BLACK SEA Coming To DVD/Blu-ray on May 5 – Stars Jude Law

Universal Pictures Home Entertainment Black Sea

BLACK SEA is a gripping adventure that takes audiences to the depths of human greed in a suspenseful underwater search for sunken treasure that becomes a fight for survival. Directed by Academy Award winner Kevin Macdonald (One Day in September, The Last King of Scotland) and starring two-time Academy Award nominee Jude Law (The Talented Mr. Ripley, Cold Mountain), the suspenseful Focus Features thriller debuts on Digital HD on April 21, 2015 and on Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD as well as On Demand May 5, 2015 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.

BLACK SEA centers on a rogue submarine captain (Jude Law) who, after being laid off from a salvage company, pulls together a misfit crew to go after a sunken treasure rumored to be lost in the depths of the Black Sea. As the captain and his crew embark on their expedition, greed and desperation take control on board their claustrophobic vessel – and the increasing uncertainty of the mission causes the men to turn on each other and fight for their own survival. The international cast includes Scoot McNairy (Argo), Ben Mendelsohn (Bloodline), David Threlfall (Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World), Konstantin Khabenskiy (Wanted),Michael Smiley (Kill List), and Grigory Dobrygin (A Most Wanted Man).

The Blu-ray Combo Pack includes a Blu-ray, DVD and DIGITAL HD with UltraViolet.

  • Blu-ray unleashes the power of your HDTV and is the best way to watch movies at home, featuring 6X the picture resolution of DVD, exclusive extras and theater-quality surround sound.
  • DVD offers the flexibility and convenience of playing movies in more places, both at home and away.
  • DIGITAL HD with UltraViolet lets fans watch movies anywhere on their favorite devices. Users can instantly stream or download.

BONUS FEATURES – Blu-ray™ and DVD:

  • “A Dive into the Black Sea” – behind-the-scenes featurette
  • Audio commentary with director Kevin Macdonald

FILMMAKERS
Cast:  Jude Law, Scoot McNairy, Ben Mendelsohn, David Threlfall
Directed By:  Kevin Macdonald
Written By:  Dennis Kelly
Produced By:  Charles Steel, Kevin Macdonald
Executive Producers:  Tessa Ross, Teresa Moneo, Merve Harzadin, Jim Cochrane
Cinematography: Christopher Ross
Production Designer:  Nick Palmer
Edited By:  Justine Wright
Costume Designer:  Natalie Ward
Music By:  Ilan Eshkeri

TECHNICAL INFORMATION – Blu-ray:
Street Date: May 5, 2015
Copyright: 2015 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
Selection Numbers: 62130321
Running Time: 1 Hour 54 Minutes
Layers: BD-50
Aspect Ratio: Widescreen 2.40:1
Rating: R for language throughout, some graphic images and violence.
Technical Info: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish and French subtitles

TECHNICAL INFORMATION – DVD:
Street Date: May 5, 2015
Copyright: 2015 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
Selection Numbers: 62130322
Running Time: 1 hour 54 Minutes
Layers: Dual Layer
Aspect Ratio: Anamorphic Widescreen 2.40:1
Rating: R for language throughout, some graphic images and violence.
Technical Info: Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish and French subtitles

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MAYA THE BEE Movie Available On Blu-ray 3D and DVD May 19th

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Kids and parents across North America will soon be enamored by the world famous little bee named Maya and her insect friends when the international smash hit MAYA THE BEE MOVIE makes its buzz-worthy debut on DVD and on two-disc BLU-RAY 3D Combo Pack (Blu-ray 3D and 2D, DVD and digital) from Shout! Factory Kids on May 19, 2015.

The Blu-ray 3D Combo Pack allows viewers to enjoy MAYA THE BEE MOVIE on the platform of their choice and includes movie presentation on Blu-ray 3D and 2D, DVD and a digital copy of the movie.

Already a great box office success in much of the world, MAYA THE BEE MOVIE, based on the well-known children’s novel and popular animated series in Europe, Australia and Asia, offers an immersive cinematic adventure into a spectacular macroscopic world. This highly anticipated animated feature brings to life an enchanting story of a little bee named Maya and her exciting adventure of self-discovery and fantastical fun. A must-have for fans of all ages, MAYA THE BEE MOVIE is an instant classic that delivers wholesome family entertainment – emphasizing the importance of friendship, freedom and courage.

This internationally acclaimed film can also be seen in select theaters in Los Angeles and New York on May 1, 2015.

Directed by Alexs Stadermann (Bambi II) and produced by Studio 100 Media and Buzz Studios in association with Flying Bark Productions, MAYA THE BEE MOVIE features the acclaimed voice talent of Coco Jack Gillies, Academy Award nominee Jacki Weaver (Animal Kingdom, Silver Linings Playbook), Miriam Margolyes (Harry Potter, Babe), Richard Roxburgh (Mission: Impossible II), Noah Taylor (Game of Thrones, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory), Kodi Smit-McPhee (ParaNorman, Rise of the Planet of the Apes) and Justine Clarke (Home and Away).

