New on DVD - Special DVD Releases - MSN Entertainment

New on DVD

:

Special Releases

'Boomerang!'/20th Century Fox
Elia Kazan's true-life drama of a murder in a small town belongs to the realist wave of American crime movies that newsreel producer Louis de Rochemont brought to Hollywood at the end of World War II. The story follows the public pressure on the police after the shocking murder of a priest (and the scene is shocking and startling without ever showing the deed) and the political pressure on the State's Attorney (Dana Andrews) to bring a speedy indictment to their only suspect, a drifter played by Arthur Kennedy. This is not Kazan's most gripping film, and you can feel his straining to get out of the brightly lit courtroom drama and back to the dramatic confrontations in back rooms, private dens and shadowy night-time streets, where the dirty business of politics favors power and money over justice. That's where Kazan and the film work best. Lee J. Cobb, Jane Wyatt and Sam Levene co-star. The commentary by film noir historians Alain Silver and James Ursini is a terrific balance of historical backstory and informed observation, all in the easygoing, conversational give-and-take of longtime collaborators; and the DVD also features galleries of production stills and posters, and the trailer.

Fox debuts two other films in its branded "Fox Film Noir" series. "Road House" is a vivid crime melodrama centered on a romantic triangle between Ida Lupino, Cornel Wilde and a pathologically jealous Richard Widmark in a rural tavern near the Canadian border. The buzzing character dynamics make this cult item simmer. There's no such dynamism in Jean Gabin's moody American film debut, "Moontide," a film that evokes the French poetic realist dramas that made Gabin's fame in the '30s but fails to bring any dramatic life to the evocative world of fog-bound docks and grimy coastal taverns. MSN's own Kim Morgan teams up with "czar of noir" Eddie Muller for a colorful commentary on "Road House" and contributes historical backstory and creative insight to the featurettes on both discs (including the instantly immortal line, "Who doesn't like a hot threesome?").

 ©Hen's Tooth
The Boys in Company C
Sidney J. Furie's brash platoon drama updates the colorful personalities of the classic World War II movies to late '60s America (naive farm boys meet nervous college boys, racist crackers meet streetwise blacks) for a tour of duty in Vietnam. The 1978 film is the missing link between "M*A*S*H" and "Full Metal Jacket," with classic platoon cliches rejiggered for a portrait of war as utter chaos. Stan Shaw and Craig Wasson star, and R. Lee Ermey barks out instructions as a movie drill sergeant 10 years before "Full Metal Jacket." Shot with the energy of a madcap comedy and played in a constant state of agitated action, it's frayed and messy and broadly played, and surprisingly effective for all that. The new wide-screen DVD features commentary by co-star Andrew Stevens, but it has not been mastered for wide-screen TVs.
©Icarus
The Case of the Grinning Cat/Chris Marker Collection
Chris Marker is known to most cinefiles for his time-travel drama "La Jette." Less well known is his legacy of imaginative pointed film essays exploring history, culture, politics and modern society. His 2004 documentary "The Case of the Grinning Cat" traces the sudden appearance of smiling cartoon cats graffitied all over Paris through the social and political culture of the 21st century, and the disc supplements the hour-long piece with seven bonus shorts all featuring animal themes. It's one of four collections of Marker's works released by Icarus Films this week, all making their DVD debuts. The others: "The Sixth Side of the Pentagon," Marker's short portrait of the 1967 protests against the Vietnam war; "The Last Bolshevik/Happiness," which pairs Marker's documentary on Soviet filmmaker Aleksandr Medvedkin with Medvedkin's 1934 classic comedy; and "Remembrance of Things to Come."
©Kino
War Requiem
Part 18th century costume epic, part martial-arts action thriller, part arcane conspiracy movie, Christophe Gans' colorful, kinetic genre mash was a box office sensation in France. Samuel Le Bihan is the two-fisted naturalist sent by Louis XV to southern France to stop 'The Beast of Gevaudan.' Japanese-American Mark Dacascos co-stars as his butt-kicking Iroquois blood-brother sidekick. What begins as an atmospheric thriller with an undercurrent of political intrigue becomes a high-concept monster movie that everyone involved seems to take way too seriously. In France it ran 151 minutes but it was trimmed by 10 minutes for its stateside release -- and it still felt too long. The footage is all put back in this new two-disc set, which also features two feature-length documentaries on the making of the film and 40 minutes of deleted and extended scenes among its supplements, all in French with English subtitles.
©MGM
Bright Lights, Big City: 20th Anniversary Edition
Michael J. Fox tries to shake his comic persona in the big-screen adaptation of Jay McInerney's novel of '80s excess in New York. His character, once-aspiring novelist Jamie Conway, hates his magazine job and tries to lose his numb disappointment and overwhelming depression in a hazy nightlife fueled by booze and cocaine and the aggressive lead of his social vampire of a best friend (Kiefer Sutherland). It's handsomely directed by James Bridges, who keeps it all at arm's length, and Phoebe Cates, Dianne Wiest, Jason Robards and John Houseman co-star. The anniversary edition features two new commentary tracks (one by novelist/screenwriter McInerney, the other by cinematographer Gordon Willis) and two retrospective featurettes.

In addition to his regular contributions to MSN Movies, Sean Axmaker is a film critic for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and a DVD columnist for MSN Entertainment. He is also a contributing writer for GreenCine.com, Turner Classic Movies Online and Asian Cult Cinema, among other publications.

advertisement
Featured Articles
Get Smart! Please!
In honor of bumbling Maxwell Smart, a brief history of our favorite clueless detectives
What's in Your DVD Player, John and Joan Cusack?
We chat with the siblings about their new film, 'War, Inc.,' and their DVD-watching habits
Frat Boy or Everyman?
The brilliant best and infantile worst of Adam Sandler
What's in Your DVD Player, Todd Haynes?
We chat with the filmmaker of the enigmatic Bob Dylan 'biography' 'I'm Not There'
On the Rocks
With 'Iron Man' and 'Hancock' featuring heavy-drinking protagonists, we reflect on the most memorable drunks in movie history
Unclassics
Though they may be listed among the greatest films of all time, these 10 movies deserve to be downgraded