The Blu-ray Blog » Sean Penn http://www.theblurayblog.com Blu-ray disc news, reviews, releases, movies, films on PS3, Playstation, players, drives, Apple, Mac, OSX, HD, HDTVThu, 06 Jan 2011 21:19:54 +0000enhourly1http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.4Top 5 New Blu-ray releases for the Week of September 28 http://www.theblurayblog.com/2010/09/top-5-new-blu-ray-releases-for-the-week-of-september-28/ http://www.theblurayblog.com/2010/09/top-5-new-blu-ray-releases-for-the-week-of-september-28/#commentsWed, 29 Sep 2010 02:18:55 +0000Brendenhttp://www.theblurayblog.com/?p=12074

It’s the last week of September and probably the finest looking for Blu-ray releases. We might not be seeing the glut of titles from weeks past but the discs hitting the shops today are some of the best you’ll see all year, including some essential catalogue titles and one of the biggest blockbuster hits of this past summer. Here we go!


1. THE THIN RED LINE

The Thin Red Line (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] (1998)


If you ask me, everything director Terrence Malick touches becomes pure cinematic gold. But I totally understand that his metered, poetic style of storytelling isn’t for everyone. So this, my strongest recommendation of the week, is really a recommendation for those who can appreciate this film: a thoughtful look at war and the toll it takes on the men who fight the battles, where the camera watching them occasionally gets lost in a slow shot of a leaf, or lingers on a long sunset over a white beach. That’s Malick. Making profound statements through a collection of deliberate, meditative images. The Thin Red Line is one of the most moving and unique war films ever made. And now, it’s one of the most visually arresting Blu-rays produced, thanks to Criterion. This is one of the best high-def presentations of the year. Highly recommended!

SPECIAL FEATURES:

  • New, restored high-definition digital transfer, supervised and approved by director Terrence Malick and cinematographer John Toll with DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack
  • New audio commentary by Toll, production designer Jack Fisk, and producer Grant Hill
  • Interviews with several of the film’s actors, including Kirk Acevedo, Jim Caviezel, Thomas Jane, Elias Koteas, Dash Mihok, and Sean Penn; composer Hans Zimmer; editors Billy Weber, Leslie Jones, and Saar Klein; and writer James Jones’s daughter Kaylie Jones
  • New interview with casting director Dianne Crittenden, featuring archival audition footage
  • Fourteen minutes of outtakes from the film
  • World War II newsreels from Guadalcanal and the Solomon Islands
  • Melanesian chants
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by film critic David Sterritt and a 1963 reprint by James Jones

Amazon: $29.49


2. MERRY CHRISTMAS MR. LAWRENCE

Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence: The (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] (1983)

What’s that, you say. Another new Blu-ray disc release from Criterion? That’s right, folks. Two new Criterion discs in one week. And this is another gem. Director Nagisa Oshima‘s Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence has time and place in common with Malick’s Line but focuses not on the fields of war but instead on a P.O.W. camp. Starring David Bowie in a rich leading role that pits him against his captor, Ryuichi Sakamoto (yes, the composer, who not only stars in the film but crafted its amazing score!), Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence also features a young Takeshi Kitano (yes, the famed actor/writer/director/Takeshi’s Castle host!) in his first dramatic role!

Special Features:

  • New, restored high-definition master with DTS-HD Master Audio
  • The Oshima Gang, an original making-of featurette
  • New video interviews with producer Jeremy Thomas, screenwriter Paul Mayersberg, actor Tom Conti, and actor-composer Ryuichi Sakamoto
  • Hasten Slowly, an hour-long documentary about author and adventurer Laurens van der Post, whose autobiographical novel is the basis for the film
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by film writer Chuck Stephens and a 1983 interview with director Nagisa Oshima by Japanese film writer Tadao Sato

Amazon: $29.49


3. KING KONG (1933)

King Kong (Blu-ray Book) (1933)

Speaking of must-have discs, the new Blu-ray edition of the original King Kong is out in shops today! Warner Home Video presents this bad boy in a gorgeous hardcover digi-book and includes all the incredible special features from the excellent 2005 DVD release. The transfer isn’t going to blow away the casual viewer, as the source material isn’t in sparkling, pristine condition. But if you’re a film fan of any sort, or if you just love the 1933 version of Kong, you’re going to fall in love with this high-def presentation. It’s very, very true to the film and an unquestionable improvement over the previously issued DVD. Though, not to the extent that I would recommend those with smaller screens (40″ or less) make the upgrade – outside of some additional clean-ups and a more robust grain structure, and unless you have a very keen eye, I’m not sure you’ll notice much difference on a smaller display. Nevertheless, this is great release. Very highly recommended!

