Showing posts with label DVD Boxed Sets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DVD Boxed Sets. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

The Private Life of a Masterpiece: Complete Seasons 1-5 DVD Review (2008)

“The Private Life of a Masterpiece: Complete Seasons 1-5”

A fascinating series that roams the world to study and explore 20 famous pieces of art, from such Renaissance masterpieces as Piero della Francesca’s “The Resurrection” and Leonardo da Vinci’s “The Last Supper” to such Impressionist works as Van Gogh’s “The Sunflowers” and Auguste Renoir’s “Dance at the Moulin de la Galette.”

Also in this award-winning set are revealing observations of Edouard Manet’s “Le Dejeuner sur l’herbe,” Whistler’s iconic painting of his mother in the then-controversial “Arrangement in Grey and Black: The Artist’s Mother,” and Edvard Munch’s “The Scream.”

The value of this collection is evident at the start: In spite of how well known these works are, the art historians assembled to discus them nevertheless manage to build drama through insight, such as when they explore “Michelangelo’s David” or Rodin’s “The Kiss.”

In doing so, “The Private Life of a Masterpiece” neatly skirts the pitfalls of mainstream familiarity to offer the surprise of something new, a fresh angle we might not have considered, and the richness that rests within.

Grade: A

The Shirley Temple Collection, Vol. 6 DVD Review (2008)

“The Shirley Temple Collection, Vol. 6”

Sinking ship.

The set includes three films--the 1936 musical “Stowaway,” in which Temple’s “Ching-Ching” leaves Shanghai to work her magic in keeping Robert Young and Alice Faye together; John Ford’s 1937 movie “Wee Willie Winkie,” a so-so retelling of Rudyard Kipling’s story that finds Temple’s Priscilla Williams fighting the good fight in Colonial India; and 1940’s “Young People,” which was Temple’s final film with Fox.

After making dozens of films with Temple, the studio decided that at the tender age of 12, she was too long in the tooth to play the roles that had made her a star.

And so, for viewers armed with this knowledge, it’s now something of a curiosity to watch Temple launch into the title song’s telling lyrics: “We’re not little babies anymore! We don’t play with dollies on the floor! We know how to act our age! We have passed the infant stage! That’s why we are in a rage! We think children are a bore!”

Poor Shirley. The suits at Fox knew they were finished with her long before they hung her out to dry with this movie and that song.

Grade: C

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Classic Musicals from the Dream Factory, Vol. 3: DVD Review (2008)


“Classic Musicals from the Dream Factory, Vol. 3”

A peppy yet uneven collection of nine films, some digitally remastered, all making their debut on DVD.

Included are 1955’s “Hit the Deck,” with Jane Powell, Debbie Reynolds and Ann Miller hitting the high notes; 1954’s “Deep in My Heart,” with Gene Kelly and his brother Fred in their only screen appearance together; and 1954’s “Kismet,” in which Vincente Minnelli attempted to capture on film the 1953 Broadway musical version of Edward Knoblock’s play.

His movie is so overheated, it nearly combusts, with Ann Blyth, Howard Keel, Vic Damone and Dolores Gray giving it their all and testing our endurance in the process.

Two additional Jane Powell movies are found in 1950’s “Nancy Goes to Rio” and “Two Weeks in Love,” with Busby Berkeley staging the latter.

Rounding out the set are four Eleanor Powell films--“Broadway Melody of 1936,” in which 15-year-old Judy Garland sings “Dear Mr. Gable,” and “Broadway Melody of 1938,” with Powell as a shoe-snapping horse trainer.

Powell also stars in 1936’s “Born to Dance,” which is a fitting since she taps herself into a frenzy, and 1941’s “Lady Be Good,” in which Powell is paired opposite Robert Young and Ann Sothern--and nearly steals the show.

Grade: B+

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Bette Davis: Centenary Collections


“The Bette Davis Collection, Vol. 3”
"Bette Davis Centenary Celebration Collection"

On April 5, Bette Davis would have turned 100 years old. Had she lived to see the day, she likely would have blown a bemused puff of smoke and gone about her business pretending it wasn’t important, but awaiting a grand celebration nevertheless.

This is her centenary, and with two new DVD collections just out to celebrate her work, what better time than now to honor all that Davis has given us over the course of her career, and also to reflect upon how she got there in the first place?

