The British are coming! The majority of this week’s DVD and Blu-ray releases are from the United Kingdom, including family films, crime films, a dramedy and a Shakespeare adaptation. There are also two Hollywood releases, though not Hollywood at it’s finest and a Korean attempt at a Western.
First Release
- The Last Song (DVD and Blu-ray)
- Furry Vengeance (DVD and Blu-ray)
- Red Riding Trilogy (DVD and Blu-ray)
- The Good, the Bad, the Weird (DVD and Blu-ray)
- Cemetery Junction (DVD and Blu-ray)
- Skellig: the Owl Man (DVD and Blu-ray)
- Dead Man Running (DVD and Blu-ray)
Re-Release
- Hamlet (1996) (Blu-ray)
- Nanny McPhee (Blu-ray)
The Last Song (DVD and Blu-ray)
What's the Deal?
Whether you love her or hate her, Miley Cyrus is undoubtedly popular, particularly with "Tween"age girls. She is obviously trying to follow the Zac Efron model in trying to prove herself as a serious actress and break away from her Hannah Montana role. Cyrus decided to star in an adaptation of a Nicholas Sparks (author of The Notebook and A Walk to Remember), and Sparks for the first time wrote the screenplay for the adaptation of his novel. Television director Julie Anne Robinson directs her first feature film and starring along Cyrus are Greg Kinnear (Green Zone) and Australia’s Liam Hemsworth (Triangle).
Cyrus plays Ronnie Miller, a piano prodigy who suffers daddy issues after a bitter divorce with her mother. She has become a teenage rebel but she is made to spend the summer with her dad (Kinnear) in Georgia. She slowly has to rebuild her relationship her father and finds love on the form with a local boy Will (Hemsworth).
Critics Rating (Rotten Tomatoes): 19% (very bad)
Player Affinity Score: N/A
DISC DETAILS
DVD Special Features: Set Tour with Bobby Coleman ; Miley Cyrus Music Video: "When I Look At You"; Making of the Music Video, "When I Look At You" with Miley Cyrus
Additional Blu-ray Features: Alternate Opening Sequence: The Church Fire (With optional commentary by director) ; Deleted Scenes (With optional commentary by director); Ronnie At The Piano; Steve & Ronnie At The Beach; Hospital Montage; Vegan Cookies; Juggling On The Pier; Audio Commentary- with Director Julie Anne Robinson and Co-Producer Jennifer Gibgot
Amazon Price: $17.99 (DVD), $24.99 (Blu-ray)
Score (DVDTalk.com): Content: 2.5 stars, Video 4.5 stars, Audio 4 stars, Extras 3 stars, Replay 0 stars (out of 5). Rent it.
Furry Vengeance (DVD and Blu-ray)
What's the Deal?
After directing the mildly entertaining Cruel Intentions, the seedy Roger Kumble has been giving us more and more crap ever since (and that’s putting it nicely) with films such as Cruel Intentions 2, The Sweetest Thing and College Road Trip. He has continued to reach new lows with this family "comedy" directing Brendan Fraser and Brooke Shields in Furry Vengeance.
Real Estate Developer Dan Sanders (Fraser) moves his family to rural Oregon to supervise construction in a forest. However nature starts to fight back against Dan and his construction plans.
Critics Rating (Rotten Tomatoes): 8% (awful)
Player Affinity Score: N/A
DISC DETAILS
DVD Special Features: Deleted Scenes, Gag Reel, The Pitfalls of Pratfalls, Working with Animals: A Profile of Ken Beggs, Audio Commentary w/ Director & Cast
Amazon Price: $15.49 (DVD), $24.99 (Blu-ray)
Score (DVDTalk.com): N/A
Red Riding Trilogy (DVD and Blu-ray)
What's the Deal?
Red Riding Trilogy is a British Television Adaptation of a series of novels by David Peace, an epic series spanning from 1974 to 1983 in the county of Yorkshire. In the USA it was given a limited theatrical release. Tony Grison (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas) adapts the novels and three acclaimed directors, Julian Jarrold (Becoming Jane), James Marsh (Man on Wire) and Anand Tucker (And When Did you Last See Your Father?), direct a film each. Red Riding Trilogy also features an outstanding cast of top British actors including Sean Bean, Andrew Garfield, Rebecca Hall, David Morrissey and Paddy Considine.
Red Riding Trilogy is a complex story set in a journalism backdrop at the Yorkshire Post, where police corruption and a string of murders including the murders of Yorkshire Ripper, as failed Fleet Street journalist Eddie Dunford (Garfield) investigates the disappearance of a young girl. There is talk of Ridley Scott directing a remake.
Critics Rating (Rotten Tomatoes): 85% (excellent)
Player Affinity Score: N/A
DISC DETAILS
DVD Special Features: N/A
Player Affinity Score: N/A
DISC DETAILS
DVD Special Features: N/A
Amazon Price: $24.99 (DVD), $27.49 (Blu-ray)
Score (DVDTalk.com): N/A
The Good, the Bad, the Weird (DVD and Blu-ray)
What's the Deal?
The director of the excellent horror thriller A Tale of Two Sisters, Kim Jee-won, directs an homage to Sergio Leone’s Spaghetti Westerns. Set in the Manchurian desert in the 1930s the search for a map to ancient Chinese treasure brings three men together: Yoon Tae-goo, the Weird (Song Kang-ho), Park Chang-yi, the Bad (Lee Byund-hun) and Park Do-won, the Good (Jung Woo-sung), while avoiding the Japanese Imperial Army. The Good, the Bad, the Weird is an action packed film and shows that the modern Western is no longer just an American genre.
Critics Rating (Rotten Tomatoes): 82% (very good)
Player Affinity Score: N/A
DISC DETAILS
DVD Special Features: N/A
Amazon Price: $16.49 (DVD), $19.99 (Blu-ray)
Score (DVDTalk.com): Content: 4 stars, Video 4.5 stars, Audio 4.5 stars, Extras 2 stars, Replay 4 stars (out of 5). Highly Recommended
Cemetery Junction (DVD and Blu-ray)
What's the Deal?
Ricky Gervais and Stephan Merchant are two of Britain’s most successful recent comic talents with their TV shows The Office and Extras. Gervais has flirted with Hollywood, with roles in Alias, For Your Consideration, Ghost Town and directing The Invention of Lying. The two men have reunited to write and direct a British coming-of-age story set in the 1970s.
Freddie Taylor (Christian Cooke) is a young man from working class stock who wants to escape the Cemetery Junction area of Reading. With his friends they spend their time joking, drinking, fighting and chasing girls. But slowly this group has started to start to grow up. Cemetery Junction underperformed in Britain, probably because it was not the post-modern politically incorrect comedy that people excepted. They missed out on a touching dramedy, with excellent performances from the young actors and Emily Watson. The film was not released theatrically in the United States.
Critics Rating (Rotten Tomatoes): 62% (good)
Player Affinity Score: 8.0/10
DISC DETAILS
DVD Special Features: N/A
Amazon Price: $20.49 (DVD), $23.49 (Blu-ray)