Special Features:

  • Commentary by creature creator Ray Harryhausen and visual effects artist Ken Ralston, with archival sound bites from Merian C. Cooper and Fay Wray
  • I’m Kong: The Exploits of Merian C. Cooper (2005 TCM documentary)
  • The Making of Kong, Eighth Wonder of the World (7-part documentary)
  • The Lost Spider Pit Sequence
  • Creation Test Footage with Commentary by Ray Harryhausen
  • Trailers

Amazon: $24.99


4. IRON MAN 2

Iron Man 2 (Three-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo + Digital Copy) (2010)

Oh, Iron Man 2. I had such high hopes for you. But alas, the genius of your original cinematic outing wasn’t to carry over to your sequel: a sequel that replaces carefully crafted moments featuring strongly motivated characters acting within the logic of the film, with ridiculous, over the top scenes that come out of nowhere, and force out-of-character action to serve plot contrivances. Or to service Marvel‘s eventual Avengers superhero team film.

I’m not saying I didn’t enjoy Iron Man 2. I just know it could have been better if director Jon Favreau had been left to his own devices and not forced to shoehorn Venom into the film. Oh wait…

Amazon: $24.99


5. BATMAN/SUPERMAN: APOCALYPSE

Superman/Batman: Apocalypse [Blu-ray]

Gahhh!! Another DC Comics animated feature film, direct to Blu-ray (and DVD, if you’re still into those old SD platters.) I didn’t receive my review disc yet so, having not seen it, I can’t recommend it on its own merits. But if past entries in this series are any indication, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse is going to be a shit-ton of fun!

Amazon: $19.99


SPECIAL MENTION: Private Eyes

The Private Eyes [Blu-ray] (2010)

Oh. Em. Gee. I had completely forgotten about The Private Eyes. I used to love this film when I was a kid. I don’t recall much about it now, in my old age, outside of the fact that my younger-self believed it to be a very Scooby Doo-like live-action film, both funny and spooky, with a great mystery and a couple of daring sleuths (Don Knots and Tim Conway) at the heart of it. Sigh…I miss going to Saturday matinees at the old Park Cinema in Welland…

I haven’t seen the film in years and know nothing of the track record of the studio releasing the Blu-ray so proceed with caution. But if you do pick it up, please let me know what you think!

Amazon: $26.49


ALSO AVAILABLE ON BLU-RAY THIS WEEK
Clicking an image will take you to Amazon.com where you can learn more about and purchase the Blu-ray disc:

Get Him to the Greek [Blu-ray] (2010)Rush- 2112+Moving Pictures Classic Album [Blu-ray] (2010)The Killer Inside Me [Blu-ray] (2010)Rock & Rule (25th Anniversary Edition) [Blu-ray] (1983)



Suck [Blu-ray] (2010)Frozen [Blu-ray] (2010)Good [Blu-ray] (2008)Babies [Blu-ray] (2010)



Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky [Blu-ray] (2010)Prey [Blu-ray] (2007)Battle 360: Complete Season 1 [Blu-ray]Patton 360: The Complete Season 1 [Blu-ray]


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Criterion announces September Blu-ray titles: The Thin Red Line, Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence, Breathless, Charade http://www.theblurayblog.com/2010/06/criterion-announces-september-blu-ray-titles-the-thin-red-line-merry-christmas-mr-lawrence-breathless-charade/ http://www.theblurayblog.com/2010/06/criterion-announces-september-blu-ray-titles-the-thin-red-line-merry-christmas-mr-lawrence-breathless-charade/#commentsWed, 16 Jun 2010 15:39:09 +0000Brendenhttp://www.theblurayblog.com/?p=10307

God help me but I’m going to be completely broke by the end of this year if this keeps up. I’m sorry to sing the same song over and over again but Criterion proves month after month that they can read my mind, choosing some of my favourite films to bring to Blu-ray. And this batch of announcements, all due out this coming September is no exception. From Godard to Malick, Donen to Oshima – these are all incredible movies and I need to own them all on Blu-ray! Details below:

PS: See, I told you Criterion was preparing The Thin Red Line for Blu-ray disc!

PPS: If you love Godard, as I do, rush out and grab up the Breathless Blu-ray as soon as it hits the shelves. It’s licensed from Studio Canal and, for all we know, could end up going Out Of Print sooner than we suspect, just as other Criterion titles have of late.