Born Ruth Elizabeth Davis in Lowell, Mass., on April 5, 1908, Davis made relatively quick work of joining our best, most iconic movie actors, of which there are precious few. She defied convention. As she rose up through the ranks in early 1930s Hollywood, she hardly was what those in the industry were seeking at a time when the bold curves of Jean Harlow, Carole Lombard and Mae West were commanding the screen.

And yet while Davis may not have had their overt sexuality, what she did have was something arguably more lasting and important--a sense of mischief and mystery, an indomitable spirit that could lay the world flat with a mere glance, and a fierce intelligence that often revealed itself as impatience, particularly when she knew she’d been saddled with dreck.

Much like her Yankee counterpart Katharine Hepburn, Davis became a woman Hollywood--and the world--couldn't do without.

The camera loved her, for sure, as any fan of “Ex-Lady,” “All About Eve” and “Dark Victory” will tell you. But even when she saw in the 1960s what years of heavy drinking and smoking had done to her, she wasn’t one to overlook the opportunity her faded flower offered. Accepting herself as she was, she turned herself into a grotesque in such films as “Hush…Hush, Sweet Charlotte” and “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane,” the latter of which won her her 10th Academy Award nomination. So, you can imagine the cocktails that flowed when that nomination was announced, and those that followed when she lost to Anne Bancroft for her work in “The Miracle Worker.”

Still, it was Davis’ seemingly bottomless talent and her staunch refusal to conform that made her a star. She was a perfectionist and could be so difficult and demanding that her boss, Jack Warner, once called her “an explosive little broad with a sharp left.” That she was completely different from anyone else didn’t hurt her career, either.

What Davis had was a vitality the screen barely could contain--a director like William Wyler, for instance, could shoot her at a distance in a crowded room, as he did in “Jezebel” and “The Little Foxes,” and still she’d be the one you’d pick out and follow. Her presence was that great, a mix of genetics and her formidable will.

In her 1962 autobiography “The Lonely Life,” she wrote about herself: “I have always been driven by some distant music--a battle hymn no doubt--for I have been at war from the beginning. I rode into the field with sword gleaming and standard flying. I was going to conquer the world.”

She wasn’t joking, and she’d be the first to tell you that she did it the hard way. But what results. When she made an entrance in her more fiery films, she seemed to have the world's throat in her hand--or at least her co-star’s. Usually both. Likewise, when she left a room, it wasn’t out of place to hear a door slamming behind her. Audiences liked it that way--so did she.

And yet there was that other side of Davis--the less-intimidating side, as seen in such movies as “Now, Voyager,” “The Old Maid” or “Mr. Skeffington”--which complicated her beyond reason, and which earned her our hearts as well as our respect and admiration. The fact that she was consistently watchable even in her bad movies gets to the core of just how transfixing a figure she was.

In Maine, where she summered as a child, she eventually came to live for several years in the 1950s with her fourth husband, the actor Gary Merrill. They lived in Cape Elizabeth at a house called “Witch-Way.” Guess who named it? The house now is gone, burned down by new owners who wanted one of those garish McMansions cluttering the coast. In doing so, they neatly abolished an important part of Maine history, as well as national history.

Of the two aforementioned DVD collections marking Davis’ birthday, Fox’s “Centenary Celebration Collection” is the best, with 1950’s quintessential “All About Eve,” 1952’s “Phone Call From a Stranger,” 1955’s “The Virgin Queen,” 1964’s “Hush…Hush, Sweet Charlotte” and 1965’s electrifying (literally) “The Nanny” included.

As for “Eve,” it’s my favorite Davis film, and my favorite movie, period. It embodies everything you love about the actress, every reason you come to her for that unique and necessary escape only a great movie and actor can provide. As many times as I’ve watched the movie, it still reveals something new with each viewing, which is the mark of a great film. The writing, the performances, the wit, the directing, the storyline and of course Davis as Margo Channing, the complicated Broadway star for whom love was difficult and career meant everything (sound familiar?), come together with such timing and ease, it’s staggering in how seamless it is. And that isn’t hyperbole.

Warner’s “Bette Davis Collection, Vol. 3” offers some of Davis’ earlier films. When compared to Fox’s collection, you could say this one features Davis’ softer side. Included are 1939’s “The Old Maid,” 1940’s “All This and Heaven Too,” 1941’s “The Great Lie,” 1942’s “In This Our Life,” 1943’s “Watch on the Rhine” and 1946’s very good “Deception.”

Taken as a whole, these collections offer invaluable insight into the savvy way Davis handled her career and especially her complex screen persona. Consider viewing both sets back-to-back over the course of a week, and then consider whether there ever has been an actress as great as Bette Davis.

