Archive for the ‘DVD’ Category

Healing Cancer Sale-$17.99!

Miércoles, Diciembre 1st, 2010

Healing Cancer Sale-$17.99!

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Healing Cancer Description:

The DVD is divided into two parts. Part 1, Curing Cancer, deals with the failings of conventional cancer treatments and shows how conventional medicine wildly - and deceptively - exaggerates the benefits of treatments, while minimizing the risks. It will provide you with the information you need to accurately assess the risks and benefits of any treatment and speak intelligently to your doctor about such treatments. There is also a section on the ‘Cancer Industry’ which explains the history behind cancer treatments, the suppression of alternative treatments and why chemotherapy, radiation and surgery are the only treatments available to mainstream medicine. Part 2, Healing Cancer, shows how cancer can be successfully healed with dietary treatments and natural supplementation. It explains common misconceptions about cancer, shows how diets designed to fight cancer are more successful than conventional treatments, discusses startling cancer research findings with T. Colin Campbell (The China Study) and has interviews with people who have reversed cancers using diet. It also discusses supplementation and why attitude is important in reversing not only cancer, but any disease.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #9199 in DVD
  • Brand: CINEMA LIBRE
  • Released on: 2008-05-20
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: 5.00 pounds
  • Running time: 127 minutes

Features

  • Mike Anderson s documentary exposes the failings of conventional cancer treatments and how the medical establishment and the cancer industry wildly - and deceptively - exaggerate the benefits of treatments. Interviews with people who have beaten the disease demonstrate how cancer can be successfully healed with dietary treatments and natural supplementation. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DOCU

Customer Reviews:

SAME DVD AS HEALING CANCER FROM THE INSIDE OUT !!!!1
This is a 5 star DVD on healing cancer naturally… ONLY IT IS THE EXACT SAME VIDEO AS ANOTHER LISTED BY AMAZON >> “HEALING CANCER FROM THE INSIDE OUT” !!! I ordered both and now have 2 of the SAME VIDEOS !!! In fact.. this cover does have the words “From The Inside Out ” but they are tiny and hard to see ( look closely ).. and Amazon doesn’t identify it as such !! The 2 covers are different.. the videos are exactly the same !!!
Please do check out another Mike Anderson video.. EATING… It’s Great !!!

What an Eye-Opener!5
Thank you, Mike Anderson! The truth is not usually accepted by the masses until it’s too late. What incredible information this DVD holds regarding animal protein and cancer. We’re former body builders and had relied on tons of animal and whey proteins. We wish we hadn’t waited until our 50’s to get this information. We made a total turnaround (cold turkey) in our diets since viewing it and our bodies have been thanking us ever since. We lost weight and improved our skin tone and energy levels. The most significant change occurred in our teenage daughter…she no longer needs supplements to control her severe hypoglycemia! PLEASE buy this DVD for your health’s sake before it really becomes too late.

Five Stars! This DVD is an absolute MUST see!5
Another WINNER, from Michael Anderson (Eating-Plus 3rd Edition). 1.3 million Americans will be diagnosed with CANCER, this year! Another 550,500 will die, from it. This extraordinary DVD is timely, well researched and riveting. It will shake the CANCER industry $$$ to it’s very foundation! You will never fear CANCER, ever again. This is a very powerful and empowering documentary. Find out why 8 out of 10 Oncologists will neither use nor recommend Chemo therapy to family or friends and why many opt for Alternative therapies! This DVD should be required viewing, by every American man, woman and child. It’s an absolute MUST, for every CANCER patient! View it, apply it’s wisdom and then share it with family and friends. This DVD is a life saver! Donate a copy to your local library or church organization and help spread the word! CANCER does not have to be a death sentence, anymore! This DVD is proof positive that CANCER is a preventable and reversible condition. Before you Walk for the cure, watch this DVD!!!

Review
The most important contribution to the cancer battle in the last several decades. -Brian Clement, Ph.D. - Director of Hippocrates Health Institute

Review
His message is dynamite. -T. Colin Campbell, Ph.D. - The China Study

Gone with the Wind 70th Anniversary Ultimate Collector’s Edition-Retail $69.92! Sale Only $54.49!

Martes, Noviembre 30th, 2010

Gone with the Wind 70th Anniversary Ultimate Collector’s Edition-Retail $69.92! Sale Only $54.49!

Gone with the Wind 70th Anniversary Ultimate Collector's Edition

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Gone with the Wind 70th Anniversary Ultimate Collector’s Edition Description:

Gone with the Wind 70th Anniversary 5-Disc DVD set: LIMITED and NUMBERED one-of-a-kind Velvet Box packaging. Contains the feature film mastered in hi-definition plus more than 8 hours of timeless extras, including an all new documentary narrated by Kenneth Branagh “Warner Bros. Home Entertainment presents 1939: Hollywood’s Greatest Year,” “Gone with the Wind: The Legend Lives On” featurette, and much more. Collectibles include an Exclusive 52-pg Hardcover Photo and Production Art Book, ten (10) 5”x7” frameable Watercolor Reproduction Art Prints, Bonus CD Soundtrack Sampler, and Reproduction of the Original 1939 Program.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #19777 in DVD
  • Brand: Warner Brothers
  • Released on: 2009-11-17
  • Rating: G (General Audience)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: AC-3, Box set, Collector’s Edition, Color, Dolby, DVD, Full Screen, Limited Edition, Original recording remastered, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 6
  • Running time: 238 minutes

Features

  • GONE WITH THE WIND: ULTIMATE CE (DVD MOVIE)

Customer Reviews:

Near-Perfect Edition of Hollywood Classic…5
It seems like a ‘new, improved’ edition of “Gone With the Wind” has appeared every couple of years, offering the ‘ultimate’ in picture and sound reproduction, and extras. It can become expensive keeping up, and frustrating (much like buying a classic Disney DVD, when you know a more complete “Special Edition” will soon render your “First Time on Video” copy obsolete), but the new GWTW Four-Disc Collector’s Edition most assuredly deserves a place in your collection.

First off, the picture and sound quality is astonishing. Warner’s Ultra-Resolution process, which ‘locks’ the three Technicolor strips into exact alignment, provides a clarity and ‘crispness’ to the images that even the 1939 original print couldn’t achieve. You’ll honestly believe your TV is picking up HD, whether you’re HD-ready, or not! This carries over to the Dolby Digital-remastered sound, as well. All of the tell-tale hiss and scratchiness of the opening credit title music, still discernable in the last upgrade, is gone, replaced by a richness of tone that will give your home theater a good workout. (Listen to the brass in this sequence, and you’ll notice what I’m talking about…)

The biggest selling point of this edition is, of course, the two discs of additional features offered, and these are, in general, superb. Beginning with the excellent “Making of a Legend” (narrated by Christopher Plummer), Disc Three offers fascinating overviews about the film, the amazing restoration, footage from the 1939 Premiere (and the bittersweet 1961 Civil War Centennial reunion of Selznick, Leigh, and de Havilland), glimpses of Gable and Leigh with dubbed voices for the foreign-language versions, the international Prologue (tacked on to explain the Civil War to foreign audiences), and a 1940 MGM documentary on the “Old South” (directed by Fred Zinneman) memorable today for it’s simplistic view of the time, and stereotypical portrayal of blacks.

Disc Four is a mixed bag; the long-awaited reminiscences of Olivia de Havilland are more chatty than informative (with the 90-year-old actress more interested in discussing her wardrobe than on-set tension…although a prank she pulled on Gable is amusing), and the Clark Gable Profile is superficial (A&E’s biography of ‘The King’ is far superior). Things improve, however, with the insightful, sympathetic TCM biography of Vivien Leigh (hosted by Jessica Lange), and a WONDERFUL section devoted to brief bios of many of the GWTW supporting cast, narrated, again, by Christopher Plummer (although I wish the filmmakers would have included bios for Ward Bond, Victor Jory, Fred Crane, and George ‘Superman’ Reeves).

All in all, the GWTW Four-Disc Collector’s Edition isn’t perfect, but offers so much terrific material that it is CERTAINLY the one to own!

A Classic but it’s NOT for everyone!5
I used to think that this Hollywood classic was for everyone. However, after reading nearly 300 reviews of the film, I think that isn’t true anymore. This movie is NOT for you IF 1) you think a movie must be as historically accurate as a history book, 2) you think a 1939 movie should reflect the values of the 21st century, 3) your attention span is so short that you must only see movies from 90-120 minutes in length, 4) you can only accept politically correct films, particularly in terms of racial issues, 5) you are so DUMB as to think widescreen movies were made before the 1950s (although to be fair, Selznik originally intended to use a special widescreen process for the so-called “burning of Atlanta” sequence but gave up on the expensive idea), 6) you can only accept computerized special effects as they appear in modern films, or 7) your idea of great acting is to be found in slasher or teen films being made these days.

