases that require costly outlays for talent and production.

But the business has become less lucrative as development, production and marketing costs have risen and the DVD market has become flooded with titles, including boxed sets of popular TV shows such as "The Sopranos," "Lost," "24" and "Desperate Housewives." Last year Warner Bros. jumped into the fray, but it promised to keep a lid of $5 million or less on budgets.

Pixar's brass, notably former Chief Executive Steve Jobs, had long soured on DVD sequels. Jobs was especially critical of Disney and former CEO Michael Eisner for making what he viewed as thin, exploitative sequels, once calling "Lion King 1 1/2 " and the "Return to Neverland" Peter Pan sequel "pretty embarrassing."

Pixar made its mark with original theatrical blockbusters such as "Finding Nemo," "Monsters, Inc." and "The Incredibles." Its newest feature, "Ratatouille," debuts Friday.

The company has released only one sequel, 1999's "Toy Story 2," which was an even bigger box-office smash than its predecessor. The film was originally conceived as a direct-to-video title, but Lasseter and others at Pixar concluded it would be better off as a theatrical release. Pixar is planning a "Toy Story 3."

Disney's restructured direct-to-DVD group, which employs 135 artists, production staff and managers, will report to Lasseter and Catmull, who are chief creative officer and president, respectively, of Walt Disney Animation Studios.

Previously, the unit reported to Walt Disney Studios President Alan Bergman. The president of DisneyToons, Sharon Morrill, a 15-year veteran of the studio, is being moved out and will be replaced by a yet-to-be-chosen executive. Disney said Morrill would be reassigned to duties that would include working on special projects.

"John and I are truly excited to be working with the talented team at DisneyToon Studios in developing and producing original stories for the home entertainment audience," Catmull said in a statement.

The first DVD to be released, in the works before the revamping, is part of a planned movie series featuring Tinker Bell and new fairy characters.

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claudia.eller@latimes.com

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Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Ace In The Hole Comes To DVD

Ace In The Hole (aka The Big Carnival) is making its home video debut as a Criterion title - excellent!

The film itself is one of Wilder's darkest, extremely cynical - even for him! You'll also get another intense, eccentric performance from Kirk Douglas. Keep your eyes peeled for it this July!

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