Grades: “Centenary”: A; “Bette Davis Collection, Vol. 3”: B+

Monday, March 24, 2008

Forbidden Hollywood Collection, Vol. 2: DVD Review (2008)

“Forbidden Hollywood Collection, Vol. 2”

Forbidden? There was a time when some in power wanted them to be, but those people likely are dead now and these hardboiled movies live on, proving just as necessary as ever.

The five films comprised in this blue collection from Warner all came before the Hays Code began its corrupt squeeze of censorship. As such, these films are more racy, free and entertaining than many that came after it.

Included are Norma Shearer in 1930’s “The Divorce” and 1931’s “A Free Soul,” with Shearer winning the Academy Award for the former; 1931’s harrowing “Night Nurse,” with Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Blondell and a sleazy Clark Gable hustling in the shadows; and 1932’s “Three on a Match,” in which Blondell appears opposite Anne Dvorak and an impossibly good-natured Bette Davis.

Rounding out this satisfying set is 1933’s “Female,” with Ruth Chatterson taking her share of male secretaries to bed--and then coldly ditching them to the curb when she’s finished with them.

Lovely woman. Fine collection. Commentaries abound.

Grade: B+

Midsomer Murders: Early Cases Collection (2008)

“Midsomer Murders: Early Cases Collection”

Based on Caroline Graham’s novels, this ingenious detective series has run for years in Britain, and now, in this “Early Cases Collection,” it enjoys a bundled set of the show’s first 18 episodes.

Murder and arched eyebrows are a mainstay here, with John Nettles’ Chief Inspector Tom Nettles and his assistant, Detective Gavin Troy (Daniel Casey), wading through the dead bodies, secrets and mayhem with their typical wit and aplomb.

Also available from Acorn Media is the equally recommended and most recent set in the collection, “Midsomer Murders: Set 10,” which includes four feature-length episodes--“Second Sight,” “Hidden Depths,” “Sauce for the Goose” and “Midsomer Rhapsody.”

For fans of the new wave of British mysteries, which are darker and more gritty than what came before them, each set offers enough manners, murder and cold-blooded characters to lift your heart.

Grade: B

Warner Gangsters Collection, Vol. 3: DVD Review (2008)

“Warner Gangsters Collection, Vol. 3”

Six gangster films from Warner, most dipped in noir, all peppered with some of the key players of the time.

Included are four films starring James Cagney--1933’s “Picture Snatcher,” 1933’s “Lady Killer,” 1931’s “Smart Money,” with Cagney paired opposite that other giant of the gangster genre, Edward G. Robinson, and 1933’s “The Mayor of Hell,” in which Cagney co-stars with Frank Darro and Madge Evans.

In 1937’s “Black Legion,” Humphrey Bogart takes the lead with Ann Sheridan, and in 1940’s “Brother Orchid,” it’s Robinson and Bogart sharing the screen, this time in an entertaining gangster comedy.

The boxed set is filled with extras, including trailers, commentaries and Warner cartoons.

Grade: B+

Sunday, March 9, 2008

America at War Megaset: DVD Review (2008)

"America at War Megaset"

From A&E and the History Channel, a well done, 14-disc collection that explores our nation's war efforts, beginning with the American Revolution and the Alamo and following straight through to our conflicts in the Persian Gulf and our current war in Iraq.

Newsreel and archival footage add weight and interest to the already substantial commentary provided by experts in the field, and especially by those who lived through some of the more current events themselves.

As with any undertaking this massive, there are sticking points.

While the Vietnam, Korean and WWI coverage seem unusually truncated by being limited to only one disc each, the American Revolution warrants three discs, while the World War II is explored on only two discs.

Finally, while the quality of the set doesn't rise to the level of a documentary by, say, Ken Burns, it does an admirable job offering enough insightful angles to allow for one solid, engrossing overview.

Grade: B+

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Punky Brewster: Season 4 DVD Review (2008)

“Punky Brewster: Season Four”

The fourth and final season of this demanding, irrepressible show proves that Soleil Moon Frye's Punky wasn't going to go down without a fight.

Now, 11-year-old Punky, who once eschewed boys, is more curious about them than ever, with flamboyant, melodramatic crushes blooming higher than Punky's pigtails.

Meanwhile, since boys can't consume the entire show, viewers also are treated to Punky appendicitis, Punky delivering a baby in an elevator, Punky marrying off her dog (it's a bit odd, that), and Punky in the throes of Margaux's financial woes.

