Waitress (Widescreen Edition)
| First Sunday [Blu-ray] by D starring Ice Cube, Katt Williams, Tracy Morgan (II), Loretta Devine, Michael Beach |
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Customer Reviews: Forgivably Funny The hijinx begins with Durell (Ice Cube) and Lee John (Tracy Morgan) two long-suffering buddies staying in trouble. I can’t say I could figure out the starting circumstances even after rewinding, but I think they’re delivering drugs by transporting wheelchairs. They aren’t very good criminals. Most criminals aren’t, but they aren’t all that effective, either. Let’s just say they get quickly caught and don’t have the cool to slip out of the knot. Facing court, their trial is held by a judge (Keith David) who has seen them many times before. Perhaps out of compassion or out of disgust, he trades their time for 5,000 hours of community service. Immediately, their outbursts indicate they aren’t too grateful, but service they do. It’s a hard break for Durell’s estranged wife (Regina Hall) who doesn’t have enough money for her beauty salon which requires back pay. Durell brings over forty dollars, but she announces she will have to leave and take their son (C.J. Sanders), to Atlanta where her livelihood will be more affordable. He doesn’t want to lose him, and it doesn’t help that her new lover, Ralph, is built like a gym rat, so he`s determined to do something. We get a lot of random scenes on the community service circuit and in a massage parlor, but one day Durrell is inspired. Distracted by the bottom of an attractive woman, Durell finds his way to her church. He and Lee John join them on a Sunday, but are no closer to converting as much as following up on Durell’s lustful interest in Tianna (Melinda Willams). It is after the financial reports are read at church that they get an idea: After hours they will come and rob the church. I won’t give up the core of the bumbling adventure, but they end up being caught on a night the Deacon (Michael Keith David) checks the safe, a financial meeting takes place with the pastor (Chi McBride of `Boston Public’) and Rickey, the choir director (Katt Williams) is engaged in singing practice. The confrontation turns to a hostage situation that brings most of the movies heart and humor. It must be conceded that this movie is dumb. However, if one considers the premise of ‘Some Like It Hot,’ an AFI comedy classic, where the characters escape witnessing a mob massacre by dressing in drag and going to Florida, then dumb can count. It’s how you do dumb that matters. Don’t get me wrong, by no means am I saying this is the next ‘Some Like It Hot,’ but I found it more entertaining than `Liar Liar,’ and it exceeds the reputation of `Big Momma’s House 2′. As someone who liked watching ‘The Tracy Morgan Show,’ a Cosby inspired sitcom, I felt that Morgan was likable, but somewhat limited here. He was shrill, but I enjoyed Ice Cube’s collected and believable performance. The supporting cast, especially the church personnel, give natural performances, but Katt Williams steals the show as Rickey, the choir director. I can forgive ‘First Sunday’’s failings. Despite the temptation to dismiss the film as just another stupid comedy adventure, `First Sunday’ is forgivably funny. It is entertaining with a moving message and a supporting cast that helps bridge the credibility gap.
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| Firefly - The Complete Series [Blu-ray] by J starring Nathan Fillion |
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Customer Reviews: If you don’t like this TV show… Worth it!! Firefly - Fox vr Universal Hard not to like this show…. I bought the DVD set for my better half (never intending to watch it myself), ended up throwing in a disc late one night after everyone else went to sleep, and was instantly hooked. The price listed now ($63) may be a bit steep for the step-up to Blu Ray over the standard DVD set since there are only 14 episodes - then again, it’s probably not a bad price for 10 great hours of entertainment in Hi Def. I think the true fans will be delighted with it.
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| The Biggest Loser Workout: Power Sculpt by C starring Jillian Michaels, Bob Harper, Kim Lyons |
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Customer Reviews: No Nonsense Workout that will change your body The biggest loss is time, not weight it works! Fantastic workout!
