RT on DVD: Kite Runner, Stephen King's The Mist Enter Your Homes!
The horror, the horror!
Ample scares abound this week with
Frank Darabont's
latest adaptation of a
Stephen King
tome, The Mist. The big-screen version of bestselling novel
The Kite Runner
also comes to DVD, keeping good company with black romantic comedy
Wristcutters: A Love Story,
Jonathan Demme's
celebrated documentary
Jimmy Carter Man From
Plains, and more.
Stephen King's The Mist
Tomatometer:
69%
Frank Darabont has twice before adapted Stephen King to critical acclaim (The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile) but this time around he may have picked the wrong story. Set in a small town in Maine, The Mist finds a group of townspeople trapped in a grocery store enveloped by a thick, mysterious fog -- vapors that conceal terribly hungry monsters that may or may not be punishments from God. Critics were split on the flick, which stars Thomas Jane and Marcia Gay Harden; while perfectly fine as a creature feature, some thought Darabont failed to seamlessly merge horror pic with message movie. A director commentary, eight deleted scenes, and a Stephen King -- Frank Darabont featurette appear on the standard DVD release; five more featurettes and a black and white version of the film comprise a 2-Disc Special Edition.
The Kite Runner
Tomatometer:
67%
Marc Forster's The Kite Runner has nearly as compelling a production story as the fictional lives of its protagonists, two childhood friends from Afghanistan. Well-to-do Amir is best friends with Hassan, the son of his family's servant, but their friendship is shattered by one pivotal traumatic event. Years later, Amir must come to terms with his childhood act of cowardice and return to Kabul to set things right. Critics gave credit to Runner's strong performances, though at two hours (and with the best of intentions) the film may feel plodding. The filmmakers' decision to film partially in the native Dari language and to evacuate the child actors and their families from Afghanistan were bold choices that make this film all the more intriguing.
Wristcutters: A Love Story
Tomatometer:
66%
Patrick Fugit, Shannyn Sossamon, and Tom Waits (in a supporting role) star in this indie black comedy about suicide victims still searching for answers after death. Lovelorn Zia (Fugit) wakes up to find the afterlife is a vast alternate world of unhappiness (quite like our own), setting off on a road trip when he hears his ex-girlfriend has also arrived. Absurdist and artful -- what Roger Ebert slyly terms "the birth of the Post-Slasher movie" -- Wristcutters tackles a difficult subject but does so bittersweetly. Music by Gogol Bordello perfectly compliments the feeling. A filmmaker commentary, storyboards, making-of, deleted scenes and Fugit's own on-set photo gallery round out the release.
Jimmy Carter Man From
Plains
Tomatometer: 78%
What exactly do presidents do when their four years are up? Some of them, like 39th United States President Jimmy Carter, turn to public service with seemingly more gusto and more freedom then they did while in the Oval Office. The peanut-farming, best-selling author and Nobel Peace Prize winning Carter -- who hails from Plains, Georgia -- only served a single term (1977-1981) as America's leader, but has devoted his post-Presidential life to humanitarian work. Director Jonathan Demme, who went from his directorial debut, Caged Heat, to winning an Oscar for Silence of the Lambs, followed Carter on a book tour for three months to make this documentary, resulting in an intriguing and candid portrait of the former president.
Bonnie and Clyde
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Tomatometer: 93%
Arthur Penn's seminal 1967 classic about real-life criminal couple Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow enjoys a much deserved spot in the annals of film history; now the newly re-mastered cut can enjoy a much deserved spot in your DVD library! Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty star in the revisionist tale of Depression-era criminals Bonnie and Clyde, who shot and robbed their way across America in the 1930s. Penn's comic touch and grisly violence broke new ground in American cinema and influenced generations of filmmakers. Pick up the 2-Disc Special Edition with over two hours of bonus material like a History Channel documentary about Bonnie and Clyde, a making-of featurette, deleted scenes, Beatty's wardrobe tests, and a theatrical trailer; a hardcover collectible photo book and the 1967 original press book come in a separate Collector's Edition.
Sliders:
The Fourth Season
Tomatometer: N/A
Ah, Sliders. Watching Quinn Mallory (Jerry O'Connell) jump between parallel worlds with a homemade but undependable "timer" made for some fun television back in 1995. Cancelled by Fox after its first season, the show was revived thanks to fan intervention; eventually the show would fire Jonathan Rhys-Davies, lose original token girl Wade (Sabrina Lloyd) to an actress-on-actress spat, and inexplicably replace O'Connell with his own brother, Charlie O'Connell (playing Quinn's brother, Colin). But before Sliders lost the original O'Connell -- right when the storylines turned to the awkward Kromagg war -- there was Season Four, out this week on DVD. Re-watch the last starring season of the apex of Jerry O'Connell's career once more!