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Maya is a little bee with a big heart. She dreams of an exciting life of freedom, fun and adventure – the world is simply far too interesting to stay inside a hive! Her funny attempts to fit in bring her into trouble with the Queen’s narrow-minded royal advisor, Buzzlina. With her best friend Willy, Maya buzzes out into the meadow on an exhilarating adventure of self-discovery.

While most bees believe that other insects should be feared, Maya can’t help but make friends with Flip the charismatic and eccentric grasshopper, Kurt the dung beetle and even Sting, a young hornet. But when the Queen’s royal jelly is stolen, it will take Maya and all of her bug buddies to figure out who did it and how to save the day!

One of the best-known and beloved children’s brands of all-time, the stories of Maya The Bee have been passed down among generations of families for years. Originally a German children’s novel by Waldemar Bonsels, The Adventures of Maya the Bee was published over a hundred years ago in 1912. Since the original publishing, the book has been translated into many other languages and enjoyed by children all over the world. In addition to the book, Maya The Bee is also a comic book series, appeared in various iterations as animated series and now a major animated feature film.

MAYA THE BEE MOVIE Two-Disc Blu-ray 3D Combo Pack contains the following special features: Movie presentation on Blu-ray 3D and 2D, DVD and a Digital Copy of the film

  • An Interview With Maya
  • “Dancing With Bees” – An Exclusive Episode Of The Maya The Bee TV Series
  • Blooper Reel
  • Trailers

MAYA THE BEE MOVIE DVD contains the following bonus features:

  • An Interview With Maya
  • “Dancing With Bees” – An Exclusive Episode Of The Maya The Bee TV Series
  • Blooper Reel
  • Trailers

Technical Information – BLU-RAY 3D Combo Pack
Street Date: May 19, 2015
SRP: $24.97
Running Time: 79 minutes
Aspect Ratio: Anamorphic Widescreen
Language: English
Subtitles: English
Sound: 5.1 DTSMA

Technical Information – DVD
Street Date: May 19, 2015
SRP: $16.97
Running Time: 79 minutes
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 Anamorphic Widescreen
Language: English
Subtitles: English
Sound: 5.1 Dolby Digital

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Maya and Willy

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THE TAMI SHOW – The DVD Review

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The recent passing of Lesley Gore was not noted on We Are Movie Geeks, I’d like to correct that and as a tribute to her review one of the best concerts ever captured on film (actually on video but I’ll get to that soon.)

Born Lesley Sue Goldstein in New York City on May 2nd 1946 Lesley Gore passed on February 16, this year. She never tried her hand at acting (to my knowledge) yet she appeared in several films and many television shows singing one of or more of her considerable string of hits in a very strong voice, for such a little lady.

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It’s My Party is probably her most famous and well remembered song but Judy’s Turn To Cry, Maybe I Know, Sunshine Lollipops, You Don’t Own Me and several other songs charted during her long career. She never resented being consigned to the “oldie’s” category of popular music and gladly toured almost nonstop to sing her catalog of hits.

One of her more memorable appearances on film was in AIP’s Ski Party with Dwayne Hickman and Frankie Avalon singing Sunshine Lollipops on a tour bus to the ski resort. Oddly enough another major performer appearing in Ski Party was James Brown and his Famous Flames (playing a mountain Ranger rescue team, of all things!)

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Which leads me to a wonderful document of 1960s popular music, The TAMI Show, (which stood for Teenage Awards Music International.)   Unavailable for years except in portions on public television during pledge week or in a short version edited together with acts from The Big TNT Show, (it’s direct sequel,) for a VHS tape called That Was Rock (long out of print by the way.)

A little background first. Growing up in the Sixties I was blessed with both a brother and sister who brought home the most amazing records. My brother David and sister Judy brought home records made by Motown, Stax, Atlantic, and other labels featuring the biggest and best music from Rock, Rhythm and Blues and country acts.

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One of the albums in our home that I listened to obsessively was the soundtrack to the TAMI Show. I remember reading the album cover and finding out that this was a concert filmed in something called Electronovision.

Just as an aside I love that name! I have a soft spot in my heart for any failed or bypassed type of technology including VHS and Beta Max video tapes, 8 track audio tape, Cartrivision video , ¾” video, lp records and 45 rpm records, Super 8 film, HD VHS, laserdiscs, quadraphonic stereo, you name it.

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Electronovision was an early type of High Definition Video with much improved sound, an early type of digital recording actually. The TAMI Show was put together to show off this technology and the result was shown in theaters.

Listening to that soundtrack I longed to see the images that went along with the incredible live performances I heard on that lp record. I assumed I would never get to actually see The TAMI Show. Little did I know!

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As I said earlier part of the TAMI Show ended up on VHS, now we have a deluxe version of the complete film thanks to Shout! Factory and it is loaded with extras and looks and sounds so clean it could have been recorded yesterday afternoon.

The live show was videotaped during two days in front of a live audience of kids who got in to the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium for FREE! Yes, the people who put the show together were only interested in profit from the video showing in theaters and possible sale to television later on. Those were the days indeed!