GWTW is NOT a documentary on the Civil War period. It is NOT a history of slavery in America. It is NOT a story of perfect people behaving perfectly at all times.

It IS an adaptation of a novel written by a Southern woman who, as a child, sat and listened to the stories the old Confederate veterans told about the old days before, during, and after THE war. It IS a love story, probably about the novelist’s grandmother, which reflects the attitudes left over from that long-ago time.

To criticize this film for so many unrelated issues is silly. It stands on its merits as a masterful film that tells of bittersweet love and lost fantasy. That it succeeds so well is a tribute to the actors and filmmakers of over sixty years ago.

“And you, miss, are no lady!”5
As with the “Wizard of OZ” BD set, the GWTW set is elaborated — and made “spendier” — with the addition of material that might not be absolutely necessary for one’s enjoyment. The box is covered in red velvet flocking (green would have been more appropriate and amusing — qv, Carol Burnett). There’s a CD “sampler” of Max Steiner’s score, running a measly 45 minutes. Given that Max took excessive scoring to the max (Bette Davis had some pointedly unkind things to say about it), a “sampler” could have filled two CDs, and still not have exhausted the music (though the music might exhaust you). *

As with “OZ”, there’s a 52-page hard-backed book that’s largely content-free, plus reproductions of some of the watercolor set-design paintings (in their own little envelope), and various memoranda sent to and from David O. Selznick. I was expecting a reproduction of Gerald O’Hara’s pocket watch, but it likely would have been of even poorer quality than the kiddie watch in the “OZ” box.

The best bonus is a reproduction of the 25-cent (expensive in 1939) souvenir booklet. It includes pieces by the principals, notably one from Clark Gable telling how badly he wanted to play Rhett Butler and much he enjoyed every minute of making the film. (He didn’t want to appear in “costume” films (having had bad luck in a film about Irish revolutionaries), was afraid to take on a role the public had such definite ideas about, and got along poorly with the first director, George Cukor.)

As I write this, I haven’t viewed all the supplemental material on the second disk. (There’s a lot.) The third disk duplicates the “When the Lion Roars” feature included in the “OZ” box — though the package labeling suggests it’s unique to GWTW.

GWTW was always unsharp and muddy-looking — until the Ultra Resolution transfer of the original three-strip negatives a few years ago. It was a major improvement, and the DVDs showed the film as it had never been seen.

This edition apparently uses a new Ultra Resolution transfer, at twice the resolution (8k versus 4k) of the previous. Some scenes — such as Ashley escorting Melanie to the balcony of Twin Oaks — are breathtaking, far superior to what the DVD offered (and /that/ wasn’t exactly chopped liver). The best Technicolor films, properly transferred, push HD to its limit.

What most surprised me, though, was the awareness of how the film’s color balance is adjusted to produce specific effects. Many scenes have an appropriately warm, “burnished” coloration that /does not/ carry over to the scene’s subtle colors. For example, at the fund-raising bazaar, there’s a bottle of pastel-colored candies (which you’ll probably never notice in the SD edition) that retain their correct colors, “unromantized” by the rest of the image’s warmth. Similarly, in the scene outside the hospital where Belle Watling makes a donation, her costume is vividly colored (there’s no question about her profession!), even though everything else is drab.

Several sequences are outstanding, particularly the one where Scarlett returns to Aunt Pittypat’s home to tend to Melanie. It’s a model of Technicolor photography, one that any cinematographer would be proud of — as good as anything being done today. In earlier transfers of poorer prints, this sequence is flat and two-dimensional. You can’t see how magnificently lit and photographed it is.

At its best, the Technicolor resembles large-format, ultra-sharp Polacolor. That’s a compliment! If you’re fortunate enough to have a large display, you’ll gasp at some of the images.

One of the most-startling moments occurs when Scarlett goes to the train station to look for Dr Meade, one of the most-famous scenes in movie history. Hundreds, if not thousands of injured men lie on the ground, waiting for medical attention that will likely never come. There weren’t enough extras, so dummies were used. And for the first time, you can actually /see/ which of the “extras” are dummies! You can probably tell better than the camera operator!

In short… The BD edition is a major improvement over the excellent DVD edition. It gives the impression that the movie makers were able to manipulate Technicolor to get specific aesthetic effects. ** And it shows just how /beautifully photographed/ this film is, something even the original Technicolor prints never fully revealed. The DVD probably captured most of this (I no longer have it for comparison), but you’ll never see it in standard definition on a “small” screen. Looking at excerpts in the supplmentary material /not/ taken from the Ultra Resolution transfer is a reminder of just how “messy”-looking the original GWTW was. It no longer is. I’ve never enjoyed watching it so much.

It’s becoming apparent that an HD transfer, shown on a big display, is not the best way to watch a movie at home, but the best way to watch a movie, period.

The sound is so-so, of limited range and not particularly clean. (Disney does a much better job cleaning up the audio of its classic films.) The reviewer who said it filled the room as well as any modern soundtrack most own Bose 901s. It would sound better in a theater, with big horn speakers that started rolling off above 5kHz. If GWTW was recorded in RCA multi-track, the stems don’t appear to have survived. (Those for “OZ” exist and have been used, though not, apparently in the Blu-ray.) Music and dialog are mono throughout, but individual sound effects (particulary explosions) are panned to the side or rear when appropriate. The music sometimes seems too loud for the dialog, and the overall level is by far the lowest of any Blu-ray I’ve yet auditioned. I had to really crank up the volume, far, far beyond 11.

This is an expensive set, but it represents such a significant improvement over the last DVD edition (as good as it was) that it’s worth seriously considering. Even if your BD player has a good scaler, the DVD won’t look anywhere nearly this good on your HD monitor. Highly recommended.

PS: Just because a film is a classic doesn’t mean it’s suitable for everyone in your family. The G rating is ridiculous. GWTW is at least PG, containing, as it does, women of questionable virtue, a fair amount of violence (including a scene in which Scarlett is attacked, and another in which she shoots a Yankee, practically blowing off his face), and Rhett dragging Scarlett up the stairs to “molest” her. The MPAA ratings board is nothing if not inconsistent.

PPS: Though Vivian Leigh and Hattie McDaniel received Oscars, I consider Butterfly McQueen’s performance as Prissy the best in the film. Though she hated the role (it’s too easy to interpret Prissy as representing slaves in general, rather than one in particular), she showed great courage in taking it, and delivers a finely nuanced performance.

* Max Steiner wrote the first great film score for a talky - “King Kong”. It epitomizes his style — “Mickey-Mousing” almost every screen action, and the heavy use of Leitmotivs for characters and events. (Note how Melanie’s motive appears every time she does, and how Rhett’s is played — breaking the scene’s mood — when he leaves Scarlett for the last time.) He was also the first sound-film composer to underscore almost the entire length of a film — this is not a recent development. It’s worth noting that GWTW, despite some memorable music, did not win “Best Score” for 1939 — Herbert Stothart’s for “Wizard of OZ” did. I find it considerably more imaginative and appealing.

** The Technicolor print uses dye transfer, in which each color is layed down separately from its own gelatin matrix. This allows a great deal of flexibility in controlling the contrast and color balance — if you’re willing to put out the time and money. According to the supplementary material, the color balance /was/ adjusted on scene-by-scene basis for GWTW, just as it is for modern films - that’s what the “color timer” person does. A high-quality print from 1939 was found, and guided the restorers in adjusting color balance.

Amazon.com
David O. Selznick wanted Gone with the Wind to be somehow more than a movie, a film that would broaden the very idea of what a film could be and do and look like. In many respects he got what he worked so hard to achieve in this 1939 epic (and all-time box-office champ in terms of tickets sold), and in some respects he fell far short of the goal. While the first half of this Civil War drama is taut and suspenseful and nostalgic, the second is ramshackle and arbitrary. But there’s no question that the film is an enormous achievement in terms of its every resource-art direction, color, sound, cinematography-being pushed to new limits for the greater glory of telling an American story as fully as possible. Vivien Leigh is still magnificently narcissistic, Olivia de Havilland angelic and lovely, Leslie Howard reckless and aristocratic. As for Clark Gable: we’re talking one of the most vital, masculine performances ever committed to film. -Tom Keogh

Stills from Gone with the Wind (70th Anniversary Ultimate Collector’s Edition) (click for larger image)

I Dream of Mimi-Retail —-! Sale Only Price Too Low To Display!!