There is more corn in this series than in all of Iowa, so, safe to say it remains an acquired taste.

Grade: C

Lillie: DVD Review (2008)

"Lillie"

From the BBC by way of Acorn Media, this fine 1978 mini-series stars Francesca Annis as Lillie Langtry, the renown Victorian stage actress who weathered her share of scandals, successes, men and disappointments while steadily climbing high up through the societal ranks.

Some of the most powerful men in London shared her bed, not the least of which was the Prince of Wales, while others shared her ear, such as her dear friend Oscar Wilde.

Though 30 years have passed since the series first aired--and though almost 80 years have passed since Langtry's death--it remains relevant, mostly because Langtry was a woman who, like so many of today's current rush of starlets, got by more on her beauty and cunning rather than on her talent.

As pop culture has proved, that's often enough.

Grade: B+

Best Picture Collection: DVD Review (2008)


“Best Picture Collection”

Out of all of these collections from Fox, this is the one to own.

In it are some of our best movies, starting with 1941’s timely “How Green Was My Valley,” with Donald Crisp and Sara Allgood struggling to keep their family together in the face of great hardship; 1947’s “Gentleman’s Agreement,” which found Gregory Peck as a journalist posing as a Jew--and getting hit hard by prejudice in the process; and Bette Davis in William Wyler’s 1950 masterpiece “All About Eve,” which isn't just one of the finest films in Davis' storied career, but also one of our finest films, period.

On a lighter note, Julie Andrews twirls and twitters and deals with those von Trapps in 1965’s “The Sound of Music,” while on the far end of the spectrum is 1971’s “The French Connection," a great action movie about a drug bust gone wrong that stars Gene Hackman and Roy Schreider, not to mention that unforgettable car chase through the streets of New York.

Grade: A

Best Actress Collection: DVD Review (2008)

“Best Actress Collection”

Fox is hoping you'll really like it.

The set, after all, features Sally Field in her Academy Award-winning turn in 1979’s “Norma Rae,” Joanne Woodward splitting into three different personalities in “The Three Faces of Eve,” and Hilary Swank altering her body and falling for a girl (Chloe Sevigny) in the moving “Boys Don’t Cry."

In the musical biopic “Walk the Line,” which is based on the life of Johnny Cash, Reese Witherspoon takes on the difficult role of portraying June Carter Cash (and does her own singing), while in 1956's "Anastasia," Ingrid Bergman is paired opposite a devious Yul Brynner in an entertaining movie that's nevertheless riddled with inaccuracies.

Grade: B+

Best Actor Collection: DVD Review (2008)

“Best Actor Collection”

A varied mix of five excellent performances in five Academy Award-winning films.

Included are 1928’s “In Old Arizona,” with Warner Baxter as The Cisco Kid; 1956’s “The King and I,” in which Yul Brynner took a shine to Deborah Kerr, danced her off her feat--and won an Oscar for his trouble; and 1970’s “Patton,” which finds George C. Scott becoming the infamous general so seamlessly, he never shook his association with the role.

Also in the set is 1973’s “Harry and Tonto,” with Art Carney winning the Oscar for portraying the retired teacher Harry Coombes, and quite a different movie is found in “Wall Street,” which teaches us other lessons about life.

Through the vehicle of Michael Douglas' cold, Oscar-winning performance, we recall that greed might have had a good time of it in the late ‘80s, but just look where it’s gotten us now.

Grade: A-

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Joan Crawford Collection, Vol. 2

What, no Mother's Day release?

In spite of that glaring oversight, this solid boxed set from Warner does comprise five heroic Crawford films, including 1934's "Sadie McKee," one of Crawford's many working-girl dramas; 1940's "Strange Cargo," in which Joan is Julie, a saloon girl who comes up against a criminal played by Clark Gable--and naturally falls for him upon his escape from Devil's Island; and George Cukor's 1941's drama "A Woman's Face," in which Crawford played Anna Holm, a physically scarred woman who finds that all the plastic surgery in the world can't heal the scars within.

Also included in the set is 1949's "Flamingo Road," with Crawford getting back to her dance hall roots--and getting framed for murder in the process; and 1953's "Torch Song," in which Crawford throws back her shoulder pads and belts out on hell of a camp melodrama. The extras are expansive, with several featurettes worthy of note--"Crawford at Warners," "Tough Baby: Joan Crawford and 'Torch Song'," and the very good "Gable & Crawford."