The TAMI Show opens with Chuck Berry doing Maebelline and on the same stage Gerry and the Pacemakers doing the same song, in the English style. Chuck does not look pleased by the way. The music never lets up after that. The TAMI Show captures many of these artists at the absolute top of their form. Among the highlights: The Beach Boys set which was deleted after the initial theatrical run has been restored. The Beach Boys were never one of my favorite bands, I could not really relate to surf music while growing up in the backwoods of Missouri. But how nice it is to see the original lineup of the Beach Boys, with Brian Wilson looking relaxed, happy and in full charge of his band. Here was a family of brothers who endured parental abuse almost identical to the Jackson family. All the Wilsons had a hard way to go, especially Brian and Dennis. Here they look to be having the time of their lives and their talent just shines.

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The real highlight, among so much talent is James Brown, performing at a white hot, fever pitch and blowing all the other acts off the stage. If you only know James Brown for the movie Get On Up (and if you have not seen that, what are you waiting for?) you really need to see the real man at height of his powers. James Brown in the TAMI Show is unforgettable; The Hardest Working Man In Show Business was a title he earned.

The Rolling Stones had to follow James Brown and they really did not want to, can’t say I blame them. But they acquit themselves very well, with all them looking painfully young and awkward. In fact among all these acts the only strangeness is an outfit called The Barbarians, who do exactly one very forgettable song. Among the extras on this dvd we learn they had a friend among the Electronovision producers who gave them “a break.” Yeah, whatever. Although it is interesting that their drummer had only one arm. Seriously, the guy plays his drum kit with a hook hand.

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But my main concern here is to pay tribute to Lesley Gore and in the TAMI Show we witness just what a terrific voice and what a great rapport she had with her audience. She opens with a blistering rendition of Maybe I Know, followed by It’s My Party, Judy’s Turn to Cry and the way ahead of its time feminist anthem You Don’t Own Me. Resurrected to good effect by Diane Keaton, Goldie Hawn and Bette Midler in The First Wives Club, You Don’t Own Me is a great song, again, way ahead of the curve and a warning to all guys when it comes to respecting their women. You listening men?

Lesley Gore had a tremendous range and power in her voice, she was a major performer in the pop music field for years with good reason, she had the goods and she never resented getting that “oldies” label. She was heard to say, more than once, that she would be crazy not to want to sing It’s My Party or Sunshine Lollipops to her faithful fans. She will be missed.

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The original concept for the TAMI show was to do a concert video for theatrical exhibition every year. The producers also had plans to fund music education for young people and actually quite a lot of projects, which never got off the ground. Like I said earlier there was a sequel of sorts, The Big TNT Show and at least one feature was shot in Electronovision, Harlow with Carol Lynley which went head to head with the more well known Jean Harlow biography with Carol Baker. Harlow can be seen on Youtube, if you’re interested.

It’s interesting to speculate on what might have been with Electronovision. The TAMI Show is a great snap shot of not just where popular music was in 1964 but also the fashions, the hair, the attitudes, all caught on camera for posterity. The audience was deliberately integrated, we are used to seeing white and black Americans interacting in public spaces now, especially concert venues. This was a big deal in 1964. In many parts of our country heads were being busted on people who dared suggest that black and white people could sit next to each other in public, especially if they were having a good time!

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What would succeeding TAMI Shows have been like? Certainly they would have gone to color and kept tweaking the video and audio, although the dvd from Shout! Factory looks flawless, the sound is incredible and you can see every drop of sweat on James Brown’s face and every stray hair on Lesley Gore’s head.

Would we have gotten to see groups like The Doors, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Canned Heat, The Grateful Dead, or even Miles Davis in Electronovision?   Wouldn’t that have been nice? But what we have here is priceless. Now if Shout! Factory will just do the same for the Big TNT Show, which has some fine performances including Roger Miller, The Lovin’ Spoonful, The Ronettes , Bo Diddley and The Byrds.

Long live rock and roll!

And rest in peace Lesley Gore, you sang your heart out, and we appreciate it.

THE STORY OF FILM: AN ODYSSEY – The DVD Review

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I love the movies, really, truly I do, I love the movies. Cinema, motion pictures, movies, film, whatever you want to label this peculiar art form that we all cherish here at We Are Movie Geeks, I have loved it ever since the first time I saw a movie on television, in a theater or at a drive-in. I wish I could recall the first movie I ever saw and what the medium was in which I saw it.

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One of my earliest memories was the yearly showing of Wizard of Oz on television and my delight at seeing Judy Garland in a different movie, Pigskin Parade, and realizing that actors made a living by appearing in more than one movie or television series.

I can recall seeing Battle Beyond the Stars at the Pine Hill Drive-in in Piedmont, Missouri, one of the Russian space movies bought and re-edited by Roger Corman. I stood in the playground in front of that huge screen in awe of the space adventure unfolding against a night sky that blended seamlessly with those images of silver rockets and asteroids and weird looking monsters.

I can recall my family going to an indoor theater, probably in Greenville, Missouri, to see a western, in color, and feeling lost in the wide open spaces captured in that (probably) B-movie landscape.

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I came to love every genre of film and from every country that makes them. Italian peplum, Russian fantasy films, Japanese historical and giant monster epics, English historical romances, American westerns, comedies, monster movies, musicals, everything, just everything.