Domingo, Noviembre 28th, 2010

I Dream of Mimi-Retail —-! Sale Only Price Too Low To Display!!

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  • Amazon Sales Rank: #86736 in DVD
  • Released on: 2004-04-27
  • Rating: X (Mature Audiences Only)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Animated, Color, DVD, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Original language: English, Japanese
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 90 minutes

Sexy anime just as I like it: funny, and with a good plot.5
To best sum up what this show is like, think of an adult-only CHOBITS or HAND MAID MAY. (You may note the title also sounds quite a bit like the name of the 1960s show I DREAM OF GENIE, whcih also delt with the theme of an ordinary guy with an other wourldly girlfriend.)

Akira is a steriotypical nerd: scrawny build, white, button-down shirt, glasses, socially inept, and obsessed with computers. He lives at home, and he has been saving up for three years to buy a computer model 9821, the latest model. However, he then learns the store has sold out it’s last copy. Depressed, he heads home, then is stopped by a shady street peddler. The man offers to sell Akira a large box which he claims contains a 9821, and the boy rather foolishly accepts, handing over his hard-earned money. Only later after taking the box home and opening it does Akira discover that instead of a computer, there appears to be a naked teenage girl. Akira is devistated, thinking he wasted his money on a sex doll, but then the girl comes to life, telling him that she is, in fact, a computer (android might be more acurate,) that she is a model 2198, and, worst of all, now that he’s opened the package, she’s recognized him as her master and she can’t be returned. He’s upset by this at first, but soon he grows rather found of her. The girl’s model name is Pixie (he renames her Mimi later on) and to expand her memory she must have sex with him, wether he likes it or not. (So much for saving himself for marrage!)

Things get more interesting when Mimi and Akira must face hostile 2198s, including a trio of masterless “sisters”, three 2198s from the U.S. who want to take over the Japanese computer market. (Some people might be uncomfertable with the theme of American characters as the villains, though I didn’t mind.) Mimi and Akira must at times enter the virtual computer world ala TRON to do battle with their enemies. Funny situations occur when we discover Mimi has emotions-happiness, sadness, and even jealousy. (Such as when Akira has an advance made on him by a female classmate, or when he spends alot of time playing on a standard computer.) And when Mimi meets Akira’s friends and then goes to his school as a student. All in all, it’s lots of fun.

Not for Children, but not Hentai4
This is a fine sex comedy, with no gratuitous scenes, and lots of nerdy in-jokes. It has an extremely silly plot, but plot and story lines aren’t the point of this anime so that isn’t a problem.

cyber sex4
This is a weird anime. I have to say it is a hentai cause of Akira having with Mimi in order to keep her function up and going cause it’s a computer. Why would amazon rated it 17 up. This dvd was sold at Suncoast it was in the adult/mature catogary.

Buy The Ascent of Money: The Financial History of the World At Amazon!

Sábado, Noviembre 27th, 2010

Buy The Ascent of Money: The Financial History of the World At Amazon!

The Ascent of Money: The Financial History of the World

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The Ascent of Money: The Financial History of the World Description:

In the four-hour version of THE ASCENT OF MONEY, historian and author Niall Ferguson seeks to explain the financial history of the world, exploring how our complex system of global finance evolved over the centuries, how money has shaped the course of human affairs and how the mechanics of this economic system work to create seemingly unlimited wealth-or catastrophic loss.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2050 in DVD
  • Brand: Ascent
  • Released on: 2009-09-01
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 240 minutes

Customer Reviews:

Clear telling of a critical story5
PBS viewers will recognize this offering. Ferguson is charming and persuasive. He makes the story something that even my twelve-year old can understand, without “talking down”. He covers the full range of financial dealings around the globe, from Wall Street to microfinance. His case study of Argentina makes a difficult story relatively simple yet not simplistic. He positively critiques Hernando de Soto’s approach ot providing title to land to the poor as a means of securing collateral-based loans and shows where small, uncollaterized loans can work even more effectively.

Great as a serious academic yet never boring treatment of “high” and “low” finance. Should be required for most college majors.

Fascinating5
Professor Niall Ferguson really shines in this presentation. His vibrant animation and his laymen’s terms make the finanical history of the world quite comprehensible. The four hours of this work give ample examples of how money and trade were handled in our past (not very well!). Ferguson always manages to appear in that country he is talking about: Peru, Italy, Spain, Algeria, China, New York, to give primary source examples of our finanical history, such as 15th-century handwritten tax records. This documentary is well worth the four hours to sit through and absorb.

General history with the application of mathematics, the science of interest-earning and speculation, the making of coins and paper money and of course ample examples of finanical crashes, depressions and recession come up in this presentation with reasons for the demise. The rise of the Chinese economy, according to Ferguson, is our next biggest financial threat.

He not only understands the stock market and finance, but also history, and together Ferguson writes a captivating review of the financial history of the world. A lot of wars were waged over money.

The earliest lenders of money were Jews, who even in medieval Venice had to wear yellow caps and live in their own ghettos outside of the town square. The reason Jews had become so prevalent in money lending is because in the Catholic church money lending was considered a sin. Aha! That opens up a lot of other follow-up questions to our history. Ferguson quotes several biblical passages for his work. In the second episode we learn why the Jews became hated by the German Reich: the Germans blamed the Jewish bankers for a failing stock market across Europe. We see history and finance blend into one. This is all so fascinating.

The final episode, “Planet Finance” really makes viewers understand the current economic crisis, and the history of prime and sub-prime lenders.

This is both good for high school and collegiate-level business or history classes. The student walks away understanding even the stock market, something I never was able to do until now.

This presentation has gotten me interested in knowing more about Professor Ferguson and watching any other of his works. He really makes the study of finance seem so easy.

This DVD is divided into four episodes of about 55 minutes each, all on one DVD.

Better than i expected5
The series ( buy the 4 hour version only) is well done. It is not a big budget show like some of the other econo/history series in the past (i.e. ‘The Shape of the World’, etc) but works very well for those who like this kind of subject. Here’s why I liked it;

a) It is filmed in full screen and fills your entire TV. This certainly helps when some of the photography is of expansive vistas or grand palaces and gives the show an overall big feel.

b) Ferguson does considerable traveling in this show and makes it to all the high spots. The silver mines of the Andes. Hong Kong, London. Paris. Amsterdam, Florence, Pisa, Venice, and thumbing through rare documents such as the Medici family ledgers. Just the places and things you would expect in such a program.

c) Ferguson interviews some impressive people for the show. Most especially the very rare and ultra blue-blood Fourth Baron Jacob De Rothschild. There they are, the two of them strolling through the jaw dropping splendors of Baron Jacob’s palace, Waddesdon Manor, reminisceing about his unbelievably wealthy family. It’s incredible that anyone like him still exists in our increasingly socialized world. For me these scenes alone were worth the price of the dvd.

If I would make any changes to the show I would spend less time on recent events ( already documented to distraction) and more on the history leading up to the present. Half of the 4 hours are devoted to recent events like Katrina and the 2008 crash.

I am certainly glad I bought it !!

Earthquake Review.

Jueves, Noviembre 25th, 2010

Earthquake Review.

Earthquake.

Product: Earthquake Review.

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Charlton Heston leads an all-star cast in an epic film about ordinary citizens who must come together in the face of an unstoppable natural disaster! When the most catastrophic earthquake of all time rips through Southern California, it levels Los Angeles and sends shockwaves through the lives of all who live there. Now strangers must become heroes as the city struggles to get to its feet before the next terrifying aftershock hits! Also starring Ava Gardner, George Kennedy, Lorne Greene, Victoria Principal, Genevieve Bujold and Richard Roundtree, Earthquake combines outstanding performances with Academy Award-winning sound and groundbreaking special effects.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #8636 in DVD
  • Brand: UNIVERSAL STUDIOS HOME ENTERTAIN.
  • Released on: 2006-05-09
  • Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
  • Dubbed in: Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .20 pounds
  • Running time: 123 minutes

Features

  • ISBN13: 0025193046925
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

PRISTINE TRANSFER, BUT WHA’HOPPIN? NO EXTRAS?3
For one of their most successful 70s films, I am so surprised that Universal did not get on the bandwagon and do a Special Edition of some kind, similar to the new Fox issues of Poseidon Adventure and Towering Inferno. Universal has treated this film like a throwaway, and if they took that attitude, they should have left the bad-print Good Times issue stand. Even the Region 2 UK version is better than this. It’s in 5.1 and at least gives you one trailer!