Long live the maligned star.

Grade: B+

In commemoration of Crawford and the Feb. 12 release of "The Joan Crawford Collection, Vol. 2," below are several highlights of why we love Crawford, whether she was at her best, her most sincere or at her worst.





Thursday, November 29, 2007

Leading Ladies Collection, Vol. 2 DVD Review (2007)


"Leading Ladies Collection, Vol. 2"

From Warner, a set of five films, each worth revisiting for the power of the performances alone.

In 1955's “I'll Cry Tomorrow," Susan Hayward is struck hard by the more melodramatic undercurrents of life--and survives (she's excellent); 1966's “Big Hand for the Little Lady” stars JoAnn Woodward trying her hand at poker after her husband (Henry Fonda) dies; and in 1967's “Up the Down Staircase," Sandy Dennis joins Jean Stapleton in a battle to make a failed public school system work.

In 1981's “Rich and Famous," Jacqueline Bisset and Candice Bergen star in George Cukor's last film, while in 1982's “Shoot the Moon,” Diane Keaton is paired opposite Albert Finney in a movie about their characters' unraveling marriage and messy divorce.

Grade: B+

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Burt Lancaster Signature Collection DVD Review (2007)


“Burt Lancaster Signature Collection”

Another signature collection from Warner that should have lost the word “Signature” from its title. The set doesn’t come though with what it promises--excellence--so the studio is just fishing for disappointment.

This is true for the “Burt Lancaster Signature Collection,” a collection of five films that doesn’t offer any of Lancaster’s best movies, such as “From Here to Eternity,” “Birdman of Alcatraz,” “Judgment at Nuremberg,” “The Professionals,” “Atlantic City” and “Elmer Gantry,” the latter of which won him the Academy Award for Best Actor.

Instead, we get 1950’s “Flame and the Arrow,” 1951’s “Jim Thorpe--All American,” 1953’s “South Sea Woman,” 1954’s “His Majesty O’Keefe” and 1973’s “Executive Action.”

While those movies are good, especially "Thorpe," few would sign off on the idea that they are among the actor’s signature films.

Grade: B-

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Barbara Stanwyck Signature Collection DVD Review (2007)


"Barbara Stanwyck Signature Collection"

What would Walter think?

A Barbara Stanwyck signature collection without "Double Indemnity" is an oversight, to say the least, but also missing here is "Stella Dallas," "Sorry, Wrong Number," "Union Pacific," "The Lady Eve" and "Christmas in Connecticut," to name a few.

What we get instead are two true signature Stanwyck films--1935's "Annie Oakley" and 1954's "Executive Suite"--and four lesser-known movies.

The latter include the 1949 murder mystery "East Side, West Side," with Ava Gardner and James Mason; the 1946 gossip melodrama "My Reputation," with George Brent; 1950's "To Please a Lady," in which Stanwyck takes to the Indy 500, of all events, with Clark Gable; and the 1953 movie "Jeopardy," a kidnapping thriller that hums with a B-movie vibe.

It's a good set--not a great one--but what it does do well is that it captures the breadth of Stanwyck's many onscreen personas, which ranged from the ferocious to the downright terrorized and demure.

Grade: B

Sunday, November 4, 2007

Stanley Kubrick Warner Home Video Directors Series: DVD Review (2007)

“Stanley Kubrick: Warner Home Video Directors Series”

One of the year’s better new releases is “Stanley Kubrick: Warner Home Video Directors Series,” a swell collection that includes some of Kubrick’s most influential movies.

Included are newly remastered versions of 1968’s “2001: A Space Odyssey,” 1971’s “A Clockwork Orange,” 1980’s “The Shining,” 1987’s “Full Metal Jacket” and Kubrick's last film before his death, 1999’s “Eyes Wide Shut.”

While it’s curious that Warner decided to go with “Eyes” rather than with “Dr. Strangelove” or “Lolita,” what comes through is nevertheless important--the collection underscores just how alike Kubrick's movies are in spite of appearing so vastly different on the surface.

Viewing the films again reveals what you remember--a sick sort of edge that's at once fascinating and jarring. Kubrick favored uneasy themes of isolation, estrangement, madness and dehumanization--love isn't just to be denied in his world, it's to be crushed.

He intellectualized his films to the point that they took on an abstract chill that bullied pop culture while also, reluctantly, embracing its underpinnings.