And among my favorite films are movies about the movies, documentaries giving the history of the medium or narrow casting down to the history of a single studio or director or actor and using numerous clips to illustrate the story. In my collection are excellent documentaries on the history of Warner Brothers, Universal, RKO and MGM studios. Biographies of John Huston, Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock, David Lynch, Roger Corman. Profiles of Joan Crawford, Clark Gable, James Dean, John Wayne, Ginger Rogers and Jimmy Stewart. I particularly love a series called 100 Years of Horror hosted by Christopher Lee and featuring clips from every monster and horror and science fiction picture imaginable.

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I say all this as an introduction to an incredible piece of work, a 15 episode history of innovation in the movies, The Story of Film, sub titled An Odyssey by Mark Cousins. This project should be subtitled a Personal Odyssey and I’ll get to that in a minute.  I found this box set at one of St. Petersburg’s libraries and brought it home, knowing nothing about the project. Of course I became hooked and watched it all, usually one episode a day, then watched the whole series again and have dipped into certain episodes ever since.

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A “Personal” Odyssey would be a more accurate subtitle as Mr. Cousins, (who first wrote a book covering this same ground and then spent six years shooting the documentary) lets us know up front this is his personal and highly opinionated story of film. He takes us step by step through every technical innovation from the invention of the camera to the recent changeover to all digital shooting and projection. He accurately informs us that it was not the camera that made the movies, it was the editing table. The first time two or more pieces of film were spliced together to create a narrative, cinema was made.  Then came color tinting, sound, wide screen systems, stereo sound, 3 Dimensions.

If you have ever taken a course in film history or read any of the many books on the subject you’ll recognize a lot of the names here. Among the usual suspects are the Lumiere Brothers, Georges Melies, DW Griffith, Murnau, John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock, Orson Welles, John Huston. And covering so much ground in only 15 one hour episodes of course a lot gets left out. David Lynch is well represented and I was delighted to see David Cronenberg also discussed at some length. If Woody Allen or Mel Brooks were mentioned I missed it.

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Cousins narrates his project with his soft Irish brogue and takes a global view of film. Which makes it all the more curious that he does not mention Irish film at all, since there is such a thing. Angela’s Ashes qualifies as Irish and so does The Crying Game. Europe is will represented but there is no mention of the astonishing work of Harry Kumel of Belgium.

Among the countries discussed at length: Germany, Russia, the French New Wave and the Italian neo-realist school. Ozu gets quite a lot of coverage, and rightfully so. But we also get quite a lot on Takeshi Miike (that most horrifying shot from Audition, if you’ve seen it you know what I mean.) and Shinya Tsukamoto.

But I was glad to learn so much about film makers I had never heard of, from countries I had no idea made world class films, or that I had very limited knowledge of. Egypt, Israel, Iran, and Brazil are discussed at some length. Although there is no mention of Jose Mohica Marins (Coffin Joe,) probably the most well known Brazilian film maker, to me anyway.

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If Cousins work has a failing it is an open prejudice about main stream Hollywood product. From the beginning he shows us a Christmas tree ornament hanging in space near the Hollywood sign (really!) and labeling Hollywood “the Bauble”. From many comments throughout the series we are asked to consider most of that body of work useless and without merit. I have to be fair and admit that a lot of disposable fluff came off the Hollywood assembly line in the 30s through the 50s. But many smart, personal, well thought out films were made by several directors, most of which have stood the test of time.

Our narrator also makes some truly outrageous statements, and some glaring omissions. While covering Orson Welles we are told that in his entire career Welles “never worked for any of the four major studios!” FOUR major studios? I thought there were about 6 or 8 major studios, RKO was never major? Or Universal? What about Columbia? Also when we get to the French New Wave we are not told that Truffaut, Godard and most of the rest of that crew had been film critics. Their back ground is critical in understanding where, how and why the French New Wave came about. For that matter we never hear the name Cahiers du Cinema, easily one of the most important film magazines ever published.

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One very curious statement, Cousins spends some time on Performance, the outrageous psychotropic English gangster mind melding, cross dressing enigma and proclaims it THE film that any aspiring film maker should watch, to see how a movie should be made! Please don’t get me wrong, I love Performance, have watched it numerous times, abused a variety of substances in order to do so. But that is a very strange statement to make. Just as an aside, any time I see James Fox in anything I cannot help but think of Chas and that outrageous Memo From Turner! “Does that sound equitable?”

But when Mark Cousins is on top of his game this series hums. Cousins really gets warmed up when he gets to the 70s and the Decade under the Influence, when the styles of the neo-realists and French New Wave were absorbed by Hollywood film makers like John Cassavetes and Robert Altman. In fact I got the impression that covering the 70s was the point of the whole series.

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Many Directors are interviewed and more than a few actors, but even here there are some odd choices. We get interview footage with Gus Van Sant, for instance. But then we get a side by side comparison of Hitchcock’s Psycho and Van Sant’s ill advised remake and what amounts to an apology for the color remake being made in the first place. Van Sant (who I do like by the way, I thought My Own Private Idaho was brilliant) explains that he made the remake basically for the paycheck. Fine, he has that right, just as I have the right never to watch the thing. The main point seems to be that Van Sant could show much more of Ann Heche’s naked body and bloody open wounds than Hitchcock could have ever gotten away with in 1960. Thankfully that is about the only time spent on useless remakes.