The upgrades to this edition of EQ include a 3.1 Sensurround track, besides a 5.1 track, plus 2.0 Spanish track. You set your language and play the film. There isn’t even a Select The Scenes menu. There are more chapter markers than the previous issue, but some are in weird places. The print of the film is fabulous. Looks like it was color-corrected and plays almost like HD. My only reason for 3 stars, or it would be less.

Still, Universal dropped the ball. Commentaries should have been included, featurettes if available, memories from cast and crew that are still with us, and even a couple of trailers and/or TV Spots. With adding the 3.1 Sensurround track, it would have been nice to see one of the “An Event” trailers for the theatrical release in Sensurround. The trailer on the UK version is one used for the post-Sensurround release of the film.
Maybe they are waiting for the 35th Anniversary in 2009 to do it up big? I doubt it.

If Universal doesn’t even care to issue the last remaining Rodgers & Hammerstein movie musical “Flower Drum Song” (1961) that has yet to see a DVD issue, what can you expect on how they treat one of their biggest 70s hits?

Wake up Universal.

Poor Sensurround Soundtrack3
While the picture is beautiful, the new DVD of “Earthquake” completely misses the boat on the Sensurround track and special features. First of all, the so-called “3.1″ Sensurround track is nothing but the same, mono, audio fed to the 3 front channels with the 25/35 Hz control tones on the .1 LFE channel - no rumble is there at all. Nothing of the sort was ever heard in theaters, so I don’t know why Universal bothered. It’s obvious that the Universal tech’s in charge of the DVD audio transfer didn’t know that the control tones are NOT the earthquake rumble and are NOT meant to be heard! The 5.1-channel remix is problimatical too. Earthquake was the first feature to use the Sensurround Special Effects System (US Patent #3, 973,839). Because, at the time, audio in theaters and on film was in such a primitive state, MCA/Universal engineers designed a sound system to run along side the theaters existing system. Two control tones, at 25 and 35 Hz, were recorded either on the main soundtrack (for optical prints) or, with stereo Magnetic prints, on the redundant optical soundtrack. Their presence and volume controlled the turning on and off of a low-frequency noise (rumble) generator to create the ‘earthquake’ effects - they also controlled the addition of the “Center Front” channel (or the composite optical) into the Sensurround channel to create “surround” effects. When desired, the two tones could also increase the volume of ALL the speakers in the theater by a desired amount. While the 4-track magnetic soundtrack had a standard “effects/surround” soundtrack (complete with 12kHz CinemaScope switching tone), in Sensurround equipped theaters, the surround mag track was disconnected and not used at all… instead, the Center Front mag channel was connected into the Sensurround channel to create the ’surround’ effects when needed. For non-Sensurround installations that used the Magnetic soundtrack, the 4-track mag had the standard surround soundtrack available. Universal’s engineers in charge of the new DVD soundtrack remix do not seem to have known this - none of the sounds from the Center Front channel are used at all in the surround channels, nor is any of the Sensurround rumble taken to the back channels as it should be. In addition to the deep rumble, Sensurround was intended to “Surround and engulf you”, which the new 5.1 track does NOT do! The composite mono optical prints, or the mag stereo prints, contained all the information the mixers needed, to know when to direct the sounds, and by how much, from the Center Front into the back channels. They only had to listen to and measure the amounts of 25 and 35 Hz tones! Heck, the old MCA DiscoVision laser videodisc release has the control tones present that we can hear, so anyone could have figured it out! Also, it does not appear that Universal used a Sensurround rumble generator - the bass is nowhere near deep enough - I’ve measured it and it cuts off around 25 Hz! That’s a whole octave higher than it should be! The cut-off frequency that was designed for Sensurround was 16Hz. The bass should be played at a level of 110-120db at those frequencies! To replicate the Sensurround soundtrack on DVD, here’s what should have been done:

The “main” channels should have been recorded at a much lower level than usual onto the DVD master. The Sensurround rumble should have been recorded at, or as near as possible, to 0db as they could. This would have allowed them to duplicate Sensurround in the home. It would have required the home viewer to raise their main volume control much higher than usual to hear the soundtrack, thus, when the rumble came along, it would be at it’s correct, high, level - and the extra headroom could have been used to raise the level of the main soundtrack during the quake as the original presentation called for. The Center Front should have been mixed into the surrounds as required and the original mag Surround track used too. For viewers who don’t have the ability to play the Sensurround track at such high levels, the original 4-track master, without Sensurround, should have been supplied at standard volume as an alternate track. The original mono Sensurround-compatible shouldtrack should have been supplied too as a 1.0 Dolby Digital track.

Contrary to what others claim, Earthquake was the ONLY Stereophonic Sensurround release (Zoot Suit doesn’t count) - after Earthquake, Sensurround was modified to place all the effects on an optical mono track with dbx Type-II noise reduction. ALL of the other “Sensurround” DVD releases from Universal get the Sensurround track wrong too - Midway, Battlestar, Rollercoaster - all WRONG! The Sensurround, because of the control tones, would pan from the front to the back of the theater, as required - none of the DVD’s duplicate this - it gave them a ’surround-type’ soundtrack capability from a standard mono-optical print. Hopefully, future HD-DVD relases will get this right - if Universal would only ask me about it! I have extensive documentation on the Sensurround system and am probably the foremost authority on it in the world.

The basic fidelity and seperation of the 3 front channels is quite good, as is the high-frequency response. Unlike other magnetic stereo films of the era, Earthquake was mixed with mono, meaning Center Front-only, dialogue - other films of the time panned the dialogue across each channel to follow the speaker. The DVD replicates this nicely, although I hate mono dialogue.

The image of “Earthquake” has a bit too much edge enhancement, but is otherwise OK. Sadly, there are NO special features at all, which is a pitty, as there was a wealth of material produced for Earthquake. MCA Universal made a “Sensurround Product Demo Reel” to show theater owners how the system worked and why they should install it in their theater - there were film demo reels to show the total image+sound effect - there were Sensurround encoded trailers - there was deleted footage - the LAX restraunt was actually modeled and filmed collapsing, but the footage wasn’t used in the film - in addition, around 10 mintues of footage were deleted shortly before the films release - all of this should have been included on the disc along with photos of the incredible Sensurround horns.

BTW, in the Mid-1970’s, MCA/Universal was attempting to sell Sensurround as a new, high-fidelity, film sound system - Dolby Stereo had just become available, and there was a general industry-wide interest in upgrading theater sound. MCA positioned Sensurround as a large increase in fidelity with special effects, all from a single, compatible, mono optical soundtrack. When the dbx Type-II noise reduction was added, the specifications of Sensurround were quite impressive:

Dynamic Range-90db
SN Ratio-80db
Frequency Response-16Hz to 16,000 kHz.

All these specs out-did Dolby Stereo at the time. SENSURROUND+PLUS, used on Zoot Suit, was merely the use of dbx Noise Reduction, WITHOUT the rumble, on a 4-track mag stereo soundtrack.

Hopefully, Universal will get it right on the HD-DVD’s of the Sensurround films.

Shaken, not stirred4
From the time that what is left of Ava Gardner roars onto the screen bellowing “60ddammit” as if she were auditioning for a dinner theater version of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolfe” to the end where half the cast is literally (rather than figuratively) mucking about in the sewer, this cheesy 70’s disaster flick throws everything it can think of at you. Fires! Adultery! Floods! Duplicity! Electricity! Motorcycle stunts! Earthquakes! Marjoe (aieeee!)! The special effects range from great (Capitol Records building, Wilshire Collonade) to the pits (the elevator, the cows), the script is at the level of a movie-of-the-week, and the acting? Velveeta city. Charlton Heston runs all over the place looking as if he wants to part something, Ava runs around screeching her dialogue as if she were trying to read it over the sound of a departing jumbo jet, Lorne Greene looks as if he can’t quite get why he was cast as Ava’s father (they were the same age), Genevieve Bujold gives quite a hint of the scary elf she would late become, and best of all, Victoria Principal (in what must be the funniest wig in the history of cinema) ACTS. Yes, before she refined her craft on “Dallas” (point chest, tear up, sniffle, whine) she showed her early technique here (point chest, sneer, read line). There is also the big time debut (and thankfully, swan song) of Marjoe, as the… oh well, you’ll just have to see for yourself to believe it.

Fans of Debralee Scott’s scenes will be disappointed- they are not included, since this is the theatrical version, not the padded version that was shown on NBC. This is a great loss, since I would love to see her big scenes; reacting to the card reading she gives her husband (who knew that an ordinary deck of cards could say “the plane will not crash, but your career will”) and her loooooooooooooooooooooong scene reacting to the same piece of film showing the runway her plane is trying to land on cracking over, and over, and over, and over.

