Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit
Steve Box, Nick Park
(#413)
Theatrical: 2005
Studio: Dreamworks Home Entertainment
Genre:
Writer:
Date Added: 9 Aug 2006
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit
Steve Box, Nick Park
(#413)
Comments: Box set
Summary: A decade after their last hilarious short, the Oscar-winning "A Close Shave", Claymation wonders Wallace and Gromit return for a full-length adventure. Daffy scientist Wallace (voiced by Peter Sallis) and his heroic dog Gromit are doing well with their business, Anti-Pesto, a varmint-hunting outfit designed to keep their English town safe from rabbits chomping on prized vegetables. Wallace meets Lady Tottington (Helena Bonham Carter), who appreciates Wallace's humane way of dealing with rabbits (courtesy of the Bun-Vac 6000), and sets up a rivalry with the gun-toting Victor Quartermaine (Ralph Fiennes, enjoying himself more than ever). Creator Nick Park, with co-director/writer Steve Box, delivers a story worthy of the 85-minute running time, although it stretches the act a bit; the formula plays better shorter, but the literally hand-crafted film is a joy to watch. Taking a chapter from classic horror films, a giant were-rabbit is soon on the prowl, and the town is up in arms, what with the annual vegetable contest close at hand. (Anyone who's seen the previous three shorts knows who saves the day.) Never content to do something simply when the extravagant will do, W&G's lives are filled with whimsical Rude Goldberg-style devices, and the opening number showcasing their alarm system is pure Aardman Animation at its finest. Even though there's a new twist here--a few mild sight gags aimed at adults--this G-rated film will delight young and old alike as Park, like team Pixar, seems incapable of making anything but an outstanding film. "--Doug Thomas, Amazon.com"
Wallace And Gromit - 3 Cracking Adventures
Nick Park
(#414)
Theatrical: 1996
Studio: 2 Entertain Video
Genre:
Writer:
Date Added: 9 Aug 2006
Wallace And Gromit - 3 Cracking Adventures
Nick Park
(#414)
Summary: A Grand Day Out
Nominated for an Academy Award in 1990, the first short-film adventure of Wallace and Gromit was this 24-minute comedy, created by clay animator Nick Park over a six-year period at the National Film & Television School in London, and at the Aardman Animation studios that Park boosted to international acclaim. In their debut adventure, Wallace and his furry pal Gromit find themselves desperate for "a nice bit of Gorgonzola", but their refrigerator's empty and the local cheese shop is closed for a holiday! Undeterred, Wallace comes up with an extreme solution to the cheese shortage: since the moon is made of cheese (we all know that's true, right?), he decides to build a rocket ship and blast off for a cheesy lunar picnic! Gromit's only too happy to help, and before long the inventive duo is on the moon, where they encounter a clever appliance that's part oven, part robot, part lunar skiing enthusiast ... well, you just have to see the movie to understand how any of this whimsical lunar-cy can make any sense! It's a grand tale of wonderful discoveries, fantastic inventions--and really great cheese!
The Wrong Trousers
Clay-animation master Nick Park deservedly won the 1993 Academy Award for Best Animated Short for this 30-minute masterpiece, in which the good-natured inventor Wallace and his trusty dog, Gromit, return for another grand adventure. It all begins on the morning of Gromit's birthday, when Wallace gives his beloved pooch the gift of his latest invention--a pair of mechanical "techno-trousers" that can be programmed to take Gromit out for "walkies" while Wallace sits comfortably at home. Gromit's not exactly thrilled with the new gadget, and things go from bad to worse when Wallace rents a room to a new boarder--a rather suspicious-looking penguin--to offset his rising expenses. As it turns out, the penguin's a notorious thief, and the amazing techno-trousers provide a foolproof method of pulling off a diamond heist! It's Gromit's big opportunity for canine heroics, and "The Wrong Trousers" turns into one of the funniest, most inventive caper-comedies ever made, with an action-packed climax on a speeding miniature train. Will the notorious "Feathers" wind up in jail where he belongs? Will Gromit finally get his due recognition? Watch this amazing marvel of clay animation to see why Wallace and Gromit have become global celebrities--this is comedic ingenuity at its finest.