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The real danger in watching a series like Story of Film is the urge to get out copies of the complete films and watching them all, all over again. If I see clips from Intolerance, Vampyr, Citizen Kane, Vertigo, Passion of Joan of Arc, The Searchers, Blue Velvet, The Godfather, Once Upon a Time in the West or any number of other titles, I want to see the whole movie again.

And the real value in a series that attempts to be this comprehensive is in learning about so many new film makers and their projects. I kept a notebook and a pencil handy to write down Directors and titles while watching Story of Film, and so should you.

There is only one special feature to this set and it is on all five discs, a 90 second ad which covers the whole series in a machine gun edit of clips from every major film and director interview. Maybe I have spent too much time watching movies; I could name just about every clip as it flashed by.

With any faults this is a very valuable and enjoyable series for any movie geek, I learned quite a lot, and I have been accused of knowing everything about movies. The more I learn, about anything, the more I realize how much more I have to learn.

Now if you’ll excuse me I have to watch Gallipoli, Kansas City Bomber and West of Zanzibar again. Oh dear, not enough hours in the day……

DVD Giveaway – Win a Copy Of STAR WARS REBELS: SPARK OF REBELLION

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Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope captivated an entire generation in 1977, launching a saga that has been embraced by generations as a timeless epic. Now, the Star Wars saga continues with Star Wars Rebels, a new half-hour animated action series on Disney XD that introduces a thrilling cast of characters that are new to the Star Wars universe.

WAMG invites you to enter to win ONE (1) of Five copies of Star Wars Rebels: Spark of Rebellion on DVD.

ENTER YOUR NAME AND E-MAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.  WE WILL CONTACT YOU IF YOU ARE A WINNER.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES. NO P.O. BOXES. NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.  NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.  PRIZES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED.

CONTEST ENDS –FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24th, 11:59p est.

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In Star Wars Rebels, the adventures focus on Ezra, a street-smart teenage boy who has joined a small band of rebels that engage in daring missions of sabotage and resistance against the Empire. Members of this rag-tag group of rebels include Kanan, a cowboy Jedi; Hera, an ace Twi’lek pilot; Sabine, a Mandalorian street artist who happens to be an explosives expert; Zeb, an agile fighter and the “muscle” of the group; and Chopper, the grumpy but good-hearted droid. Together this motley but clever crew of the starship Ghost face threatening villains, embark on thrilling adventures and become heroes with the power to ignite a rebellion.

Star Wars Rebels takes place between Star Wars: Episode III and IV as the Empire tightens its grip on the galaxy and a rebellion begins to form.

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The voice cast includes Freddie Prinze Jr. as Kanan Jarrus, Taylor Gray as Ezra Bridger, Tiya Sircar as Sabine Wren, Steve Blum as Zeb Orrelios, Vanessa Marshall as Hera Syndulla, Jason Isaacs as the Inquisitor and David Oyelowo as Agent Kallus,

The series, executive produced by Dave Filoni, Simon Kinberg, and Greg Weisman, had it’s premiere as a one-hour special telecast on Disney Channel and airs Monday nights on Disney XD.

Following its 6.5 million Total Viewer global movie premiere weekend, Monday’s October 13th premiere telecast of the original series “Star Wars Rebels” became Disney XD’s #1 original animated series debut in the channel’s more than 15-year history in Total Viewers  – delivering 1.03 million.

https://www.facebook.com/starwarsrebels

PHOTOS: ©Disney XD

THE RAILWAY MAN Coming To DVD & Blu-Ray August 12; Stars Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman

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Anchor Bay Entertainment is bringing THE RAILWAY MAN to DVD and BLU-RAY™ on August 12, with the early digital download window beginning this Friday, August 1.

Academy Award Winners Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman star in the remarkable autobiography of Eric Lomax (Colin Firth), a British Army officer who is captured by the Japanese during WWII and sent to a POW camp, where he is tormented and forced to work on the Thai-Burma Railway.

Decades later, still suffering the trauma of his wartime experiences, Lomax and his wife Patti (Nicole Kidman) discover that the Japanese interpreter responsible for much of his treatment is still alive and set out to confront him, in this powerful and inspiring tale of heroism, humanity and the redeeming power of love.

Claudia Puig (USA TODAY) called director Jonathan Teplitzky’s film “A celebration of compassion and forgiveness.”

From The Weinstein Company, THE RAILWAY MAN is rated R for disturbing prisoner of war violence and has a running time of 108 minutes.

Pre-order here: http://www.amazon.com/Railway-Man-Blu-ray-UltraViolet/dp/B00KB01PWG/ref=sr_1_1?s=movies-tv&ie=UTF8&qid=1406223098&sr=1-1&keywords=The+Railway+Man+%5BBlu-ray+%2B+UltraViolet%5D

Special DVD and Blu-Ray™ features include The Making Of The Railway Man and Feature Commentary With Director Jonathan Teplitzky And Co-Writer/Producer Andy Paterson.

