Stupid Criminals #4 Special Edition
A&E Literary Classics – The Romance Collection Megaset (Pride and Prejudice / Emma / Victoria & Albert / Tom Jones / Jane Eyre / Lorna Doone / Ivanhoe / The Scarlet Pimpernel)
A&E Literary Classics – The Romance Collection Megaset (Pride and Prejudice / Emma / Victoria & Albert / Tom Jones / Jane Eyre / Lorna Doone / Ivanhoe / The Scarlet Pimpernel)
Product Description This handsome, 14-disc boxed collector’s set features eight of the A&E cable network’s acclaimed films. Included are “Emma” (1996), “Ivanhoe” (1997), “Jane Eyre” (1997), “Lorna Doone” (2001), “Pride and Prejudice” (1995), “The Scarlet Pimpernel” (1999), “Tom Jones” (1997), and “Victoria & Albert.”
Mantis in Lace
The 6th Day (Special Edition)
The 6th Day (Special Edition)
Amazon.com For a movie about cloning, it’s only appropriate that The 6th Day, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, is instilled with a strong sense of d?j? vu, namely from Arnold’s previous “Who am I?” outing, Total Recall. In that movie, Arnold is a normal Joe who discovers that his entire reality has been co-opted by an evil conspiracy, and has to take his life back by force. The same premise applies here for Roger Spottiswoode’s clever if overlong sci-fi thriller–Arnold thinks he’s a regular guy leading a regular life, until a twist of fate puts him on the lam from a vast conspiracy that’s replaced him with a clone. While he’s trying to evade the evil genetics corporation–and its trendy, deadly, clone-friendly assassins (who don’t care how many times they’re killed: there’s more where that came from)–his double is snuggling at home with his wife and daughter. And new legislation outlaws the existence of human clones, so somebody’s got to go. But who gets to be live and who gets to be the dead Memorex man? Why does said genetics corporation want to clone people? How does the kindly scientist (Robert Duvall) fit in? What’s the mystery behind the slick billionaire (Tony Goldwyn) who runs everything? It’s all kind of irrelevant in the end, as long as it provides a chance for Arnold to indulge in some energetic mayhem and explosive action. What distinguishes The 6th Day is its sneaky, humorous–and chilling–look at the near future, taking everyday technological advances and turning them up just a couple notches, envisioning an era with cloned pets, virtual girlfriends, and computers running most everything, from the refrigerator to your car. Arnold is supposed to be a throwback to the “real” world–you can tell because he cherishes his vintage, navigation-system-free Cadillac–but as usual, he just brings his behemoth presence to the role and not much else. Still, he’s a friendly enough hero, and he rolls with the punches (literally) all the way through to the end. Too bad the film overstays its welcome by about half an hour–a little shorter and it could have been a breezy sci-fi/action romp. With scene stealers Michael Rooker, Sarah Wynter, and Rod Rowland as the trio of cloned assassins who always come back–again and again. –Mark EnglehartProduct Description IN THE NOT TOO DISTANT FUTURE WHEN CLONING PLANTS, PETS, ANDHUMAN ORGANS IS ACCPETED, A SINISTER CORPORATION HAS BEGUNILLEGALLY DUPLICATING ENTIRE HUMAN BEINGS. THEY MISTAKENLYCLONE THE WRONG MAN: A MAN WHO IS NOW THE ONLY ONE WITH THE POWER TO EXPOSE THEIR EVIL.
Wittgenstein (Special Edition)
Wittgenstein (Special Edition)
Product Description Continuing his biodrama series on gay historical figures, Derek Jarman’s visually stylized and campily funny look at the quirky, Austrian-born philosopher follows Ludwig Wittgenstein from his days as a child prodigy in the early 1900s to his life as a Cambridge don. Karl Johnson, Tilda Swinton, Michael Gough, and Clancy Chassay star. 69 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtrack: English; Subtitles: English (SDH); behind-the-scenes footage; bonus short “The Clearing” (1994); interviews.
