Author: BO

  • Blu-ray Review – Ultimate Mars Challenge

    Mars Rover Curiosty Ultimate Mars Challenge

    The quest to unlock the mystery of Mars has bewitched scientists for
    over 50 years, dating back to early probe discoveries of the 1960s. It's
    a planet of untold resources and possible life, yet exploring efforts
    with rovers have only managed to scrape the dust off the surface. Enter
    Curiosity, a behemoth of a rover that was launched in 2011 in an effort
    to send a machine skyward capable of doing a little more than to simply
    collect soil samples. Here was a work of engineering mastery, with
    drills, wheels, and cameras able to observe and tour Mars in ways
    previous thought unimaginable. And while the rover made its miraculous
    touchdown on the red planet in 2012, the story of Curiosity begins with
    its construction — a concerted effort to build a machine durable enough
    to withstand the harsh elements of an alien landscape. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Escape from Planet Earth

    ESCAPE FROM PLANET EARTH Still 1

    As low impact CG-animated moviemaking goes, “Escape from Planet Earth”
    is surprisingly persistent when it comes to staging mind-numbing
    mediocrity. The potential for a rip-roaring alien adventure is there for
    the taking, but the production doesn’t bother, instead recycling beats
    of irreverence, action, and sentiment from other, better pictures. It’s a
    drag, but a needlessly stupid one, begging on bleeding knees for
    younger audiences to fall in love with it, which translates to emphatic
    voice work, extended slapstick routines, and a precocious child
    character meant to act as a surrogate for the nosepickers. And just to
    make sure the feature radiates complete nonsense, every time a character
    falls in “Escape from Planet Earth,” there’s a fart sound effect piped
    in. Surely your children would rather watch “Argo” instead, right? Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Would You Rather

    WOULD YOU RATHER Brittany Snow

    Out of all the horror productions that flood the market every year, it
    takes a special idea and level of execution to catch attention. Basic
    shock value is no longer enough to pass muster. “Would You Rather” isn’t
    blessed with a comfy budget or particularly strong actors, but there’s a
    suffocating feeling of suspense and personal ruin carrying the
    proceedings along, with a healthy amount of tension to savor. It’s a
    humdinger of a picture at times, guaranteed to rile up even the most
    jaded viewer, while presenting in interesting, if incomplete, portrait
    of human nature as it’s faced with a cold reality of choice and
    survival. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Last Gladiators

    LAST GLADIATORS Still 1

    Last year saw the release of “Goon,” a hockey comedy (starring Seann
    William Scott and Liev Schreiber) that took special interest in the job
    of the enforcer, a man recruited to provide violent protection for
    players, picking fights with anyone to claim dominance on and off the
    ice. It’s a genuinely funny picture with an amusing ugliness, but
    there’s an undeniable dark side to the profession that wasn’t
    illuminated in full. Director Alex Gibney picks up the slack with “The
    Last Gladiators,” a sobering documentary on the true price of this NHL
    fight club, featuring interviews with a few of its most notorious
    participants. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The End of Love

    END OF LOVE Mark Webber

    At the risk of coming off cold-hearted, I admit I wasn’t moved by Mark
    Webber’s “The End of Love.” It’s too incomplete and calculated to truly
    engage emotions, though it’s not without a few surprises, chiefly in the
    performance department. Webber appears to be making an audition tape
    with his second directorial effort, using screen time to display a range
    of moods and dramatic encounters that could go on to secure future jobs
    for the actor, never quite gelling as a film of its own. Still,
    elements of note do break through the artificiality, keeping “The End of
    Love” more interesting than infuriatingly self-promoting, as it’s
    inclined to be on occasion. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Spiders

    SPIDERS Still 1

    “Spiders” is a latest attempt to bring the creature feature explosion of
    the 1950s to the modern age, and the newest example of why the genre
    should remain in stasis, or perhaps regulated to the intentional
    ridiculousness of basic cable productions. While giant spiders rampaging
    around New York City sound like an amusing, potentially thrilling night
    at the movies, “Spiders” doesn’t have the budget, the talent, or the
    ingenuity to really explore the potential of the premise.
    Disappointingly backlot-bound and teeming with halfhearted chase
    sequences, the effort is stale and repetitive, failing to create a
    worthy and suitably diverting cinematic panic. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Playroom

    PLAYROOM Still 2

    “The Playroom” is a disappointing film with an intriguing premise.
    Dealing with insecurities and marital dissolution in the 1970s, it’s
    fair to compare the feature to Ang Lee’s 1997 effort, “The Ice Storm,”
    which also mined the same material, but to greater effect. “The
    Playroom” doesn’t share the same narrative drive or depth of emotion,
    instead coasting on a tedious wave of anticlimactic incidents, weaving
    metaphorical content with half-realized melodramatic confrontations.
    It’s a misfire from screenwriter Gretchen Dyer and director Julia Dyer,
    who can’t connect the puzzle pieces, resulting in a movie of attentive
    performances working through ill-defined storytelling. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – A Good Day to Die Hard