To learn more about the film, visit www.railwayman-film.com

THE RAILWAY MAN BLU-RAY™ with Digital HD UltraViolet™
Street date: August 12, 2014
Catalog #: BD61761
UPC: 013132617619
Run time: 108 minutes
Rating: R
SRP: $34.99
Format: Widescreen
Aspect Ratio: Widescreen 2.40:1
Audio: 5.1 DTSHD-MA

THE RAILWAY MAN DVD
Street date: August 12, 2014
Catalog #: WC61760
UPC: 013132617602
Run time: 108 minutes
Rating: R
SRP: $29.98
Format: Widescreen
Aspect Ratio: Widescreen 2.40:1
Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1

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HOLLYWOOD CAVALCADE – The DVD Review

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Review by Sam Moffitt

I love the silent era of movie making. I’ve written of this before and will again, many times I’m sure. Roger Ebert, on his website, made the observation (accurately I’d say) that silent films are not just movies without sound; they are a different medium altogether from the movies we are used to seeing now. Silent films are as different to sound films as radio is to television.

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Hollywood Cavalcade was one of the first movies to look back at Hollywood history, and managed to involve several artists who were instrumental in making films that are still enjoyable today.

Hollywood Cavalcade tells the story of Mike Conners (Don Ameche) and his partner, ace cameraman Pete Tinney (Stu Erwin) and their trip to New York City to find a stage actress they can take back to Hollywood and make into a star of moving pictures. This is 1913 when stage actors were not inclined to work in moving pictures, which many people considered a fad that would pass away soon.

They hit the jackpot with Molly Adair played winningly by Alice Faye. It takes some doing and quite a lot of bullshit to get Molly headed west by train. Connors is not a director or a producer or even a writer, but he sure would like to do all three and make a star of Molly while making a whole lot of motion pictures. Mike pulls it off and Molly becomes a star, and of course she falls in love with him but all he’s in love with is making movies.

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Molly marries her co-star and Mike fires her and there by destroys his own career. And in scenes eerily like the recent return to silent film making, The Artist, Mike predicts that talking pictures are a passing fad, that audiences don’t want to hear their idols talk.

I won’t give any more plot away other than to say that like any Hollywood movie, especially one made in 1939, there is a happy ending, and along the way Hollywood Cavalcade is a tremendous piece of work. To start with the Technicolor has been fully restored, the images are just gorgeous. And the period detail is right on the money. The clothes, the cars, the movie equipment, which actually can be seen being upgraded as the story progresses are fascinating to a movie geek like myself.

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And the characters are a curious amalgam of several Hollywood legends. On the surface Hollywood Cavalcade appears to be all about Mack Sennett and his one true female star, Mabel Normand. Legend has it that Normand loved Mack Sennett and he never really returned that affection. Don Ameche’s character also has certain elements of D.W. Griffith, one scene he is shown directing looks a lot like the Babylon scenes from Intolerance. He also appears to have some of Eric Von Stroheim’s drive to get it all on camera and damn the cost! Alice Faye’s character also has elements of Gloria Swanson and especially Greta Garbo, in that she effortlessly makes the transition to talkies.

But it’s the passing parade that really fascinates. In their wisdom 20th Century Fox hired not just Buster Keaton (uncredited) to play himself they also brought in several of the original Keystone Cops to play themselves. Chester Conklin, Snub Pollard, Hank Mann and several others recreate Sennett era gags to perfection. Keaton directed some of the silent scenes and most of that filming was directed by Malcolm (Mal) St. Clair who really did direct a great deal of silent era films. And again, very wisely, the silent scenes really are silent and in black and white and in a smaller aspect ratio than the main film. Beautifully done, for a movie lover Hollywood Cavalcade is a real treasure.

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And there is even more, Mack Sennett plays himself in an awards ceremony. Al Jolson recreates a scene from The Jazz Singer which Mike Connors goes to see and verify that the Vitaphone system works. And amazingly, here is a film made by 20th Century Fox, openly singing the praises of a land mark film…..made by Warner Brothers! That kind of free publicity for a rival studio was unheard of in Hollywood, then or now!

There is even more astonishing content in this wonderful film, J. Edward Bromberg (the only other film I can recall seeing him in was Universal’s Son of Dracula) plays a producer named Spingold who is openly, unashamedly Jewish! The Jewish influence in early, and current Hollywood is not only not glossed over, this movie celebrates it! I couldn’t help but think of the excellent documentary, An Empire of Their Own regarding the Jewish businessmen who invented Hollywood. We have a lot to thank them for, and maybe to blame them for at the same time! The scene with Jolson recreating part of The Jazz Singer is not, as you would expect, the “wait a minute, wait a minute, you ain’t heard nothin’ yet!” that always makes it into every documentary on the history of movies. No, it’s the cantor scene, in a Jewish synagogue with good old Jolson singing his heart out, in Hebrew!

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All of this is discussed in the extra features, and those extra features are excellent, as you would expect from a 20th Century Fox release. First is a great making of documentary, mostly with film historians and critics. The cast and crew of a film made in 1939, as you would expect, are pretty much gone.

There are also short featurettes on Buster Keaton, Fatty Arbuckle and Alice Faye. If you don’t know anything about Keaton’s sad story this is a good place to start. A true superstar in the silent era, Keaton couldn’t get arrested by the time Hollywood Cavalcade was in production. He managed to hang on long enough to get a fairly good career as a character actor but he never got to direct again and was pretty much considered an antique for years afterward. At least AIP put him in all the Beach Party movies and he’s got nice bits in It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to The Forum.