Stephen King's The Mist
Tomatometer:
69%Frank Darabont has twice before adapted Stephen King to critical acclaim (The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile) but this time around he may have picked the wrong story. Set in a small town in Maine, The Mist finds a group of townspeople trapped in a grocery store enveloped by a thick, mysterious fog -- vapors that conceal terribly hungry monsters that may or may not be punishments from God. Critics were split on the flick, which stars Thomas Jane and Marcia Gay Harden; while perfectly fine as a creature feature, some thought Darabont failed to seamlessly merge horror pic with message movie. A director commentary, eight deleted scenes, and a Stephen King -- Frank Darabont featurette appear on the standard DVD release; five more featurettes and a black and white version of the film comprise a 2-Disc Special Edition.
The Kite Runner
Tomatometer:
67%Marc Forster's The Kite Runner has nearly as compelling a production story as the fictional lives of its protagonists, two childhood friends from Afghanistan. Well-to-do Amir is best friends with Hassan, the son of his family's servant, but their friendship is shattered by one pivotal traumatic event. Years later, Amir must come to terms with his childhood act of cowardice and return to Kabul to set things right. Critics gave credit to Runner's strong performances, though at two hours (and with the best of intentions) the film may feel plodding. The filmmakers' decision to film partially in the native Dari language and to evacuate the child actors and their families from Afghanistan were bold choices that make this film all the more intriguing.
Tomatometer:
66%Patrick Fugit, Shannyn Sossamon, and Tom Waits (in a supporting role) star in this indie black comedy about suicide victims still searching for answers after death. Lovelorn Zia (Fugit) wakes up to find the afterlife is a vast alternate world of unhappiness (quite like our own), setting off on a road trip when he hears his ex-girlfriend has also arrived. Absurdist and artful -- what Roger Ebert slyly terms "the birth of the Post-Slasher movie" -- Wristcutters tackles a difficult subject but does so bittersweetly. Music by Gogol Bordello perfectly compliments the feeling. A filmmaker commentary, storyboards, making-of, deleted scenes and Fugit's own on-set photo gallery round out the release.
Tomatometer: 78%What exactly do presidents do when their four years are up? Some of them, like 39th United States President Jimmy Carter, turn to public service with seemingly more gusto and more freedom then they did while in the Oval Office. The peanut-farming, best-selling author and Nobel Peace Prize winning Carter -- who hails from Plains, Georgia -- only served a single term (1977-1981) as America's leader, but has devoted his post-Presidential life to humanitarian work. Director Jonathan Demme, who went from his directorial debut, Caged Heat, to winning an Oscar for Silence of the Lambs, followed Carter on a book tour for three months to make this documentary, resulting in an intriguing and candid portrait of the former president.
Tomatometer: 93%Arthur Penn's seminal 1967 classic about real-life criminal couple Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow enjoys a much deserved spot in the annals of film history; now the newly re-mastered cut can enjoy a much deserved spot in your DVD library! Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty star in the revisionist tale of Depression-era criminals Bonnie and Clyde, who shot and robbed their way across America in the 1930s. Penn's comic touch and grisly violence broke new ground in American cinema and influenced generations of filmmakers. Pick up the 2-Disc Special Edition with over two hours of bonus material like a History Channel documentary about Bonnie and Clyde, a making-of featurette, deleted scenes, Beatty's wardrobe tests, and a theatrical trailer; a hardcover collectible photo book and the 1967 original press book come in a separate Collector's Edition.
Tomatometer: N/AAh, Sliders. Watching Quinn Mallory (Jerry O'Connell) jump between parallel worlds with a homemade but undependable "timer" made for some fun television back in 1995. Cancelled by Fox after its first season, the show was revived thanks to fan intervention; eventually the show would fire Jonathan Rhys-Davies, lose original token girl Wade (Sabrina Lloyd) to an actress-on-actress spat, and inexplicably replace O'Connell with his own brother, Charlie O'Connell (playing Quinn's brother, Colin). But before Sliders lost the original O'Connell -- right when the storylines turned to the awkward Kromagg war -- there was Season Four, out this week on DVD. Re-watch the last starring season of the apex of Jerry O'Connell's career once more!