As a side note- the night before the 94 Northridge quake, I had the flu. I was watching this very same movie. My roomate asked me why I didn’t go to bed if I was sick. I replied that “I like the part where LA falls apart”. I had quite the wake-up call at 5 am.

I have seen this movie since, but I still get a little twinge falling alseep after.

The Canyon Discount.

Martes, Noviembre 23rd, 2010

The Canyon Discount.

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The Canyon Description:

Honeymooners Nick and Lori head off to the Grand Canyon for adventure and time alone together. Upon arriving, they hire Henry as their guide, who seems to have his own idea about the outdoor excursion. When tragedy strikes, the newlyweds must fend for themselves. Discovering they are
prey being hunted by something or
someone, they desperately fight for
survival to escape the canyon alive.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #16544 in DVD
  • Brand: MAGNOLIA FILMS
  • Released on: 2009-11-17
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Aspect ratio: 2.40:1
  • Formats: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Dubbed in: Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds
  • Running time: 102 minutes

Features

  • ISBN13: 0876964002356
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Customer Reviews:

Formulaic, with some credible acting3
In “Open Water” (2003), a pair of scuba divers (who were also a couple) got stranded in the middle of the ocean and found themselves imperiled by a school of sharks. Well, in “The Canyon”, we have a newly-married couple stranded somewhere in the Grand Canyon and hunted by wolves. It’s basically a survival-type drama with some twists, but on the whole is quite formulaic. What makes this watchable (though more as a rental and not a purchase) is the acting, which I thought was quite alright, considering this is a low-budget indie flick. The story centers around Nick (Eion Bailey) and Lori (Yvonne Strahovski) who are a pair of newly-weds and eager for adventure (well, Nick mainly) - Nick’s idea of a perfect honeymoon is to explore the deepest recesses of the canyon via muleback. Unfortunately, Nick did not have the foresight to apply for a permit for their excursion and the pair decide to take on the proffered services of a grizzled old guide Henry (Will Patton).

Will Patton makes the initial part of this movie quite watchable with his dry humor and vast knowledge of the canyon - he really is quite a hoot to watch in his role as guide. Unfortunately, his role is rather shortlived, and it is left to Nick and Lori to carry the rest of the movie through as the stranded pair are forced to rely on their wits to stay alive and make it out of the canyon, even as tragedy and danger stalk them in the form of a pack of determined wolves. Eion Bailey’s Nick is quite average in his role as the smart ass new husband who uses his persuasive skills in getting Lori to agree to his adventure - a plan that seems doomed from the beginning considering his lack of planning and foresight.His character as such is hard to empathize with. Lori as portrayed by Yvonne Strahovski has more of a screen presence and manages to convey a wider range of emotions convincingly and had me rooting for her all through the movie. The highlight of this movie is actually the gorgeous cinematography of the canyon - simply breathtaking. On the whole, this is basically a been-there-done-that sort of survival drama, and I’d recommend it as a rental at best.

Wolves Will Be Wolves4
This film would fit nicely in a gift set with “Open Water” and “Black Water”. Like its less-than-warm-blooded brethren, “The Canyon” finds an attractive couple trapped in raw wilderness, ultimately pit face to face with Mother Nature and her drones - in this case, wolves. There is stunning cinematography, beautiful scenery, and a fair level of intensity on display here, which makes the so-so script worthwhile. If you’re the kind of person who enjoys man-against-nature pictures, “Canyon” is a perfect fit for a rainy afternoon. Even if one isn’t a lover of eco-horror, the wolves used are put on full display, and they are breathtaking to behold. No CGI here…. thank the films Gods for that one. All in all, this is an entertaining thriller with more to admire than to roll the eyes at, and even when the eyes are rolling, they’re rolling over a gorgeous surface.

Sesame Street: Vol. 2 - Old School 1974-1979 Sale-$29.49!

Lunes, Noviembre 22nd, 2010

Sesame Street: Vol. 2 - Old School 1974-1979 Sale-$29.49!

Sesame Street: Vol. 2 - Old School 1974-1979.

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Can you dig it? Sesame Street: Old School Volume 2 picks up right where Volume 1 left off, including all the grooviest Sesame Street memories from 1974 to 1979! You’ll see cats like Don Music and Roosevelt Franklin, Guy Smiley and Fat Blue. Break out your boogie shoes for far out classics like “What’s the Name of That Song?” and “Telephone Rock!” Rediscover the Sesame Street of the 1970s — the place where you learned about letters, numbers, and loveable furry monsters. Catch you on the flip side!

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2940 in DVD
  • Brand: Sesame Street
  • Released on: 2007-11-06
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 60 minutes

Features

  • ISBN13:
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Forget Elmo - here’s more of the real deal!4
This DVD set, released on my 40th birthday, proved the appropriate gift!

But let’s get the negatives out of the way first, to explain why I gave it four stars rather than five:

1) One reviewer for Volume 1 complained that there was too little material extracted from a six-year period of broadcasts. Unfortunately, Volume 2 presents the same limits.

2) If a Volume 3 is ever released, please omit the Falling Baker skit for the Number Two. With the current two volumes, it’s been repeated to death. Give us more variety — at least treat us to that elusive Number One skit (Baker falling with a wedding cake).

3) Same packaging is used as in Volume 1, with two of the three discs annoying stacked on top of each other.

4) One Super-Grover skit appears to be needlessly edited with recent material.

5) That irritating disclaimer saying the DVDs may not be appropriate teaching material for today’s kids. (Might the lobster-trap segment be too un-PC?) My 3-year-old nephew absolutely loves watching Volume 1, so I anticipate the same reception for Volume 2.

Nonetheless, this DVD set almost earned five stars from me for two main reasons:

1) The nostalgia effect was powerful enough to nearly override the negatives.

2) There’s one absolutely can’t-miss-feature in Disc One — the test pilot used to pitch the show to PBS! It’s one of the freakiest gems in this release, with a heavy and admirable “Soul Train” streak running through the episode, an atypically rude Mr. Hooper, no kids singing “Sunny Day” (it took a moment for me to recognize the voice), and precious animated skits that I wish had been included in Volume 1 (notably Triangle & Square). And is that the actor that I think it is, playing a FOURTH Gordon??!!

As with Volume 1, I nearly cried seeing some skits that jogged bittersweet memories out of my subconscious (horseback mailman delivering an issue of “The Plain Truth” in the outskirts of Kentucky), and some that I thought I’d never see again but which I’m grateful to say I own at last (cows being fed hay in winter). Some material almost unsettled me as a kid but I now find hilarious (King Minus), while some is of just downright laugh-out-loud quality (Grover’s show-and-tell with Maria’s head).

You’ll also find the following: Telephone Rock, I’m a hard-working dog, surprisingly more of Roosevelt Franklin, Cookie Monster in flamboyant Elton-John wardrobe, the moment when Woof-Woof’s name was changed to Barkley (a change I voted against as a kid, but which I now can’t imagine having occurred otherwise), and one moment when Snuffy came so close to being discovered by David. I could go on! But you’ll have to watch for yourselves.

I must admit my hope that, if there’s a Volume 3, it’s willing to go back and cover more of ‘69-’74.

Sesame Street: Old School, Volume 2 features5
Genius Products picks up the reigns for this second volume of nostalgic Sesame Street episodes aimed at adults who remember the series from their childhood.

The set contains five complete, hour-long episodes from the 6th through 10th seasons, 57 bonus segments, an unaired test pilot, a 12-page booklet with behind-the-scenes information and photos, and a special collectible animation cell from the classic animated segment “Pinball Number Count” featuring vocals by The Pointer Sisters.

Episode content includes the first episode with Roscoe Orman, the actor who still plays Gordon today. Also the first appearance of Muppet characters Rodeo Rosie, Oscar’s trashman Bruno, the Two-Headed Monster and Barkley the Dog. Famous songs include “What’s the Name of that Song?” and “A Song From Kermit” with celebrity appearances by Judy Collins, Henry Winkler (as the Fonze), Paul Simon, Lily Tomlin, Richard Pryor, Ray Charles and others.

Old School rules!4
I couldn’t agree more with you Raul.
The first three episodes were chalk full of segments that I remember fondly(I managed to view the entire three discs all in one evening).

But it’s still disappointing how they only have one episode from each season.Plus I was also getting annoyed with the repetitive showing of the Baker’s # 2 segment,as well as the Jazzy Spies # 2 segment.

