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March 2009

Caprica: Best DVDs of April

Caprica What it is: a new movie on DVD set in the Battlestar Galactica universe but with a family saga twist.  This "series premiere" is available on DVD in April, while new episodes are supposed to start airing on the sci-fi channel in 2010.  Set against the backdrop of a society a lot like ours, Caprica will be looking at all the ethical conundrums we like to imagine we'll be dealing with soon enough (bring it on Children of Men, Gattaca and Caprica - the near-future looks awesome!).  The story is centered around Joseph Adama (father of Bill) played by Esai Morales and a "wealthy technologist" named Daniel Graystone (Eric Stoltz) who have both lost their daughters to an act of terrorism. Graystone approaches grief in an unorthodox way--recreating his daughter in robot form. (An interesting idea in theory, but obviously it doesn't end well.)

Why it's Significant: Because Battlestar Galactica is arguably the best show ever and a prequel done right is really exciting.  And simply, because Eric Stoltz is the man. ---Kira

Blu Monday: "Gran Torino" goes Blu on June 9

Gran Torino

It seems like forever ago since Gran Torino hit theaters in December and generated Oscar buzz for director-actor Clint Eastwood and his "get off my lawn" story of a Korean war veteran confronting his Hmong neighbors.  In the meantime, it got completely shut out of the Oscars, but at least it's finally coming out on Blu-ray and DVD on June 9, at least two months after most of the Oscar contenders.  Why the wait?  I don't know, but we do know some of the advance specs, which don't appear to be spectacular:

  • Behind the Story: The Eastwood Way, Manning the Wheel
  • Gran Torino: More Than a Car
  • Digital copy of the film
  • BD-Live

In other Blu news, Netflix told its subscribers today that Blu-ray access will increase their monthly fees by $1 to $9 depending on their plan.  They had previously charged an extra dollar for Blu-ray, so this is a steeper hike.  --David

Staying in Character: "Wanted" and "Frost/Nixon"

We've all heard rumors of actors so dedicated to the craft that they stay in character even when the camera isn't rolling, but now Frank Langella, who portrays the president in Frost/Nixon, finally cops to doing it. In this exclusive clip, Langella talks about sacrificing the on-set camaraderie of his peers in order to provide the full Nixonian experience for the cast and crew.


Of course actors aren’t the only folks who sometimes internalize the personality of another person. At the risk of sounding like a movie ad, I thought Wanted was pretty much a 110-minute adrenaline rush (except for the part where Morgan Freeman explained how he takes his marching orders from a giant loom—then it became kind of a comedy). In fact, the action was intense enough that I walked out of the theater feeling like a warrior—ready to strike at the first sign of trouble from my date, my fellow movie-goers, or the nice lady who sold me a gift card for my Mom’s birthday immediately after.

However, J. Jill is no place for an assassin. The appropriate place, of course, is your rec room (Wanted is now available as a game for your PC, PlayStation3, or Xbox 360). In this trailer, Wanted stars and others talk about creating the movie and game.  --Leah

"Frost/Nixon": Best DVDs of April 2009

What it is: A retelling of the real-life interviews that took place between British TV host David Frost and fallen President Richard Nixon, resulting in a David vs. Goliath battle of wits. Michael Sheen (The Queen, Underworld) and Frank Langella (Dave, Superman Returns) reprise the roles they played in the original Broadway play on which the movie is based, Langella winning a Tony for his portrayal of Nixon.

Why It's Significant: Frost/Nixon was nominated for five Oscars, including the top categories of Best Picture, Director, Screenplay, and Actor (Langella). It was an also-ran in all its categories, but that doesn't mean it should be missed. Langella greatly overcomes his little physical resemblance to Tricky Dick with an inside-out performance that is far from impersonation. Typically the film's premise would position a viewer to root for Nixon to get his comeuppance, but Langella shows you that there's not much to root against; Nixon had already had his defeat, he just wanted closure. The film's fine supporting cast includes Oliver Platt and Sam Rockwell as Frost's political research team, Kevin Bacon as Nixon's handler, Matthew MacFadyen as Frost's TV producer, and Rebecca Hall as Frost's girlfriend. --Ellen

"Doubt": Best DVDs of April 2009

Doubt DoubtBD What it is: Doubt is a mesmerizing, suspense-filled drama with riveting performances that will have you pinned to the edge of your seat. Sister Aloysius Beauvier (Streep), the rigid and fear-inspiring principal of the Saint Nicholas Church School, suffers an extreme dislike for the progressive and popular parish priest Father Flynn (Hoffman). Looking for wrongdoing in every corner, Sister Aloysius believes she's uncovered the ultimate sin when she hears Father Flynn has taken a special interest in a troubled boy. But without proof, the only thing certain is doubt.