A Close Shave
Hot from the international triumph of "The Wrong Trousers", clay animator Nick Park knew that his third Wallace and Gromit film was going to have to be the biggest and best adventure yet for the mild-mannered inventor Wallace and his perceptive pooch Gromit. With the ambitiously zany plot of "A Close Shave", Park and his fellow animators rose to the occasion and their film won the 1995 Academy Award (Park's second Oscar) for Best Animated Short. This time out, Wallace and Gromit have teamed up to provide a window-washing service, and that's how Wallace meets the lovely Wendolene Ramsbottom, a wool-shop owner whose malevolent dog Preston turns out to be the mastermind of a sheep-napping scheme! Of course, no Wallace and Gromit adventure can be without a grandiose gadget, so Wallace's latest invention is the Knit-O-Matic, a yarn-making machine capable of shearing a whole flock of sheep just a bit too efficiently! When the villainous Preston gains control of the mechanical knitting marvel, Gromit must race to the rescue, and "A Close Shave" reaches new heights of clay-animation mastery. Every shot is a testament to Nick Park's patience, his clever ingenuity, and his film-making flair. The movie's so technically impressive, in fact, that the whole world wondered where Park could go next. It was no surprise, therefore, to find him making the transition to the big screen with "Chicken Run". --"Jeff Shannon"
Wanted
Timur Bekmambetov
(#415)
Theatrical: 2008
Studio: Universal Pictures
Genre:
Writer:
Date Added: 10 Sep 2008
Wanted
Timur Bekmambetov
(#415)
Summary: As the impresario behind gravity-defying Russian blockbuster "Night Watch", it's inevitable that Hollywood would come calling for Timur Bekmambetov. With a studio budget and an international cast, including two Oscar winners, Timur cooks up a Hong Kong-styled actioner bursting with fast cars and big guns. Our unlikely hero is mild-mannered Chicago accountant Wesley Gibson ("Atonement"'s James McAvoy), whose father died when he was a tot. Wesley never learned to stand up for himself, and his girlfriend, boss, and best buddy all take advantage until the seductive Fox (Angelina Jolie) rescues him from a sharpshooter named Cross ("The Pianist"’s Thomas Kretschmann). After which, she whisks him away to a mansion on the edge of town to meet the other members of the Fraternity, where leader Sloan (Morgan Freeman) informs Wesley that Cross, a rogue agent, executed his father. Sloan believes Wesley has the goods to take him out, so he undergoes the Fraternity's brutal training regimen (Marc Warren and Common dish up some of the abuse). When he's ready, Sloan sends him out to fulfill his duty, but matters become complicated when Wesley finds out someone isn't telling the truth, leading our former milquetoast to exact an elaborate revenge. For those who've been following McAvoy's career to date, "Wanted" will surely come as a surprise. In adapting Mark Millar's comic series, Timur offers buckets of blood and a smidgen of depth, but fans of "The Matrix" and "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" will want to give this one a look. "--Kathleen C. Fennessy"
Way Of The Dragon
Bruce Lee
100 minutes
(#416)
Theatrical: 1972
Studio: Bonzai Media Corp. RSP
Genre: Action & Adventure
Writer:
Date Added: 4 May 2014
Way Of The Dragon
Bruce Lee
100 minutes
(#416)
Summary: The last film of Bruce Lee career, released after his death. Here, Lee pays a visit to family members who own a restaurant in Italy. But mobsters, who want the land the eatery is built upon, harass the owners, forcing Lee to defend his family, as only he can. In the film high-voltage, high-kickin finale, Lee, for the sake of his loved ones, must battle a U.S. karate expert (Chuck Norris), in a Roman coliseum!