It was quite a treat to see the unaired pilot episode.I never even knew such an episode existed.Ernie and Bert’s home looked rather strange.

Not only was”Old School”the era before Elmo and Zoe,but before Telli,Grungetta and Gina as well.Olivia is seen in the two later episodes of disc three.

I was also glad to see Buffy Saint Marie in this set.I’m a big fan of hers.

The Goddess Workout: Introduction to Bellydance Review.

Domingo, Noviembre 21st, 2010

The Goddess Workout: Introduction to Bellydance Review.

The Goddess Workout: Introduction to Bellydance.

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  • Amazon Sales Rank: #33690 in DVD
  • Released on: 2002-07-03
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Format: NTSC

Neither a workout nor an effective instructional DVD1
The Goddess Workout claims it will do two things-teach you how to bellydance and give you a workout. It is effective at neither. The only positive aspect of this workout is the eye candy. The costumes and sets are gorgeous. But this wasn’t meant to be a performance video…it was meant to teach.

The main problem is the camera work. Frequently, the camera focuses on Dolphina’s face or chest when you’re supposed to be doing things with the lower body. At one point she said “now let’s add a leg movement.” So I stood there waiting for the camera to show her leg (it was focused on her upper body). And I kept waiting, and waiting. Then we moved on to something else. I never did figure out what she was doing with her leg. Similar things happened throughout the workout. The camera may focus on the proper area for a short time, but quickly moves somewhere else before you can get the movement down.

She explained a few things adequately, but others left me completely lost. She would go on and on about “goddess energy” and chakras which did not help me with dance form at all. She kept trying to act sexy which was really embarassing when one of my family members came in the room. The way she behaves you’d think this was entertainment for men, not dance instruction for women.

Finally, the “workout” did not make me break a sweat, and I am in relatively poor shape. There was a cool down, which was pretty silly because there was nothing to cool down from.

How can you learn to dance if you can’t see the teacher?1
Most of the time the camera is focussed on Dolpina’s face. This
makes it impossible to see what her hips and feet are doing. How
can you learn hip movements by looking at the teacher’s eyes? You can’t. Dolphina is also a poor dancer. She is usually off the rhythm of the music playing in the background and her technique is stiff. The cluttered backgrounds that she uses are distracting. I am an advanced dancer and I frequently couldn’t understand what she was trying to demonstrate. One of my beginning students was completely lost. Save your money for a better video.

All-over tone4
The good news-
It really does give you amazing all-over tone. I have done the gym thing, and I hate sit-ups and crunches. I always do them wrong and end up hurting something. I have never seen my stomach get this flat and hard so quickly, WITHOUT SIT-UPS, as I have with this video. After one week of regular use, I could see a definite improvement. Now, I do it about 5-7 times a week, because you can actually see an almost daily improvement. It’s great.
I sit all day at my desk. So my back hurts at the end of the day. This video really stretches out my back and straightens my posture. My arms and backside look great. I have gone down a dress size in one month of consistent use.

The bad news- The camerawork is shoddy. It focuses on her face too much rather than her actual body-movements. It is difficult to tell exactly what she is doing all the time. It took me about a week to actually figure out what she is doing. I have taken several dance classes and I found it hard to follow. She often loses count. She talks a lot about chakras and serphents that apparently live at the base of your spine, etc.

In sum: Now, that I have figured it out. I love it. It makes me feel good, toned, and relaxed. I don’t mind doing it almost everyday. I intend to buy another one.

Buy Zardoz At Amazon!

Miércoles, Noviembre 17th, 2010

Buy Zardoz At Amazon!

Zardoz.

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Two societies, one intellectual (the Eternals) and the other physical (the Brutals) live side by side but never meet. Sean Connery is a Brutal out to shake things up.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #12367 in DVD
  • Brand: CONNERY,SEAN
  • Released on: 2001-03-27
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English, French
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds
  • Running time: 105 minutes

Greatly rewatchable. Interesting for flaws and brilliance4
`Zardoz’ was produced, written, and directed by John Boorman who, like Robert Altman (`M.A.S.H’) and Ken Russell (`Women In Love’) cash in their credit earned from directing very successful commercial films and spend it to direct very personal, very original, and very uncommercial films. `Zardoz’ was made right after Boorman’s immense critical and commercial success with `Deliverance’ and his star in that movie, Burt Reynolds, was to play the lead role in `Zardoz’ until Burt fell ill and was replaced with Sean Connery at a cost of 1/5 of the whole million dollar budget. As high as that relative figure may seem, apparently Connery was just finishing up his appearances as James Bond and no one would hire him for anything else, so he needed the money.

While there is a great danger that no one will ever read this review, it is immense fun to write a review of this rich, quirky, and very flawed movie. For starters, I find it easy to see that people have a hard time understanding the movie. I have never held that fact alone against a movie, as it took me at least three viewings of `2001 A Space Odyssey’ to feel I was anywhere near understanding it, and `2001′ has taken its rightful place among the very best American movies. It has taken me at least that many viewings to understand some of Fredrico Fellini’s movies and I still don’t understand `8½’. But that doesn’t mean this is not a great movie. But that doesn’t mean this is a great movie. It only means it has potential the fact that it can still be found on the store shelves is a testament to the fact that this movie has a lot to offer, even if it ultimately does not fully realize the filmmaker’s vision.

There are few movies I have seen which are more in need of the director’s commentary than this one. One of Boorman’s most telling observations on this commentary is the statement that there may just be too much being attempted in this movie. And, I think this summarizes the problem in a nutshell.

Like all true science fiction works, the heart of `Zardoz’ is to set the stage by imagining `what would happen if this statement were true’? The central premise of the movie is the fact that some cataclysm destroyed the world as we know it and, not unlike H. G. Wells’ `The Time Machine’, humankind has split into two major subspecies, one of which is effectively immortal and the other barely survives on a subsistence level and who treat an artifact of the immortals as a god named `Zardoz’. In addition to being immortal, the higher level beings can communicate telepathically and can control lower level beings by the force of mind alone.

Some of the implications the filmmaker draws from this central premise are truly inspired. By far the most brilliant is the inference that the immortals can suffer from debilitating boredom. To imagine how easy this can happen, just imagine a conventional image of heaven where the primary activities are singing and playing an archaic musical instrument.

Another inspired implication is the fact that the immortals are punished by being aged a certain number of years, so that when they are treated to restore their youth, they never grow any younger than their penal age. These two implications lead to two subgroups. These are immortals who become totally immobilized by ennui and immortals who age to the point of debilitation. If the movie stopped there, it could probably have easily filled its two hours with a rich explication of all these suppositions.

The problem is that to make the story interesting, the storyteller must bring a mortal into the immortals’ world to shake things up. The problem I have with the device Boorman uses to bring Connery’s mortal character into the immortals’ world really doesn’t seem to work very well. This element of the story all revolves around the premise that the mortals are being suppressed by a myth based on the story of the Wizard of Oz. This myth is so central to the story that the title of the movie and the name of the deity itself comes from a contraction of `wiZARD of OZ’. Connery’s character, `Zed’, with the help of his fellow mortal `brutals’ manages to get aboard the great stone head which embodies Zardoz’ after Zed discovers the fact that the great and mighty `Zardoz’ is, like the fictional wizard, a sham. My biggest problem is that the analogy between this future earth and the Land of Oz is very, very thin. There is no explanation I can fathom for why the mortals are divided into two classes, one of which, the `brutals’ like Zed spend all their time, catching, raping, and killing the other mortal class. This situation remits somewhat when we see the brutals acting as overseers while the other mortals spend time planting crops, but this subplot is simply not very well developed.

The primary thread of the story is in the contention between two immortals over what to do with Zed. The `scientist’ who wishes to study Zed wins a vote to keep him alive for 21 days. In the course of this period, Zed manages to stir up the world of the immortals and do a lot to bring some real interest to their life.

As the movie was done very cheaply in the early 1970’s, today’s computer based effects simply did not exist and the `on camera’ effects are a bit threadbare, not unlike the curtain behind which the Midwestern huckster manipulates the image of the Wizard of Oz. And yet this does not detract from the movie. The film mostly suffers from too much implausibility and, to paraphrase the Austrian Emperor’s comments on Mozart’s music in `Amadeus’, there are `simply too many ideas’.

An yet, this is a really worthwhile movie to see, enhanced by medieval music expert David Munro’s score.

Beware of the Flying Head of Fake God!4
Director John Boorman has delivered some very good films such as “Deliverance” (1972), “Excalibur” (1981) and “The Emerald Forest” (1985).
“Zardoz” (1974) occupies a very special place in his filmography. As Boorman also wrote the screenplay, we may assume it is a “film d’auter”. He not only conveys a sci-fi story, he also gives the viewer a parable about power and immortality.