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Fatty Arbuckle (someone who resembles him) makes a brief appearance in Hollywood Cavalcade and again, if you know nothing about his sad story it will break your heart. Accused of rape and involuntary manslaughter Arbuckle was put on trial three times (THREE times!) and finally acquitted, long after his career was over. If you have never seen an Arbuckle comedy Kino video has released a box set of his vintage comedies, I strongly recommend these films, they are priceless. The guy was the first full blown comedy genius in films. Keaton learned everything from Arbuckle. He certainly did not deserve the fate that was in store for him when he made his great series of comedies. Disgraceful!

And Alice Faye, well what can you say about someone who walked away from Hollywood at the height of her career and never looked back? Faye was one of the biggest stars of her generation, and known for being a singer, although she does not sing in Hollywood Cavalcade.   Faye was married for years to Phil Harris and had two children by him, she wanted to be a full time wife and mother and Hollywood, through various producers and directors and writers and other actors tried to get her back, it seldom happened. She came back for a part in State Fair in 1962, her last appearance on film was The Magic of Lassie in 1978 with Jimmy Stewart.   Alice Faye walked away from Hollywood fame on her own terms, I have to admire and respect that, I really do.

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And I have to admire and respect a movie as glorious as Hollywood Cavalcade. Yes, it’s Hollywood re-writing its own history, so what? It’s a swell picture! And if you see it, watch a Buster Keaton or Harry Langdon movie afterwards, you’ll be glad you did!

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MORE THAN THE RAINBOW – The DVD Review

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Review by Kathy Kaiser

Dan Wechsler’s vision as he chronicles the life of street photographer Matt Weber, is truly mesmerizing, as the film MORE THAN THE RAINBOW brings an innate sense of realism to Matt’s life, and the streets of the city where his life and compassion for art combine – New York City.

Going from being a cabbie for 12 years on the streets of New York, this film shares how Weber’s love of photography evolved from the quick snaps out of his taxi cab window, to the full time street photographer he is today.

Along for the ride of telling not only Matt’s story –  but sharing their own – are numerous fellow photo journalists, who know where Matt’s  passion and realism comes from, as they too, make a living doing what they love – taking images of “their world” – sharing their own lives, passions and personalities along the way.

This film is filled with the incredible black and white images and old style photography that envelopes Matt’s creative genius as you find “his story” in every photograph, which seems to be filled with a harshness and sadness.  As you are subjected to more of his work throughout the film, you seem to feel a transposing of feelings from his own life, into the photographs and subjects he covers through his work.  His innate sense for capturing the humanity in all of us seems to be conveyed in every photograph he takes.

As fellow photographers Beckerman, Boogie, Gibson, Kroll and Strauss share throughout the film – being a professional photographer is a blessing –  and a curse –  as what many of us see an imagery beyond all understanding, seems to bore others to sleep, making it a hard living for some, and very fruitful for others.

Also enjoyable in this documentary, is the exchange between Designer Todd Oldham and Weber, as they produce one of his photography book “masterpieces”.  Both gentlemen are creative geniuses in their own right, but are so far in their ideologies and philosophies in life – somehow Oldham, as the masterful, graceful, and poetic designer is the perfect match for the gruff, disheveled, and brash Weber. Seeing this process unfold on screen is truly magical.

Unlike most documentaries, this film and its subject(s) keep you engrossed as you find yourself wanting to learn more about Matt Weber and the genius he creates in Black and White.

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OWNING MAHONEY – The DVD Review

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Review by Sam Moffitt

I was as shocked and saddened as anyone at hearing of the death of Philip Seymour Hoffman.

Not that long ago I wrote a review of Jack Goes Boating for We Are Movie Geeks, directed by Hoffman and starring him in an amazing performance. I’m glad I did that as I had no way of knowing Hoffman wouldn’t be with us much longer. I cannot comment on the problems he had with addictions. I had my own substance issues for years. I never lost a job or stole anything to support any habit and I never had to go into rehab, I simply quit using anything. Two cups of coffee is about as wild as I get these days.

Of course the Hollywood haters came out on the internet and in newspaper letter columns slamming Hoffman and the entire Hollywood lifestyle. Again, I can’t make any comment about that, such people obviously don’t understand addictions, how hard they can be to break and get clear of. The hardest addiction I had to overcome was tobacco, a legal substance.

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So how ironic that Hoffman gave an incredible performance in a movie about a real life addict. Owning Mahoney is based on the real life story of Dan Mahoney who skimmed the largest amount of money in outright bank fraud in Canadian history. Mahoney was a golden boy at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, in the heart of Toronto’s financial district.

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Mahoney was well liked by his co-workers, by the bank customers and his friends and family. He is loved by his girlfriend, played by Minnie Driver (a whole other issue, were I involved with Minnie Driver I doubt I would be interested in much else, but I digress….)