Gundam Wing the Movie – Endless Waltz (Special Edition)
Gundam Wing the Movie – Endless Waltz (Special Edition)
Amazon.com This three-part OAV adventure picks up one year after the conclusion of the Gundam Wing series. Earth and the Space Colonies have joined to form the Earth Sphere Unified Nation; after a brief reign as Queen of Earth, Relena Peacecraft/Darlian has abdicated and is serving as a government minister. The giant Gundams (the large, robotic armor suits) have been hidden or sent hurtling into the sun. This fragile peace is shattered when the sinister Dekim Barton initiates a revolt to make Mariemeia, the daughter of former Oz chief Treize Khushrenada, absolute ruler of the new world-state. She describes the change as part of History’s Endless Waltz of “peace, war, and revolution.” If Earth refuses to accept the new regime, Barton will crash one of the orbiting colonies into the planet’s surface. Only the Gundam pilots can resolve this crisis–with a little help from their friends and former enemies; writer Katsuyuki Sumisawa uses the lulls in the action to explore their early lives in flashbacks. This special-edition DVD includes both the three-part OAV series and the compilation feature, which contains about eight minutes of additional animation. The extras include a “Mobile Suit Encyclopedia” with information about the five Gundams and the Tallgeese. The OVA episodes are: 1. “Silent Orbit,” 2. “Operation Meteor,” 3. “Return to Eternity.” Rated 13 Up for violence, largely restricted to machines attacking each other. The regular edition is suitable for television play. –Charles Solomon
Absolutely Positive
Absolutely Positive
Product Description This award-winning, groundbreaking documentary paints an honest and surprisingly humorous portrait of 11 people living with HIV. The late filmmaker Peter Adair, HIV-positive himself when he worked on the project, focuses on subjects ranging in age from 17 to 60, showing the variety of people who have tested positive for the virus. 88 min. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital stereo; featurette; interviews; more.
Mobile Suit Gundam 00 Season Two: Part 3 (Special Edition)
Penitentiary
Penitentiary
Product Description The original tough-as-nails prison thriller stars Leon Isaac Kennedy as the jailed street tough who must fight to stay alive (and unmolested, if you know what we mean and we think you do) and goes on to become the penitentiary’s top boxer. But his toughest battle is yet to come! Gloria Delaney, Thommy Pollard and Wilbur “Hi-Fi” White co-star. 99 min. Widescreen; Soundtrack: English; audio commentary by director Jamaas Fanaka; trailer; scene access.Amazon.com The first of many in a series depicting the harrowing prison existence of a convict who uses his wits and fists to survive. Leon Isaac Kennedy’s character is thrown deep into the bowels of the prison system, where the only consistent truth is kill or be killed. To show his strength and gain respect from the other inmates, Kennedy must distinguish himself as a boxer, taking on all comers to save his own skin and regain his pride as a human being. Surprisingly effective in its harsh detailing of violent prison life, the film addresses the dehumanization of prisoners without excusing their crimes. Thought of as an exploitation picture, Penitentiary rises above its roots to provide a blunt and passionate look at one man’s struggle on the inside. –Robert Lane
Phantom of the Paradise (Ultimate Edition) [Blu-ray]
Phantom of the Paradise (Ultimate Edition) [Blu-ray]
Product Description France released, Blu-Ray/Region A/B/C : it WILL NOT play on regular DVD player. You need Blu-Ray DVD player to view this Blu-Ray DVD: LANGUAGES: English ( Dolby DTS 5.1 ), French ( Dolby DTS 5.1 ), French ( Subtitles ), WIDESCREEN (1.85:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Cast/Crew Interview(s), Featurette, Interactive Menu, Remastered, Scene Access, Trailer(s), SYNOPSIS: A disfigured musician sells his soul for the woman he loves so that she will perform his music. SCREENED/AWARDED AT: Golden Globes, Oscar Academy Awards, …Phantom of the Paradise (1974) ( Phantom ) ( Phantom of the Fillmore )Amazon.com Describing Brian De Palma’s Phantom of the Paradise as an update of the classic Phantom of the Opera doesn’t do justice to this demented movie. While De Palma’s Hitchcock homages have sometimes led him into dead ends, this rock & roll remake seems to have liberated De Palma’s imagination, and the result is weird and funny, with the scruffy underground spirit of the director’s early pictures. The Phantom is one Winslow Leach (William Finley), a nerdy songwriter whose “pop cantata” on the subject of Faust is stolen by a freakish, Phil Spector-like rock impresario called Swan (Paul Williams). After getting his head caught in a vinyl-LP compressor, Leach is transformed into a masked creature, haunting Swan’s music palace, the Paradise. De Palma proves how nimbly he can establish narrative rhythm: the story moves like a cannon shot, and the musical numbers (especially in the Alice Cooper-like Paradise sequences) are brilliantly cut. The movie seems to predict the Studio 54 scene, MTV, and punk rock–the last, especially, in the figure of Beef, a screeching singer played by the unhinged Gerrit Graham. The songs were written by Paul Williams, that diminutive ’70s music icon (he cowrote the Barbra Streisand wet noodle “Evergreen”), and his performance is a reminder of his peculiar, self-spoofing presence: at one point, the preening Swan announces, “You know how I abhor perfection in anyone but myself.” Comedy, musical, horror film, ’70s artifact–this movie isn’t quite definable, and that’s what’s wonderful about it. –Robert Horton