The whole movie has the look and feel of mid `70s cosmovision. Daily life in the Vortex resembles a Hippie community; there are scenes with kaleidoscopic effects (Ken Russell will use very similar images in “Altered States” (1980)); scenes of mass killing are shown with minimal blood effusion and so on.

The story is a classical sci-fi argument: in far future humankind is fractioned in two groups. One group lives in an edenic valley, profits from immortality and suffers no material needs. The other, by far the hugest group, dwells in a destitute Earth subject to the persecution of the Brutals.
Brutals are servers of god Zardoz, an enormous flying and speaking stone head. Their religion promises eternal after-life at the Vortex. Zed, one of them, decides to creep into Zardoz’s head and starts a “heroes’ journey” of discovery, enlightenment and trial.
From there on a complex plot, requiring viewer’s attention is deployed.

There are several high points in this film.
Cinematography directed by multi-Oscar awarded Geoffrey Unsworth (”Cabaret” (1972) and “Tess” (1979)) is delicate, portraying slender and beautiful women bodies. He uses color and texture (especially cloth texture) masterfully. The film has received a BAFTA nomination to Best Cinematography.

Playacting shows a young, beautiful and stylized Charlotte Rampling impersonating Consuella, a sensitive Eternals’ leader opposing Zed. Sara Kestelman as May, in her first movie role, insinuates an attractive personality. Last but not least Sean Connery fleshes Zed gallantly; we must remember that, at that time, he was vigorously trying to detach himself from his alter ego: James Bond.
It is a good sci-fi movie for sophisticated audience!
Reviewed by Max Yofre.

A 70s relic that remains surprisingly relevant.4
The big surprise for me was not just rediscovering “Zardoz” after all these years — now back to the land of the living in a fine 16×9 DVD edition — but to find that it was a far better, more interesting movie than I had remembered. I grew up with “Zardoz” appearing on TV in a badly-edited form about once a year, and my brother and I would frequently drop everything to catch it. We didn’t know what the hell it was about, but it was fascinating nonetheless. Here, reissued, it’s dated only in some superficial ways (the costumes, etc.). The underlying story has, if anything, only gotten better with time.

In the year 2273, the world has collapsed. The world is divided between the Eternals, who live forever inside protected utopian communies, and the Brutals, who squabble for what little existence can be had in the lands outside. Some of the Brutals have been raised up and appointed “Exterminators,” charged with the task of keeping the Brutals in line. The object of their worshop and the source of their instructions is a giant stone head they call Zardoz (hence the title.)

One of the Exterminators, Zed (Connery), stows away in the head one day to find out where it goes, and winds up inside one of the protected communes. The Eternals there are fascinated and repulsed by him at the same time, probably because he represents all the things they neither have nor can achieve (such as sexual potency and mortality — and the two are intimately related, the movie argues). Slowly he reveals his true reasons for coming within their fold, and then chaos erupts.

That’s the basics of the plot; any more than that would ruin some of the movie’s more interesting secrets, which really should not be given away carelessly out of respect for the audience. The movie’s mostly infamous now for being that weird SF story where Connery ran around in a red diaper, but underneath the surface is a smarter and more philosophically astute film that most people would give it credit for. Don’t let the production devices distract you.

“Zardoz” is also interesting as being a product of a very short period of Hollywood’s history when experimental, risky productions were financed with great zeal. Many of those movies were terrible duds — anyone here remember “Futz!”, “The End of the Road,” “The Final Programme,” “The Monitors,” or “Glen and Randa”? Not surprisingly, a great many of these movies were post-apocalyptic SF headtrips, but “Zardoz” was probably the king and emperor of the bunch. And still is.

Martial Arts 50 Movie Pack Collection Review.

Martes, Noviembre 16th, 2010

Martial Arts 50 Movie Pack Collection Review.

Martial Arts 50 Movie Pack Collection.

Product: Martial Arts 50 Movie Pack Collection Review.

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For the first time, the legends of martial arts are gathered in the ultimate DVD collection that will provide countless hours of adrenaline-filled action.

Included

  • Big Fight, The
  • Black Cobra
  • Black Cobra 2
  • Black Cobra 3
  • Black Fist
  • Black Godfather, The
  • Brave Lion
  • Chase Step by Step
  • City Ninja
  • Deadly Duo
  • Death Machines
  • Death of a Ninja
  • Fighting Mad
  • Four Robbers
  • Four Shaolin Challengers
  • Guy with the Secret Kung Fu, The
  • Hands of Death
  • Head Hunter, The
  • Heroes of Shaolin Part 1
  • Heroes of Shaolin Part 2
  • Image of Bruce Lee
  • Impossible Kid, The
  • Infernal Street
  • Karate Kids USA
  • Kung Fu Arts
  • Kung Fu Kids Break Away
  • Master, The: Max
  • Master, The: Out of Time Step
  • Ninja Champion
  • Ninja Death I
  • Ninja Death II
  • Ninja Death III
  • Ninja Empire
  • Ninja Heat
  • Ninja: The Protector
  • Real Bruce Lee, The
  • Return of the Kung Fu Dragon
  • Return of the Street Fighter
  • Shadow Ninja
  • Shaolin Deadly Kicks
  • Shaolin Temple
  • Sister Street Fighter
  • Snake Fist Dynamo
  • Snake, The Tiger, The Crane, The
  • Spirits of Bruce Lee
  • Street Fighter, The
  • Ten Fingers of Death
  • Tiger Love
  • TNT Jackson
  • Weapons of Death

    • Amazon Sales Rank: #13149 in DVD
    • Brand: MILL CREEK ENT. (UNDER DIGITAL
    • Released on: 2005-01-18
    • Rating: Unrated
    • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
    • Formats: Box set, Color, NTSC
    • Original language: English
    • Number of discs: 12
    • Running time: 4223 minutes

    Features

    • For the first time, the legends of martial arts are gathered in the ultimate DVD collection that will provide countless hours of adrenaline-filled action. System Requirements: , Martial Arts Classics 50 Movie MegaPack - Kung Fu Arts, Shaolin Deadly Kicks, Black Cobra, Black Cobra 3, Chase Step by Step, Deadly Duo, Ninja Champion, Spirits of Burce Lee, City Ninja, Four Shaolin Challeng

    On a 1 to 10 scale, this collection rates : 4.83
    Some of the titles in MARTIAL ARTS 50 MOVIE PACK are so obscure, very little information could be gotten about them. A couple of selections here are from a long-forgotten American TV series. There’s even a few spaghetti-karate films thrown into the mix. The majority however originate in the Far East: Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines.

    Lots of choreography went into the making of these movies; undoubtedly, there were a few unintentional injuries along the way, too. The action and pratfalls are non-stop and the plots mere window dressing for the foot-to-head combat scenes. For all martial arts fans these cinematic slugfests are sure-to-please.

    Overall rating was achieved by averaging out viewer polling on 42 of these titles. Based on a film resource website’s 1 to 10 scoring system, the current rating for MARTIAL ARTS is: 4.8.

    The following alphabetized program list includes individual poll scores, original theatrical names (where indicated), country of origin, years of release and primary performers.