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| Live Free or Die Hard (Full Screen Edition) starring Bruce Willis |
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Customer Reviews: Die Hard with a Jar Jar… I was glad to see Bruce Willis back in action again, and I’m equally impressed with with Wolverine-magnitude fast-healing factor that almost completely recovered him from his earlier injuries (it looks like he was near death in the earlier Police station sequence… but subsequently he healed… magically!) A surprise for me was seeing Kevin Smith in, amazingly, a likeable roll, and even in the unrated version, not once did the customary f-bomb fly out of his mouth (watching his interviews at things like the LA comicon, you’d think he’s replaced the word “the” with the f-bomb.) Anyhow, this film was completely implausable and ridiculous, but it is one of those films that gets you to wondering how long the world would last without electricity, if some terrorist nut (that vaguely resembled an evil Ryan Seacrest) took over the computers of the US. Incredible Bruce Willis fun & entertainment. Fantastic Film….but Fox lied on the back cover! This is a fantastic movie, but if I had paid $8 to see it in the theater in it’s original PG-13 ‘kiddies’ version, I would have beat the theater owner to a pulp and taken my $8 back!!! It’s really a serious sad statement of human morals when it’s ok to rate a movie PG-13 for a movie that shows people shot in the head and people being gunned to death….but when a simple “F” word gets uttered it forces the MPAA to rate it R!!!! So, the utterance of the “F” word is worse than people being slaughtered? That’s just pathetic. And why bother censoring the movie so it would get a PG-13 anyway? The first 3 Die Hard’s were all rated R….it didn’t seem to limit their popularity at all!! It’s not a REAL Die Hard movie without hearing John McClane utter the famous line “Yippee-Ki-Yay Mother F*****”!! is it? That’s like removing the line “Asta la Vista” from Terminator 2, or “I coulda been a contenda” from On The Waterfront!! What’s the point??? If you like special features but don’t like being scammed and lied to, buy the 2 disc Special Edition of this film before you plunk $30 down (and again, thank you Amazon for offering it for MUCH less than that!!!…..Amazon ROCKS!!) for this version, which most obviously makes you believe there are features on the disc that do not exist!! Otherwise…what a cool 3rd sequel to one of the best action films ever made!!! I’m probably dreaming here, but I’d love to see Bruce Willis make a couple more of these before it’s all over! die hard 4
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| The Waltons - The Complete Fifth Season by G starring Ronnie Claire Edwards, Nora Marlowe, Robert Donner, Richard Gilliland |
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Customer Reviews: Wholesome Family Entertainment The “Titanic” of “The Waltons”: Season Five 5 Stars for 5 Great Seasons The Waltons Fifth season
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| House, M.D. - Season Three starring Hugh Laurie, Omar Epps, Lisa Edelstein, Robert Sean Leonard, Jennifer Morrison |
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Customer Reviews: My suggestion is to watch the seasons and the episodes in order. Although House, M.D. is promoted as a procedural drama, the episodes also tell the fascinating story of Dr. Gregory House and the doctors who reside in his orbit. The Season 3 DVD set contains a hilarious blooper reel (my only complaint about it is that it is too short); a director’s commentary on the mid-season episode “Half-Wit” (which guest starred Dave Matthews); and a behind-the-scenes look at “The Jerk” (a late season entry). Other extras include a look at the props, a peek at the production office, and some alternate takes of several scenes. (None of these additional extras, in my opinion, is particularly special). My favorite extra on the DVD has less to do with the show than with its star. It is a recorded recording session of Hugh Laurie’s band “Band From TV” recording Laurie’s arrangement of “Minnie the Moocher.” It’s a rare look into the recording studio and into Hugh Laurie’s other life (one of them, anyway) as a gifted musician. The advantage to watching Season 3 on DVD, besides the glorious color and richness of the print, is that you can watch episodes one after the other with no breaks, no commercials, nothing to interrupt the flow of the narrative. Broken up as it is aired, it is easy to miss the cohesiveness and story arc of Season 3. As I see it, the season unfolds in four separate acts (on five DVDs). Act 1: Episodes 1-4 (concluding with “Lines in the Sand”), followed by the bridging episode “Fools for Love.” Act 2 (also known as the “Tritter Arc” among fans was) was bridged into Act 3 with “One Day One Room,” which concluded with “Fetal Position.” “Airborne” led fans into the season’s final act. The following “road map” is intended to guide you through some of the glorious subtext and motivations (as I saw them) that suffused the series’s third season. These are the things that can be easily missed in casual viewing, but that draw me back to this show week after week and viewing after viewing. Act I–The Happiness Scale. The season started out hopefully for Dr. House, in the aftermath of his near-fatal shooting and subsequent treatment with the veterinary drug ketamine, a radical procedure that would, if it worked, end House’s pain to the point where he could exercise, do physical therapy, and regain the use of his leg. Side note: This is why you should also watch Season 2 