As such, his movies increasingly come off as a sneer, with the director's own internal estrangement stripping his later movies of the dark humor he favored early on.

Beyond the films, the collection's best selling point is Jan Harlan's documentary "Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures," which is rife with insight.

Those seeking "Odyssey," "Orange," "The Shining," "Jacket" and "Eyes" on high definition should know that they are just out separately on HD DVD and Blu-ray, with "2001" and "Jacket" easily proving the standouts.

Grade: A-

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Spider-Man High Definition Trilogy: Blu-ray Movie Review

"Spider-Man High Definition Trilogy"

“Spider-Man: Blu-ray”
Upon its 2002 release, Sam Raimi's "Spider-Man” wasn't just a smash hit, it also re-established faith in the web as a money-making venture. Smart and thrilling, it respected the franchise while giving audiences an exhilarating kick in the process. Based on the comic book series Stan Lee and Steve Ditko created for Marvel Comics in 1962, the film stars Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker, the nerdish 17-year-old high school boy from Queens, N.Y., who goes on to realize great things from a spider bite. A great deal of the film's fun comes from watching Peter’s transformation after the bite, which isn’t just physical as his wiry body thickens with muscle, but almost spiritual as he realizes the confidence that forever has eluded him. When he first takes flight through the concrete canyons of Manhattan, spinning his tangled webs and swinging high through the skyscrapers like Nureyev on Ecstasy, it’s doubtful that anyone watching won’t be caught up in the moment—or floored by the sheer artistry of John Dystra’s special effects, which, incidentally, look smashing in this series' new incarnation on high-definition Blu-ray disc. Rated PG-13. Grade: A-

Read a more in-depth review of "Spider-Man" here.

“Spider-Man 2: Blu-ray”
Legs down, it’s a winner. The special effects remain something to behold, as does Tobey Maguire's performance as Peter Parker. What makes the actor such a perfect fit for the role are the very qualities that made him so appealing in "The Ice Storm" and "Wonder Boys"--the shrewd intellect simmering beneath his bemused detachment and charm. Director Sam Raimi leans hard on those traits, but this time out, he pulls something deeper from Maguire--the sense of isolation, doubt and sadness that have crept into Peter's soul as the full weight of being Spider-Man becomes clearer to him. Rated PG-13. Grade: A

“Spider-Man 3: DVD, Blu-ray”
Legs up, it’s a loser. After the terrific first two films, "Spider-Man 3" suffers from a fatigue of familiarity. The same was true for "Superman III" and the third Batman movie, which suggests that when it comes to getting into bed with superheroes, perhaps two films are enough to leave one satisfied and spent. What’s missing in "Spider-Man 3" is the delight of watching Peter Parker become Spider-Man. We’ve seen it before and frankly, his swing has lost its zing. Also gone is the spark between Parker and Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst), which was critical to the success of the previous two films but which now finds the duo reduced to squabbling, a separation and, near the end, an awkward rush of tears. Director Sam Raimi returns to helm the project, but this time his gift at finding the human within the superhuman is something the movie lacks. This is the longest "Spider-Man" yet, with the story feeling derived not from inspiration but from a sense of desperation. And why not? When you spend nearly $500 million on a movie, as they did here, the urge isn’t to underplay your hand. Instead, it’s to feed the masses with overkill. While some of that overkill can be fun and the special effects are impressive, the story stumbles through a cluttered haze of plot threads, the likes of which eventually form a noose from which the movie doesn’t recover. Rated PG-13. Grade: C+

Read a more in-depth review of "Spider-Man 3" here.

Friday, October 26, 2007

The Twisted Terror Collection: DVD Review (2007)

"The Twisted Terror Collection"

A rousing B-movie horror collection from Warner.

Includes six films--John Carpenter's 1978 television stalker movie "Someone's Watching Me," with Lauren Hutton in the lead, and Oliver Stone's 1981 horror film "The Hand," in which Michael Caine loses a hand to an auto accident--and the hand just won't die!

Also included are 1986's "Deadly Friend" from Wes Craven, which he'd likely sooner wish to forget; 1973's "From Beyond the Grave," with Peter Cushing as a shifty antiques dealer; and 1981's "Eyes of a Stranger," with Jennifer Jason Leigh protecting her deaf and blind sister from a serial rapist.

Finally, there's 1992's "Dr. Giggles," which is about a mass murderer that stars nobody memorable, but which nevertheless features a title that gets to the heart of this holiday.

Go and have a few laughs of your own.

Grade: B+