CHARADE


(September 21, 2010 – MSRP $39.95)
Video: 1.85:1 1080p
Audio: TBA

Special Features:

  • New high-definition digital transfer, with restored image and sound and enhanced for widescreen telelvisions
  • Audio commentary: A conversation with Stanley Donen and screenwriter Peter Stone
  • The Films of Stanley Donen: A selected filmography, with an introduction by Donen biographer Stephen M. Silverman
  • Peter Stone’s career highlights
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • English subtitles for the deaf and hearing impaired

BREATHLESS


(September 14, 2010 – MSRP $39.95)
Video: 1.33:1 1080p
Audio: TBA

Special Features:

  • Restored high-definition digital transfer, approved by director of photography Raoul Coutard
  • Archival interviews with director Jean-Luc Godard, and actors Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jean Seberg, and Jean-Pierre Melville
  • New video interviews with Coutard, assistant director Pierre Rissient, and filmmaker D. A. Pennebaker
  • New video essays: filmmaker and critic Mark Rappaport’s “Jean Seberg” and critic Jonathan Rosenbaum’s “Breathless as Film Criticism”
  • Chambre 12, Hotel de suede, an eighty-minute French documentary about the making of Breathless, with members of the cast and crew
  • Charlotte et son Jules, a 1959 short film by Godard, starring Belmondo
  • French theatrical trailer
  • New and improved English subtitle translation
  • PLUS: A booklet featuring writings from Godard, film historian Dudley Andrew, François Truffaut’s original film treatment, and Godard’s scenario

MERRY CHRISTMAS MR. LAWRENCE


(September 28, 2010 – MSRP $39.95)
Video: 1.78:1 1080p
Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio

Special Features:

  • New, restored high-definition master with DTS-HD Master Audio
  • The Oshima Gang, an original making-of featurette
  • New video interviews with producer Jeremy Thomas, screenwriter Paul Mayersberg, actor Tom Conti, and actor-composer Ryuichi Sakamoto
  • Hasten Slowly, an hour-long documentary about author and adventurer Laurens van der Post, whose autobiographical novel is the basis for the film
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by film writer Chuck Stephens and a 1983 interview with director Nagisa Oshima by Japanese film writer Tadao Sato

THE THIN RED LINE


(September 28, 2010 – MSRP $39.95)
Video: 2.35:1 1080p
Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio

Special Features:

  • New, restored high-definition digital transfer, approved by director Terrence Malick and cinematographer John Toll (with DTS-HD Master Audio on the Blu-ray edition)
  • New audio commentary featuring Toll, production designer Jack Fisk, and producer Grant Hill
  • Outtakes from the film
  • Video interviews with several of the film’s actors, including Kirk Acevedo, Jim Caviezel, Ben Chaplin, Tom Jane, Elias Koteas, Dash Mihok, and Sean Penn
  • New video interview with casting director Dianne Crittenden, featuring original audition footage
  • New interview with composer Hans Zimmer
  • New video piece featuring interviews with editors Billy Weber, Leslie Jones, and Saar Klein
  • An interview with writer James Jones’s daughter Kaylie Jones
  • World War II newsreels featuring footage from Guadalcanal and the Solomon Islands
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by film critic David Sterritt and a 1963 essay by James Jones on war films

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Top 5 New Blu-ray releases for the Week of May 18 http://www.theblurayblog.com/2010/05/top-5-new-blu-ray-releases-for-the-week-of-may-18/ http://www.theblurayblog.com/2010/05/top-5-new-blu-ray-releases-for-the-week-of-may-18/#commentsWed, 19 May 2010 14:56:56 +0000Brendenhttp://www.theblurayblog.com/?p=9727

This week is a no-brainer for me, as the number one pick is one of my all time favourite films! The rest of the Blu-ray discs out this week are a bit of a mixed bag, though, with some decent, new Hollywood fliks (and some truly awful ones), some catalogue titles and a couple of pretty decent anime releases.


1. WALKABOUT

Walkabout Criterion Collection Blu-ray


My old Criterion Collection edition of Walkabout has been one of the most treasured DVDs in my vast collection for years now. It’s one of my favourite films of all time. I’m so excited to be able to retire that worn, aged non-anamorphic disc and replace it now with this new pristine Blu-ray edition of the film, hot off the printer from Criterion!

It’s always seemed to me that everything director Nicolas Roeg touches is gold. Whether focusing his lens on the steely eyes of David Bowie in The Man Who Fell to Earth or adapting the children’s book, The Witches, Roeg’s work always seems to stand apart from the crowd as that of a true auteur. And Walkabout, to me, has always been his finest work – the story of a couple of young children lost in the outback of Australia, guided to safety by an Aboriginal boy on his “walkabout”. Stunning photography, wonderful, rich performances and a gripping yet simple tale told brilliantly. Walkabout is the Blu-ray I’ve most been looking forward to these last months. Don’t miss it!