before Season 3. We first meet the new (and maybe improved) Season 3 House all sweaty and running! Pain free and cane-free! However, House’s Season 2 finale hallucination had convinced him that “meaning” was lacking in his miserable, lonely existence. And Season 3, as much as anything, is about House’s search for meaning and humanity - and for healing. House’s Season 3 journey is also about change–change that is within his control, and change that is not. But from the start, House is at a loss as to how to insert meaning into his life. So much of season 3 is about things that House cannot control, such as the terrible disappointment of the ketamine treatment’s failure. There is a devastating scene in Episode 3 (”Cane and Able”) where House tries to push himself on a treadmill in the dead of night. He’s in terrible pain, desperate, trying to deny the pain its final victory. Then there is the tragedy of that episode’s final scene, made even more tragic by the musical backdrop of the song “Gravity,” as House seeks out the familiarity of his cane, his face awash with defeat. Season 3, Act I concludes with “Lines in the Sand,” as House tries to understand how parents could devote themselves to an autistic child. As he had wondered about the patient’s wife in the season premiere, so, too, he wonders how the boy’s parents can be fulfilled by the all-consuming task of raising their needy son. What is the meaning they derive from it? Are they happy? House connects with the autistic boy, and for his efforts is rewarded with a gift that I think both stuns and moves him. It is also in this episode that House engages in what appears to be a power struggle with the Dean of Medicine, Lisa Cuddy (who alternately tries to both control and protect Dr. House), over something seemingly trivial - the replacement of House’s bloodstained carpet - that actually gets to the heart of House’s control issues. That carpet was something he could control when everything else in his life was spiraling away from him. It had become, in effect, his anchor. He doesn’t want it replaced. Act II–Les Miserables. As Act II unfolds, things spiral completely out of House’s control. He offends the wrong patient, a vindictive detective who sees House’s relationship with vicodin as a menace to society. House has found his own personal Javert. He sees Detective Michael Tritter (played by David Morse) simply as a bully. If you ignore a bully, House postulates, he will go away to harass an easier score. House’s refusal to deal with Tritter as a serious threat digs him into even deeper trouble, sweeping everyone around him into the maelstrom. But through this personal nightmare, House still endeavors to come to terms with the role of “meaning” in his life and in others’. The episodes “Son of Coma Guy” and “Merry Little Christmas” are specific examples of House’s continued journey. In “Son of Coma Guy,” House helps a man (played by John Laroquette) make sense of his own tragedy by enabling the man to make the ultimate sacrifice. It’s a poignant moment, driven not by ego or the solving a diagnostic riddle, but by respect for one person’s desire to make his death meaningful. House, who is often accused of not caring for anyone but himself and having no interest in a patient beyond solving a diagnostic puzzle, risks his career and his freedom by assisting the man’s suicide at a time when, had Detective Tritter found out, it would have ramped up House’s legal difficulties exponentially. The second act of Season 3 also explores the value House places on being “normal,” picking up on a thread from “Lines in the Sand.” House decries being “inside the circle” and the “circle queens,” who endeavor to re-mold anyone “outside the circle” (as House sees himself) to fit inside it. House appears to revel in his uniqueness, his outsider status a badge of honor. In “Son of Coma Guy,” he romanticizes a Japanese Buraku (outcast) physician he knew as a kid living in Japan as his role model for becoming a doctor himself. “Merry Little Christmas” is the first of several episodes where House helps give another outsider–another “freak” like him–the chance of a normal life. And it becomes clearer and clearer that this is something House seeks for himself. This theme echoes the Season 2 finale, “No Reason,” in which House ultimately decides to risk his genius for a “normal” life. The encounter with Tritter (and the nearly tragic events of “Merry Little Christmas”) lead to House’s voluntary stay in a drug rehab program. But we are led to assume, by House’s own words, that neither rehab nor his brush with the law have any effect on the good doctor. The Tritter arc bridges to Act III with “One Day One Room,” which contradicts the assumption that House was left unchanged by his encounter with Detective Tritter. I think rehab put House in a particularly vulnerable emotional place, despite his best efforts. And it is at this vulnerable time that Eve, a young rape victim, enters into his sphere. She simply “wants to talk” to House - and only to House. But he resists connecting with her, questioning why she would even want to connect with him, until he can no longer push back. And when she wears down his resistance, getting deeply under his skin, House reveals to her that he had been physically (and probably emotionally) abused by his marine pilot father Although being an abuse survivor doesn’t come close to fully explaining House’s motivations, personality, or behavior, it does begin to explain why he so very much needs to be in control of his out-of-control life. I believe that he had never told anyone about the abuse until that moment in a room with