Why it's significant: Boasting an A-list cast of Meryl Streep, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Amy Adams, Doubt, had five Academy Award nominations and Meryl Streep won the SAG Best Actress award for her role. Doubt is based on the Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning play, that may take some back to their Catholic school days. The film holds you on the edge of  your seat, not knowing if Sister Aloysius' accusations are baseless and just plain vicious, or if Father Flynn is trying to get away with inappropriate behavior.  --Meredith

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"The Reader": Best DVDs of April 2009

What it is: "The Reader", the Oscar-nominated film from The Weinstein Company, is based on the 1995 novel by Bernhard Schlink. It details the passionate love affair between teenager Michael Berg and the older Hanna (Kate Winslet). When she suddenly disappears, Michael is left without answers, at least for the next eight years. When she is finally back in his life - it is hardly how he expected. As a defendant on trial for war-crimes, Hanna's past is revealed and Michael struggles with reconciling the details of the past eight years with the love he discovered as a teenager.

Why it's significant: Many people's dark horse for Best Picture, The Reader is a gripping film that is still gaining notoriety and basking in Kate Winslet's Oscar for Best Actress. For a film that was originally slated to come out in 2009 (and was therefore a bit rushed in its release), The Reader has done surprisingly well. In addition, it was also the final film for producers Anthony Minghella and Sydney Pollack, both of whom died during production. Although it did not win for Best Picture (as Harvey Weinstein predicted), it is certainly deserving of our attention and will be remembered as one of the truly inspiring performances of Kate Winslet. --Tim

"Slumdog Millionaire": Best DVDs of April 2009

What it is: We all agreed that it may seem redundant to name Slumdog Millionaire as the best film of the month, but it just really is that good of a film. The golden child of this year’s award season (hands down), this story is unlike any other films of 2008. For those of you who have been living off the grid in a small hovel in the woods (because that’s probably the only circumstance in which you might not know about Slumdog), it revolves around a teen growing up in the slums of Mumbai who becomes a contestant on Who Wants to be a Millionaire? Arrested under suspicions of cheating, events from his life are shown in a series of flashbacks that explain how he knew the answers to all the questions on the show.

Why it's significant: Needless to say, with all the hype and buzz, I had high expectations going into this film and therefore prepared myself for the inevitable disappointment. But Slumdog prevailed over my pessimism. It was both humorous and tragic, creative but honest. Boyle did a superb job of portraying an exquisite but tormented modern-day Mumbai where the beauty of its citizens is offset by stunning images of poverty and conflict. The film could have very easily come across as almost cheesy in a sense, but maintained itself as realistically hopeful. Director Danny Boyle (Sunshine, Trainspotting, 28 Days Later) earned his first Oscar as Best Director for Slumdog and I must say, it is well-deserved. If you are like me and keep a list of movies (new and old) to see, bump Slumdog to the top. It is not to be missed. ---Kelsey


"The Wrestler": Best DVDs of April 2009

The Wrestler What it is: The Wrestler is the story of a down-and-out wrestler who is faced with the impact his career has had on his life, his health, and his future. A former 80’s wrestling god, Randy “The Ram” Robinson (Mickey Rourke) now spends his days pursuing small-time bouts in small-town locales to scrounge together an income and hold on to his past glory. Outside the ring he’s a man with an estranged daughter, dead-end job at the local supermarket, and a blossoming romance with exotic dancer Cassidy (Marisa Tomei). Facing a health crisis, but given the opportunity for a true return to the wrestling world, The Wrestler chronicles the struggles of the man and “The Ram”.

Why it's Significant: This film received critical acclaim and was an awards season darling with thirty wins and twenty additional nominations. Wins included Best Actor awards for Mickey Rourke at BAFTA and the Golden Globes ®, not to mention two Oscar® nominations. Will The Wrestler be to Mickey Rourke what Pulp Fiction was to John Travolta? Will “The Ram” have one more glorious performance in the ring? Will Randy get the future he wants with his daughter and get the girl? There’s only one way to know the answer to these questions... buy your copy of The Wrestler on DVD or Blu-ray today. -- Lesley


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Trailer Park: Where the Wild Things Are

Yeah!!!