Whip It
Drew Barrymore
111 minutes
(#417)
Theatrical: 2009
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Genre:
Writer: Shauna Cross
Date Added: 17 Aug 2010
Whip It
Drew Barrymore
111 minutes
(#417)
Languages: English, Spanish, French
Subtitles: English, Spanish
Sound: AC-3
Summary: Drew Barrymore makes her bow as a director with this Roller Derby coming-of-age number, which shares the spirit of so many of Barrymore's movies: it's loosey-goosey, cheerful, and buoyant in waving its "Girls Rule!" flag. On screen, Barrymore relegates herself to a slapstick supporting role, handing the lead to Juno gal Ellen Page. Page plays a Texas teen with a yen to join Austin's Roller Derby squad, complete with new professional moniker Babe Ruthless, but she'll have to keep the side career secret from her beauty-pageant-obsessed Mom (Marcia Gay Harden) and football-watchin' Dad (Daniel Stern). A coming-of-age tale emerges between bouts of skating on the RD track (Jimmy Fallon plays the goofy Derby announcer), with a dash of romance added in the form of a generic Dude in a Band. Kristen Wiig does surrogate-mom duty as a teammate, Juliette Lewis is appropriately out-there as a track rival, and Andrew Wilson (bro of Owen and Luke) gets some hilariously poker-faced lines in as the team's coach. All the pleasant stuff makes you almost overlook how ramshackle the movie is, and how standard-issue the parental tensions (even if Harden is a total pro, as always). Ellen Page doesn't offer the innate audience-friendly cuddliness of Barrymore herself--thus her apt casting as Juno's brittle heroine--but her rapt focus is something to behold. "Babe Ruthless" indeed. --Robert Horton
Stills from Whip It (Click for larger image)
Who Am I?
Jackie Chan
120 minutes
(#418)
Theatrical: 1998
Studio: Sony Pictures
Genre: Action
Writer: Nikolaj Arcel, Rasmus Heisterberg, Stieg Larsson
Date Added: 4 May 2014
Who Am I?
Jackie Chan
120 minutes
(#418)
Languages: English, French
Subtitles: English, French
Sound: Dolby
Summary: It all started when a bunch of commandos (including Jackie of course) kidnapped three scientist who were studying very powerful meteorite fragments. The mission was a success - until one of their superiors double crossed them. The commandos were then killed in a chopper crash, except Jackie who fell out of the chopper. After that, Jackie was picked up by a a tribe of South African Indians, who then asked him his name. Sadly, Jackie had lost his memory and shouted 'Who Am I?!' which led the Indians to think that it was his name. So he started learning their cultures and customs, while also trying to pick up their language. Later, he started having memories of things that happened before the crash, and he decided to leave the Indians in search for his identity...
The Wolverine
James Mangold
126 minutes
(#419)
Theatrical: 2013
Studio: Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
Genre: Action, Adventure, Fantasy, Sci Fi
Writer: Mark Bomback, Scott Frank
Date Added: 25 Dec 2014
The Wolverine
James Mangold
126 minutes
(#419)
Languages: English, Japanese
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
Sound: Dolby
Summary: In modern day Japan, Wolverine is out of his depth in an unknown world as he faces his ultimate nemesis in a life-or-death battle that will leave him forever changed. Vulnerable for the first time and pushed to his physical and emotional limits, he confronts not only lethal samurai steel but also his inner struggle against his own immortality, emerging more powerful than we have ever seen him before.
World Invasion: Battle Los Angeles
Jonathan Liebesman
116 minutes
(#420)
Theatrical: 2011
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Genre: Science Fiction
Writer: Christopher Bertolini
Date Added: 4 May 2014
World Invasion: Battle Los Angeles
Jonathan Liebesman
116 minutes
(#420)
Languages: Deutsch, Englisch
Subtitles: Deutsch, Englisch, Türkisch
Sound: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Summary: Seit Jahren werden überall auf der Welt immer wieder UFO-Sichtungen gemeldet - in Buenos Aires, Seoul, Frankreich, Deutschland, China. Aber 2011 wird aus diesen Beobachtungen eine Furcht einflößende Gefahr: Die Erde wird auf einmal von unbekannten Streitmächten angegriffen. Während die Menschen weltweit machtlos mit ansehen müssen, wie ihre Städte dieser Invasion zum Opfer fallen, wird Los Angeles der letzte Zufluchtsort der Menschheit in einem Krieg, den keiner sich vorzustellen wagte. Ein Marine-Unteroffizier (Aaron Eckhart) und seine Truppe haben den Auftrag, eine letzte Verteidigungslinie zu errichten und sich dem Kampf gegen den übermächtigen Feind zu stellen. Ein Feind, wie er ihnen noch nie zuvor begegnet ist ...