a stranger. That, of course, is part of House’s MO: revealing things about himself to perfect strangers (and to us, the viewers) rather than risk doing so to those who know him the best. Act III–Baby Steps. After the heaviness of the first two acts, we get the humor of “Needle in a Haystack” before embarking once again on House’s journey to “normal.” We get hints in “Insensitive” and “Half-Wit” that House is doing a lot of reading about experimental pain management - something to help himself. Wilson believes that House is depressed and needs to begin to reach out to people, rather than relying on drugs and the faint hope of healing himself through radical, experimental, and dangerous procedures. “It will shorten your life,” Wilson tells House in “Insensitive,” regarding an experimental treatment for pain. “Shorter but normal,” House retorts. But in “Fetal Position,” we do witness House begin to reach out, take baby steps. Back in “One Day One Room” House had revealed to Wilson (and to the rape victim) that he visits a jogging park (even though he can no longer run) to “watch and imagine.” In “Fetal Position,” more of his torn inner life is revealed. House makes plans for a vacation that someone in his physical condition cannot possibly take with ease: The Galapagos Islands, Vancouver Island, the Andes. He imagines, he desires. But to actually do would require bigger steps towards change than he is emotionally able, or willing, to make. Act IV–Resignation. Season 3’s final act is fueled by Foreman’s decision that he has no stomach for House’s game. He sees himself in House (I don’t, but, hey, I’m only a fan) and doesn’t like what he sees: a cold, misanthropic, unemotional machine. No heart; no soul. Meanwhile, House continues his baby steps towards change. Whether they are fueled by the antidepressants Wilson was surreptitiously slipping him for at least one or two episodes, who knows? But House allows himself the pleasure of a young woman’s company and an ongoing flirtation with Cuddy, something he would have never done two years ago, or even one year ago. Our change-averse, out of control doctor has edged closer and closer to becoming part of society. Then, in the finale, House does something we’ve never seen him do: kick back and relax with a patient’s spouse. The scene towards the end of the episode perfectly bookends the season premiere, in which House had nearly forced himself to spend time with his family, trying awkwardly to access his own humanity. As he told Wilson, “I didn’t even know how I was supposed act.” But in the finale, he has, in the end, resolved that issue, as he enjoys tequila and cigars with the patient’s husband, keeping watch on the man’s recovering wife. This would not be a review of mine if I didn’t make special note of the extraordinary Mr. Hugh Laurie, OBE. His portrayal of one of the most prickly and difficult characters ever written for network television is breathtaking in every episode. He is a joy to watch as he deftly tells House’s story. He so completely embodies the character, and is so completely in the moment in every scene, that every episode is simply a master’s master class. Three words to conclude: buy it. Today. (originally published at Blogcritics.org) good LOVE IT! House problems? Although the main plot of each episode still is an unsolvable medical case and House still is a jolly, painridden misanthropist, the sub plots plays a larger role in series 3. House is about to land in prison and lose his medical license when he insults a policeman (played excellently by David Morse) who in turn goes out of his way to nail House. The drama and tension between House’s underlings also raises to new levels ending the series in a true cliffhanger. This is all very nice, but I think the sub plots get a little too much attention in series 3 and the drama gets a bit too dramatic. I think they painted themselves in a corner with the ending of series 3, which will be very hard to get out of in a plausible way for series 4. Series 3 is, however, still seriously good entertainment. Hugh Laurie makes sure of that on his own. It is just not entirely as good as series 1 and 2, is all. But the difference is more akin to an Aston Martin being a better car than a Jaguar. That dosen’t mean that the Jag is bad car, does it? Very high recommendations. A good-looking man with only one redeeming quality…
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| The Office - Season One starring Steve Carell, John Krasinski, Jenna Fischer, Rainn Wilson, B.J. Novak |
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Customer Reviews: Must Watch Television The first season is only 6 episodes, but once you watch this season, you will be hooked forever. Not only does the show present the wittiest humor on television, but there are also significant plot lines to follow as the season develops. My wife, at first, enjoyed the romantic sub-plot between Pam and Jim, and now she is as hooked on the show as I am. Whether you enjoy sarcastic, sardonic humor or just great television, this DVD and indeed the entire Office Series is a must buy. New “The Office” Fan Season 1 A wonderful introduction to one of the best sitcoms currently available The humor is a little drier than in sequential seasons, but this is still a great way to begin the series. Highly recommended for any fan, as well as pretty much anyone else who likes to laugh. Painfully Funny (4.5 Stars) Season 2 is slightly better than this brief season, and has many more episodes to watch. That’s why this can’t get 5 stars, even though it might deserve it.
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