And thanks to the 6 different people who emailed me about this today - I honestly now couldn't be more excited.  ---Kira

"New York City Serenade": Frank Whaley Blog

Frank Frank Whaley is most recognized from his starring role with Kevin Spacey in the independent cult favorite Swimming With Sharks and films like Pulp Fiction and Vacancy, as well as television shows including The Dead Zone, CSI, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and House M.D. But this time, Frank is behind the camera - as director and writer of the independent film, New York City Serenade starring Freddie Prinze Jr, Chris Klein and Jamie-Lynn Sigler, which recently opened theatrically in New York. And who better to tell us about the film than Frank himself - so check out his blog below written just for Amazon to celebrate the film, which is now available on DVD. - Lisanne

I began writing the screenplay for NEW YORK CITY SERENADE one early November morning in 1994. The night before, my best friend at the time and I were sitting in a pre-Starbucks coffee shop on the west side of Manhattan trying to figure out what to do with our Saturday night. We bumped into an acquaintance who was on his way to a party up at Columbia University where his lady friend was a student. We decided to tag along, despite his sheepish warning “It might be by invitation only.” We assured him it would be fine. Like most things in those days it was on a lark, an impulse conducted with little or no thought. This particular Saturday evening, this crashed party, and it’s aftermath, became the basis for the script.

We took the subway uptown and found the party. It was in a beautiful old townhouse which was now NYC home to a Columbia fraternity. My friend immediately engaged himself in a close conversation with an exotic looking blonde art student. Left to my own devices, I began making mindless conversation with various coeds. One of these conversations turned into a spirited game of truth or dare between myself and a couple of philosophy majors in an upstairs study and ended when one of the young lady’s boyfriend and a few of his frat brothers burst in. I accepted their invitation to fight but only one at a time before scurrying out of the room like a squirrel. Hearing the commotion my friend removed himself from the back room where he and the art student had moved their conversation and the two of us hauled ass out of there, escaping a small angry mob of drunk frat boys.

The next night I was packing up my drums in the dive bar where my band had played a set earlier in the evening, (For many years I played the drums in a NYC band called the Niagaras). The place was called Mondo Cane, a fire trap situated above an Italian restaurant in the West Village with space to occupy thirty people but whose owner frequently allowed in five times that many for a ten dollar cover charge. My friend came in and sunk into a corner table looking forlorn. Evidently the art student was a friend of a co-worker of his girlfriend. Word had traveled and his girlfriend found out he had been getting busy with her at the party the night before. She broke up with him at dinner earlier in the evening but not before throwing a full glass of ginger ale in his face.

The good news was she was no longer his girlfriend and therefore no longer going to the film festival in Houston, Texas where a short film he had made was going to be playing. It took a little bit of convincing but I was the recipient of the extra plane ticket and moreover a free trip to Houston.

This relatively pointless series of events became the script and eventually the movie. What I set out to do was capture an otherwise forgotten moment. I was in my mid thirties and at a real turning point in my life, which had become a nightly booze fueled  whirlpool of adolescence and I was becoming way to old and tired for the whole thing. I think writing the script helped me come to terms with a lot of things at that time.

I also wanted to write a story about New York,  the New York that I experienced in my younger days.

Mostly I wanted to tell a story about friendship and the strange way people have of moving in and out of each other’s lives like ghosts. All the people that I wrote about and characterized in the movie are no longer a part of my life, at least not in any significant way. It’s as though I lived another life, remote from me now and completely forgotten about. Somewhere tucked away in the nooks and crannies of memory there are vague pictures.

In the movie Owen and Ray are like brothers, of the same mind, two sides of the same coin. Inseparable. In the end they have no choice but go their separate ways.

After I wrote the first draft I put the script away for a long time. I wrote and directed my second film THE JIMMY SHOW, got married and started a family. In 2001 I came back to it, I did a couple of revised drafts,  changed the title from THE WINTER SPRING RISE AND FALL OF RAY and set out to try and get it financed. I sent it to my agent and she said “No one wants to see a movie about these two awful people.”

A little over four years later I somehow managed to raise the money to make it. In the summer of 2006 Freddie Prinze Jr., Chris Klein, Jamie Lynn Sigler, Heather Bucha  and Wallace Shawn among others along with my faithful producer Rachel Peters and a very good and hard working crew began twenty-two and a half blistering, drama filled and very difficult days and nights filming NEW YORK CITY SERENADE in and around the city of Manhattan.

Nearly three years later the film has finally found a theatrical release, an extremely limited release (one theater) , but a release none the less. More importantly it will find an extremely beautiful DVD release courtesy of ANCHOR BAY ENTERTAINMENT.

It’s been quite a journey from that early November morning in 1994. I’m glad I was able to tell this story. I hope people enjoy the movie. - Frank Whaley

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