Nobody knows what Mahoney is up to except his bookie played by Maury Chaykin. Mahoney gets so out of control his bookie won’t take his bets anymore. Consider that for a moment! To stay in the game he starts skimming from his bank, a little at first then a lot, a whole lot. Before he is done he will take over 10 Million dollars, (Canadian) to Atlantic City and Vegas and, mostly, lose it.

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Twice Mahoney wins enough to pay back all that he has taken and have some left over, but no, like all gamblers the House is depending on Mahoney to keep betting and lose it all back. And he does, boy does he lose it!

There are a lot of great movies about gamblers. Just off the top of memory; The Hustler, California Split, The Gambler, Things Change, Bob le Flambeur, The Cooler. Many movies have great scenes of gambling; Rain Man, Going in Style, Household Saints, all the Bond movies. I have never seen a movie get so down to the nuts and bolts of gambling, what gamblers do and how they do it, what the house does when they realize they have a first class high roller with Mahoney and they plan to make a fortune off him, never mind where his money comes from. And most especially the effect a gambling addict has on those around him.

And here is where Hoffman’s pure genius takes us to places we never wanted to go. Most actors would try something to get us on Mahoney’s side, most actors would give away something that is happening in Mahoney’s head. Not Hoffman.

When Mahoney is with his co-workers and bank customers he is cordial, polite, friendly. He seems to love his girl friend but when he takes her to Vegas he leaves her alone in the suite (a comp suite so luxurious she assumes they are getting married) in order to gamble. When this poor lady goes to the casino to try and get him away from the gaming tables he doesn’t even look up, making the bet is everything to Dan Mahoney.

And again, this is Minnie Driver he is ignoring in order to place bets!

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All of Mahoney’s affability and likeability is an act, a performance put on for those around him so he can get to the serious business of taking other people’s money to big casinos and gamble it away. When he is gambling he is a blank slate, a tabula rasa if you will, who gives away no emotion what so ever, to us, the camera or his fellow actors. The term “poker face” is taken to a whole new level. At one point the casino run by John Hurt (in a terrific performance) sends a comp hooker to visit Mahoney. The working girl tells her boss that “lady luck is the only woman he is interested in.”

This is a risky thing for any actor to do, Hoffman pulls it off beautifully. We still feel terrible for Mahoney, especially when he could put the money back, (twice!) keep some and get on with his life. No, with a gambling addict the bet is everything, it’s all about the risk and the high of placing yet another bet.

I have to admit gambling is one of those things I never “got.” Seriously, I don’t get it, along with a whole lot of other activities my fellow human beings indulge in. For instance I have never figured out how craps is played (Officer Earl Berry Jr. offered to show me but I never took him up on it.) I mean, I know you place bets on what number will come up on the dice, but how? Where do you put the bet on the crap table? If I did go to Biloxi or Atlantic City or the Hard Rock Casino in Tampa I’m afraid I would look foolish asking how the game is played. And quite frankly I feel foolish enough on a regular basis now!

I can still recall when Omar Sharif made a visit to David Letterman’s show, the old show on NBC. He talked of his gambling addiction and how hard it was to beat. He also said that no game is played in any casino where the odds are not on the side of the house. If a game exists where the odds are in favor of the player, it is not played in any casino.

That statement and the human wreckage on display in Owning Mahoney is more than enough to make me glad I never caught the gambling bug.
Oh, and Mahoney gets caught, of course. We are told at the end that he is barred from placing a bet anywhere in Canada or the USA and that he has to repay the 10 million. I wonder where he is at with that ?

So this is my farewell to Philip Seymour Hoffman. I never saw him give anything less than 100% or better in any part he chose to play. So light a candle and say a prayer for Mr. Hoffman and pick your own personal Philip Seymour Hoffman performance, Synedoche, New York , The Savages, Boogie Nights, Talented Mr. Ripley, Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead, after all there are so many to choose from.

Rest in Peace, Philip Seymour Hoffman, we hardly got to know you.

MERCEDES SOSA – THE VOICE OF LATIN AMERICA – The DVD Review

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Review by Kathleen Kaiser

Narrated by her son Fabian Matus, this film takes you through the life and times of Argentina’s legendary and world-renowned folk-singer and political activist, Mercedes Sosa.

Blessed with an alto voice that mesmerized her listeners, Mercedes shared the trials and tribulations of “her people” through her many songs and ballads, tracing her roots and expressing the pain of poverty and despair that Argentina was feeling during its quest for Democracy.

In sharing her gift with anyone who would listen, Mercedes became a world-renowned entertainer, but as you will find from viewing this film, her life was far from being “a dream”.

Through actual footage shot on tour throughout the world, you will come to understand her musical talent and her plight to become the voice of her “fellow Americans”.

You will also meet many members of her family, her friends and fellow musicians, as they reminisce about Mercedes strength and perseverance; all while being plagued by low self-esteem and intense loneliness throughout her life.

Suffice to say that this film wasn’t exactly what I would call a “pick-me-up”, as Mercedes Sosa’s life was filled with much pain, suffering and loss. I personally found it to be a sleeper, literally, as I found myself practically dozing off at points throughout the film.  I enjoyed learning about Mercedes and her life, but 94 minutes of the same thing being rehashed by one source after another, just left me losing interest in the subject matter and this particular documentary.

1 out of 5

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