    (5.0) The Big Fight (Taiwan/Hong Kong-1972) - Roc Tien/Cheung Chin Chin
    (4.0) Black Cobra (Italy-1987) - Fred Williamson/Eva Grimaldi
    (5.1) Black Cobra 2 (Italy-1988) - Fred Williamson/Nicholas Hammond
    (4.5) Black Cobra 3 (Italy-1988) - Fred Williamson/Forry Smith
    (4.8) Black Fist (1975) - Richard Lawson/Dabney Coleman/Philip Michael Thomas
    (2.7) The Black Godfather (1974) - Rod Perry/Damu King
    (4.4) The Brave Lion (1977) - Wei Tzi Yung
    (3.9) Breakout From Oppression (1978) - Fonda Lynn/Alan Tam
    (2.7) Chase Step By Step (China-1982) - Chee Fung/Wong Gwan Sheong
    (???) City Ninja (1986) - Wai-Man Chan/Chia Che Fu
    (6.6) The Deadly Duo (Hong Kong-1971) - David Chiang/Chuen Chan
    (2.2) Death Machines (1976) - Ronald L. Marchini/Michael Chong
    (5.6) Death Of A Ninja (”Black Magic Wars”) (Japan-1982) - Hiroyuki Sanada/Sonny Chiba (in support)
    (4.0) Fighting Mad (”Death Force”) (USA/Philippines-1978) - Jayne Kennedy/Leon Isaac Kenndey (both minor roles)
    (6.1) Four Robbers (Hong Kong-1987) - Charlie Cho/Feng Ku
    (5.1) Four Shaolin Challengers (Homg Kong-1977) - Charlie Chan/Phillip Ko
    (3.7) The Guy With The Secret Kung Fu (Hong Kong-1981) - Sally Chen/Fei Meng
    (3.9) Hands Of Death (Hong Kong-1987) - Richard Harrison/Roc Tien
    (3.6) The Head Hunter (Hong Kong-1982) - Rosamund Kwan
    (4.6) Heroes of Shaolin Part 1 (Hong Kong-1979) - Sing Chen/Jang Lee Hwang
    (4.6) Heroes of Shaolin Part 2 (Hong Kong-1979) - Sing Chen/Jang Lee Hwang
    (4.3) Image Of Bruce Lee (1978) - Bruce Li/Chang Leih
    (8.1) The Impossible Kid (Philippines-1982) - Weng Weng
    (5.5) Infernal Street (Taiwan/Hong Kong-1973) - Feng Chang/Wan Hsi Chin
    (4.7) Karate Kids USA (”The Little Dragons”) (1980) - Charles Lane/Ann Sothern
    (6.6) Kung Fu Arts (Taiwan-1980) - Carter Wong/Sing Chen
    (7.8) Kung Fu Kids Break Away (Hong Kong-1980) - Au Dai/Cheung Hoi Fan
    (???) The Master (series): “Max” (TV-1984) - Lee Van Cleef/Timothy Van Patten/Sho Kosogi/Demi Moore (bit part)
    (???) The Master (series): “Out-Of-Time Step” (TV-1984) - Charles Collins/Dick Durock
    (2.9) Ninja Champion (Hong Kong-1985) - Bruce Baron/Pierre Tremblay
    (5.1) Ninja Death I (1987) - Alexander Lou/Fei Meng
    (???) Ninja Death II (1987) - Lo Yiu/Fei Ming
    (???) Ninja Death III (1987) - Lo Yui/Fei Ming
    (2.3) Ninja Empire (Hong Kong-1990) - Mike Abbott/Marko Ritchie
    (???) Ninja Heat (1988) - Chan Sheng/Chan Wai Mang
    (3.2) Ninja The Protector (Canada/Hong Kong-1986) - Richard Harrison/Jackie Chan
    (6.0) The Real Bruce Lee (Hong Kong-1973) - Bruce Lee/Bruce Li/Dragon Lee
    (4.9) Return Of The Kung Fu Dragon (Hong Kong-1976) - Sing Chen/Tao Chen
    (6.1) Return Of The Street Fighter (Japan-1974) - Sonny Chiba/Yôko Ichiji
    (6.7) Shadow Ninja (Hong Kong-1983) - Roy Chiao/Wei Tung
    (5.7) Shaolin Deadly Kicks (”Flash Legs”) (Hong Kong-1977) - Tao-liang Tan/Lieh Lo
    (7.3) Shaolin Temple (Hong Kong-1976) - Sheng Fu/Kuan-Chun Chi
    (5.7) Sister Street Fighter (Japan-1974) - Hiroshi Miyauchi/Sanae Ohba
    (3.4) Snake Fist Dynamo (Homg Kong-1984) - Erik Yee/Dick Lee
    (???) The Snake, The Tiger, The Crane (Hong Kong-1975) - Carter Wong/Nan Hsi Yen
    (5.2) Spirits Of Bruce Lee (Hong Kong-1973) - Michael Chan/Poon Lok
    (6.9) The Street Fighter (Japan-1974) - Sonny Chiba/Waichi Yamada
    (???) Tiger Love (1977) - Hu Chin/Lieh Lo/Ya Wang
    (4.0) T.N.T. Jackson (Philippines/USA-1975) - Jeannie Bell/Stan Shaw
    (3.3) The Weapons Of Death (1982) - Eric Lee/Bob Ramos

    Craptacular!5
    This collection is well worth every penny you’ll spend on it, as long you enjoy this film genre. Personally, these movies evoke more laughter for me than most of the comedies being currently released. Some of the movies don’t really qualify as martial arts movies - in particular, I’m referring to Black Cobra 1, 2, and 3 - three of the worst movies ever made. These movies, starring former NFL player Fred “The Hammer” Williamson would more appropriately be categorized as action movies, although there isn’t a Hell of a lot of action in them. I digress. The point is that there are maybe 3 punches thrown in the entire first movie. It’s definitely not a martial arts movie. Most of the movies in this collection, however, are exactly what you would expect. In particular, there are three movies, Ninja Death 1, 2, and 3 that are so awful that they border on greatness. I’m not a film student, so I couldn’t tell you what the filming technique is called wherein the “actors” fight in slow-motion, and then the film is sped up to make the fights look like they are taking place at a normal speed. The director of these Ninja Death movies sped the fights up too much, and the result is that every battle looks like an episode of the Benny Hill show. I put these kind of crappy movies on at night to fall asleep to (spaghetti westerns and cheesy horror flicks work well also), but Ninja Death kept me awake and laughing. None of the movies in this collection are big budget - they are all old, and the sound and picture quality is poor, but that adds, not detracts, to the experience of watching them. If you “get” these kinds of films, you absolutely can’t go wrong spending the money on this collection.

    YOU ARE DAM RIGHT IT DESERVES A 5/5, AND THESE ARE NOT MOVIES THAT ARE SO BAD THEY ARE GOOD, ALRIGHT MOST OF THEM ARE.5
    I was looking through the list of movies surprised to see that all 20 movies that I bought in a 20 pack are in this 50 pack. And now I punching myself in the head this very momentttt because I REALLY WISH I WOULD HAVE JUST PAYED LIKE 20 DOLLARS OR WHATEVER IT WAS EXTRA BECUASE THERE WERE ONLY LIKE 3 GOOD MOVIES IN THE 20 PACK, BUT THERE IS LIKE 10 GOOD ONES IN THIS FREAKING 50 PACK.

    Let me go over what I am talking about.
    20 pack has ninja death 1, 50 pack actually has the sequels part 2 and 3.
    50 pack has guy with secret kungfu with meng fei, 20 pack doesn’t.

    50 pack has a chow yunfat and a jackie chan movie, 20 pack doesn’t.

    Now I’m 99% sure that the jackie and chow movies suck balls, but that is why you go exploring. In the 20 pack I found one of the greatest kungfu movies ever, shadow ninja, which is of course in the 50 pack, what the real name of it is I don’t know, but I do know that I would buy it at like best buy for up to 25 dollars because it is rare and AWESOME. So that is a major reason to buy this collection, and if somebody finds out if chow and jackie are actually in this collection and what the movies are like THEN PLEASE POST THAT AT THE LEAST.

    Now the main reason I wanted to post a review on her is because I saw Shaolin Heroes on there and have not seen this movie in SOOOOOOOOOOO many years it is likely I will throw away my 20 pack and get this thing because I saw it as a kid and had no idea that there are 2 parts to this. I can’t remember if I saw one or two but I do remember seeing a pretty good kungfu movie. CHen sing I remember as the good guy, so that stood out for me, but the thing that really sttod out for me was Lieh Lo(pei mei) and Hwang Jang Lee(druinken master) as the bad guys. I wish america had an equivilent to these two guys, but I just don’t find hannibalector that scary. The only possible way that they could have made this movie better is if they added Johhny Wang(Lung Fei) as a third bad guy. Now this movie I remember has a little more of a storyline than normal kungfu, but if I could sit through the slow moments as a kid, I know that I can now.

    Also the dvd quality of these are all pretty good, all full-screened I think, but probably around 2-3 will be almost unwatchable like chase step by step, but it is still watchable if you wanna see a semi-original kungfu movie, but still VERY good.

    So whoever has this please take the time to review all of the movies that you think are worth watching. Because heroes of Shaolin is a LONG forgotten kungfu movie that definitely needs to be discovered as does shadow ninja with shen yi-kwan(jet’s opponent in OUATIC 1), and ninja death 1 2 and 3 with alexander lo rei and Lu feng(the centipede). And I know that everyone wants to see the Karate Kids starring the great Charles Lane. Now if you are not familiar with Charles Lane, then you are in for a big surprise. Charles Lane is a grandmas-yeah I know just kidding…

    SO DO NOT BUY THE 20 PACK GET THIS AND THEN YOU WON’T HAVE TO SPEND LIKE A YEAR TO GET NINJA DEATH 2 AND 3 LIKE i DID!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!