The World Is Not Enough
Michael Apted
(#421)
Theatrical: 1999
Studio: MGM Home Ent. (Europe) Ltd.
Genre:
Writer:
Date Added: 9 Aug 2006
The World Is Not Enough
Michael Apted
(#421)
Comments: Special Edition
Summary: In his 19th screen outing "The World is Not Enough", Ian Fleming's super-spy is once again caught in the crosshairs of a self-created dilemma: as the longest-running feature-film franchise, James Bond is an annuity his producers want to protect, yet the series' consciously formulaic approach frustrates any real element of surprise beyond the rote application of plot twists or jump cuts to shake up the audience. This time out, credit 007's caretakers for making some visible attempts to invest their principal characters with darker motives--and blame them for squandering "The World is Not Enough"'s initial promise by the final reel. By now, Bond pictures are as elegantly formal as a Bach chorale, and this one opens on an unusually powerful note. A stunning pre-title sequence reaches beyond mere pyrotechnics to introduce key plot elements as the action leaps from Bilbao to London. Pierce Brosnan undercuts his usually suave persona with a darker, more brutal edge largely absent since Sean Connery departed. Equally tantalising are our initial glimpses of Bond's nemesis du jour, Renard (Robert Carlyle), and imminent love interest, Elektra King (Sophie Marceau), both atypically complex characters cast with seemingly shrewd choices and directed by the capable Michael Apted. The story's focus on post-Soviet geopolitics likewise starts off on a savvy note, before being overtaken by increasingly Byzantine plot twists, hidden motives and reversals of loyalty superheated by relentless (if intermittently perfunctory) action sequences.
Bond's grimmer demeanour, while preferable to the smirk that eventually swallowed Roger Moore whole, proves wearying, unrelieved by any true wit. The underlying psychoses that propel Renard and Elektra eventually unravel into unconvincing melodrama, while Bond is supplied with a secondary love object, Denise Richards, who is even more improbable as a nuclear physicist. Ultimately, this world is not enough despite its better intentions. --"Sam Sutherland, Amazon.com"
On the DVD: There are three different documentaries on this disc, as well as a "Secrets of 007" featurette that cuts between specific stunt sequences, behind-the-scenes footage and storyboards to reveal how it was all done, and a short video tribute to Desmond Llewelyn ("Q"), who died not long after this movie was released. The first "making of" piece is presented by an annoyingly chirpy American woman and is aimed squarely at the MTV market (most fascinating is watching her interview with Denise Richards in which the two orthodontically enhanced ladies attempt to out-smile each other). "Bond Cocktail" gamely distils all the essential ingredients that make up the classic Bond movie formula--gadgets, girls, exotic locations and lots of action. Most interesting of all is "Bond Down River", a lengthy dissection of the opening boat chase sequence. Director Michael Apted provides the first commentary, and talks about the challenges of delivering all the requisite ingredients. The second commentary is less satisfactory, since second unit director Vic Armstrong, production designer Peter Lamont and composer David Arnold have little in common. There's also the Garbage song video, and the booklet has yet more behind-the-scenes info. The anamorphic CinemaScope picture and Dolby digital sound are as spectacular as ever. --"Mark Walker"
World War Z
Marc Forster
116 minutes
(#422)
Theatrical: 2013
Studio: Plan B Entertainment
Genre: Action, Drama, Thriller, Horror, Sci-Fi
Writer: Matthew Michael Carnahan, Drew Goddard
Date Added: 4 May 2014
World War Z
Marc Forster
116 minutes
(#422)
Languages: English
Subtitles: French
Sound: SDDS
Summary: United Nations employee Gerry Lane traverses the world in a race against time to stop the Zombie pandemic that is toppling armies and governments, and threatening to destroy humanity itself.