Related Items
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Spiderbash writes: on Mar 24 2008 05:23 PM I heard from Friends that the ending to the mist was sad. (Reply to this) |
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AFuneralMaker writes: on Mar 24 2008 05:38 PM The ending of Mist is both incredible and appropriate. Many people didn't appreciate it for what it was. Too many movie goers want this jumps scare bullcrap, but The Mist gives you a story with just enough information to understand what's going on. There is also a great deal of humanity in the film, which is really what I think it is about. Great flick. (Reply to this) |
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DaHypr1 writes: on Mar 24 2008 05:56 PM the ending to the mist was fantastic. it was one of the only movies that made me love it and hate it at the same time. marcia gay harden's character was brilliant, I've never hated a movie character more lol. great movie (Reply to this) |
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Some guy you dont know writes: on Mar 24 2008 06:36 PM Anyone who dosen't like The Mist's ending is an idiot. (Reply to this) |
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smartmoviekid writes: on Mar 24 2008 06:48 PM The mist's ending was compelling, depressing, and facinating all at the same time. i wanted to cry seriously, while appriciating the ending all at the same time. (Reply to this) |
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Talkintrumpeter2 writes: on Mar 24 2008 07:14 PM I loved the mist. I think it is one of the best stephen king adaptations out there (Reply to this) |
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Some guy you dont know writes: on Mar 24 2008 07:15 PM Yo, by the way, RT, you made a mistake. You have The Mist listed as 57%. It's really 69. (Reply to this) |
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Alex Vo writes: on Mar 24 2008 07:34 PM In reply to this comment (#1651593) If chins could kill... Thanks, we've fixed the error. (Reply to this) |
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jokerboy1991 writes: on Mar 24 2008 08:30 PM The Mist was ausome (Great ending), I cant wait to get the 2-Disc with the BLACK and WHITE version. (Reply to this) |
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rle4lunch writes: on Mar 25 2008 09:15 AM I agree, this movie did make you love/hate it at the end. The book ending was a little too mellow for me. (Reply to this) |
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Some guy you dont know writes: on Mar 25 2008 12:22 PM Now it's at 70%. Awesome. (Reply to this) |
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unbreakable_samurai writes: on Mar 25 2008 12:32 PM I'm really looking forward to renting Wristcutters, pissed me off when we never got it in theaters. (Reply to this) |
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jokerboy1991 writes: on Mar 25 2008 02:53 PM Just watch the BLACK and WHITE version its ausome. (Reply to this) |
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quietus28 writes: on Mar 25 2008 03:14 PM The Mist was typical Stephen King. It had a bunch of people trapped and killing each other off with personality conflicts, and, in typical King fashion, it glossed over the most interesting plot elements, namely where the damn mist even came from. Oh, and it had a spider, too, another King staple. Ultimately disappointing. (Reply to this) |
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Some guy you dont know writes: on Mar 25 2008 03:55 PM In reply to this comment (#1652685) How much better is it then the color version? (Reply to this) |
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Some guy you dont know writes: on Mar 25 2008 03:55 PM In reply to this comment (#1652747) You have no idea about what you're talking about. Nobody listen to him. (Reply to this) |
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jokerboy1991 writes: on Mar 25 2008 04:24 PM In reply to this comment (#1652799) THE BLACK and WHITE version just has this 50's/60's HORROR look like NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD. I just felt like it was a great throwback to those 50's and 60's horror pics. To me it made the creatures look cooler to. Dont say I dont know what I'm not talking about, maybe you should watch it BRUCE instead of writing in your Diary how hot ZOEY is. (Reply to this) |
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Some guy you dont know writes: on Mar 25 2008 06:07 PM It's Zooey. And thanks for the traffic and info though. (Reply to this) |
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jokerboy1991 writes: on Mar 25 2008 06:47 PM In reply to this comment (#1652965) Jee Wizz sorry I spelled your womans name wrong, you are right though she is hot. (Reply to this) |
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Poor_Frisco writes: on Mar 25 2008 10:22 PM glad to see so much love for the mist. i saw it in theaters on a gamble, not expecting much and was very pleasantly surprised. far from perfect, but the flaws is what makes it so compelling. i really enjoyed and will probably be picking it up soon. hopefully it builds a bigger following on DVD (Reply to this) |
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