Amazon: $29.49


2. INVICTUS

Invictus Blu-ray

I really wasn’t looking forward to watching Invictus. I don’t care for sports films and I’m not very attracted to movies that portray political figures as gods or gurus. And Invictus has both sports and gods. But despite this preachy, predictable nature of this picture of a rugby team’s struggle to win the cup and unite a South Africa under newly elected President/Buddha Nelson Mandela, I actually managed to enjoy the story! What is it with these sports films winning me over lately?! Invictus shouldn’t have worked for me but the filmmaking and the performances won me over. The Blu-ray is packed with some nice features as well, including an exclusive picture-in-picture track with director Clint Eastwood and all the major players involved.

Amazon: $24.99


3. CARLITO’S WAY

Carlito's Way Blu-ray

Do you, like I, have a soft spot for the often borderline exploitation films of director Brian DePalma? Yeah…his movies feature a lot of scenes and characters that are quite often in bad taste but are packed full of amazing feats of inhuman camer-work. And Carlito’s Way is no exception. While perhaps not the best DePalma film, this one does stand out for a couple of reasons – it marked DePalma’s reunion with his Scarface star, Al Pacino (again playing a latin charactrer for the director) and it features one of the most electric Sean Penn performances on celluloid! It’s just a shame that Universal didn’t hold off on issuing this Blu-ray for a couple of years in favour of giving us a fully-loaded twentieth anniversary edition in 2013! I guess I won’t be surprised if we see a double dip, when the time comes…

Amazon: $17.99


4. DRAGONBALL Z KAI: PART ONE

Dragonball Z Kai: Season One Part one Blu-ray

Are you a fan of anime? More specifically, are you a fan of the Dragonball franchise? If so, be certain not to miss out on this revolutionary, revitalizing release for the property – the first part of the Dragonball Z series revised, now with cleaned up animation, tightened plot and storytelling and an all new voice-cast recording featuring the original actors! Toei Animation are celebrating the 20th anniversary of Dragonball by taking the unwieldy 291-episode series, dragged out by numerous multi-episode battles that forgo plot progression in favour of never-ending scenes of violence, and crunching it down to a more well-paced and palatable 100 episode run. The first 13 episodes are presented in this 2-disc set, not looking as shiny-perfect as the Evangelion redux I reviewed last month, but certainly the best all-around presentation Dragonball Z has ever seen.

Amazon: $31.99


5. DOGORA

Dogora Blu-ray

Dogora is no Baraka, though it tries very hard to be. But on its own, it’s a fine effort – an 80-minute Cambodian travelogue of a sort, featuring some absolutely stunning photography set to a driving musical score. There is no narrative to be found here and as such, the film is not for everyone. I haven’t had a chance to screen the Blu-ray, but if it’s up to the standards of the Baraka disc, this could be a superb showpiece for your home theatre setup!

Amazon: $26.99



ALSO AVAILABLE ON BLU-RAY THIS WEEK
Clicking an image will take you to Amazon.com where you can learn more about and purchase the Blu-ray disc:

Extraordinary Measures Blu-rayValentine's Day Blu-rayThe Messenger Blu-rayThe Spy Next Door Blu-ray



Outlander Blu-rayThe New Daughter Blu-rayAppleseed Blu-ray



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Criterion preparing Terrence Malick's The Thin Red Line for Blu-ray? http://www.theblurayblog.com/2010/03/criterion-preparing-terrence-malicks-the-thin-red-line-for-blu-ray/ http://www.theblurayblog.com/2010/03/criterion-preparing-terrence-malicks-the-thin-red-line-for-blu-ray/#commentsMon, 22 Mar 2010 18:31:18 +0000Brendenhttp://www.theblurayblog.com/?p=8895

I never thought I would say this but I freaking love Twitter! About an hour ago, Ben Lim, one of the fine fellows who work for The Criterion Collection tweeted a photo with the note “Screening the HD master of an upcoming release…“. That image appears to be from Terrence Malick‘s brilliant The Thin Red Line providing evidence that my favourite home video label is preparing to release the 1998 film!

"Screening the HD master of an upcoming release..." - Ben Lim

“Screening the HD master of an upcoming release…” – Ben Lim

Criterion is providing a lot of hints about their upcoming line-up of films via their Twitter account lately – last week they revealed that they’re actively working on the twisted Japanese horror film House (Hausu) and now they drop hints about Malick’s Line! The only real burning question remaining is whether or not either of these films will see a high-def release on Blu-ray or be relegated to old, SD DVD. Let’s pray for the former…

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