    A GOOD DAY TO DIE HARD Bruce Willis

    With 2007’s “Live Free or Die Hard,” the once venerable franchise hit a
    shocking creative low, thwacked with a bout of amnesia that prevented
    the picture from recalling what made the previous three installments of
    the series so special to action film fans. It didn’t walk and talk like a
    “Die Hard” production, generating immense disappointment after waiting
    12 long years for the return of iconic screen cowboy, John McClane.
    Turns out, the worst was yet to come, with “A Good Day to Die Hard”
    effectively killing off the brand name with an asinine, immobile feature
    that’s dripping with trendy cinematography and toxic banter, while a
    visibly bored Bruce Willis hobbles through this dud, putting in the
    least amount of effort possible. “A Good Day to Die Hard” isn’t just a
    lousy movie, it’s the cement shoes on a once amazing collection of
    movies. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Beautiful Creatures

    BEAUTIFUL CREATURES Still 3

    “Beautiful Creatures” explores a romance between a slack-jawed mortal
    and a magical being, it features characters performing spells and
    dealing with a lifelong burden of destiny, and a few of the participants
    sport wild outfits and colorful hairdos. The movie is also based on a
    blockbuster series of young adult books. Sound a little familiar? That’s
    the idea, with the producers clearly hoping such formula will attract
    an audience aching for screen adventure now that “Harry Potter” and
    “Twilight” have ended, and “The Hunger Games” is between installments.
    Thankfully, “Beautiful Creatures” has a little more on its mind than
    simply rehashing stale fantasy fodder, but the pressure to distill the
    2009 book by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl proves to be trouble for
    writer/director Richard LaGravenese, who’s overwhelmed by the challenge
    once the film reaches its second half. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Safe Haven

    SAFE HAVEN Josh Duhamel

    At this point, it’s fruitless to fight the Nicholas Sparks formula,
    having already serviced hits such as “The Notebook,” while also worked
    into pictures like “Nights in Rodanthe” and last year’s “The Lucky One.”
    The man has a devoted fanbase, those who adore breezy North Carolina
    beachside locations, dewy love between opposites, and wildly implausible
    turns of fate that kick on the melodramatic afterburners. “Safe Haven”
    (adapted from the 2010 novel) pours neatly into the same mold, only here
    there’s more of a prominent thriller element that mirrors Nancy Price’s
    1987 book, “Sleeping with the Enemy” (turned into hit film in 1991),
    employing even more proven formula to strengthen the proven formula. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Life

    LIFE Eddie Murphy Martin Lawrence

    In 1999, the pairing of Martin Lawrence and Eddie Murphy was considered a
    major event. While the two already worked together in
    1992's"Boomerang," "Life" caught the pair during a celebratory career
    run, with Murphy riding high on the success of "The Nutty Professor" and
    "Doctor Doolittle," while Lawrence was burning off his "Bad Boys"
    goodwill, developing his transition from sidekick tomfoolery to leading
    man responsibility. This collision of comedic spirits creates an
    interesting atmosphere of improvisational skill in "Life," though the
    movie itself feels short-sheeted, without a full sense of the titular
    experience, despite a premise that could reasonably carry a pleasing
    episodic narrative. Laughs are found in the film, supplied by its varied
    cast and director Ted Demme's patience, but "Life" is far from
    satisfying, only masterminding a few compelling scenes of character
    interaction and conflict before it's buried back in the screenplay,
    which never figures out exactly what it wants to be, often content to
    permit star power to carry the story along. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Queen of Versailles

    THE QUEEN OF VERSAILLES David Siegel

    David Siegel took the real estate world by storm when he founded
    Westgate Resorts, a timeshare company based out of Orlando, Florida that
    quickly grew in stature and profit with its slick sales techniques and
    luxurious accommodations. Soon spawning multiple properties around
    America, Westgate blossomed into a billion-dollar business, peaking five
    years ago when the average vacationer could easily borrow money to
    purchase their dream getaway. The corporation permitted David a lavish
    lifestyle, a trophy wife in Jackie, and a family of eight children. The
    man could buy anything his heart desired, and he did, culminating in the
    construction of Versailles, a 90,000-square-foot home in Orlando
    inspired by a vacation to France. In 2007, this cavernous dwelling
    sounded like a great idea. In 2010, the unfinished domicile came to
    represent everything that soured in David's life after the financial
    collapse of 2008. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Magic of Belle Isle

    MAGIC OF BELLE ISLE Morgan Freeman

    The direction of Rob Reiner's career has been quite curious as of late.
    After scoring a major hit with 2007's "The Bucket List," the helmer has
    retreated into smaller films of a more wholesome nature, including
    2010's unexpectedly tedious family offering, "Flipped." "The Magic of
    Belle Isle" furthers Reiner's newfound interests in unexceptional
    entertainment on a slightly more victorious note, though the picture
    isn't something that demands attention. Better with intimacy than
    artifice, the movie shines intermittently, holding out hope that Reiner
    will wake up before the feature concludes and deliver a string of
    amazing scenes. Instead, "Belle Isle" contains very little magic, at
    least the sustained kind. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Top Gun: The IMAX 3D Experience

    TOP GUN Tom Cruise

    Looking to promote an upcoming Blu-ray release,
    Paramount has decided to make over the 1986 blockbuster “Top Gun” with
    some 3D mascara and IMAX blush, hoping to entice the faithful to once
    again pay money for a movie I assume most know by heart at this point.
    Indeed, the need for speed has returned to theaters for an exclusive
    one-week run, and while the takeoffs and landings show incredible
    dimension, the Kenny Loggins is cranked, and the roar of the jet engines
    could loosen fillings, it’s still the same old “Top Gun,” retaining
    every frame of ridiculousness and emphatic acting that turned the Don
    Simpson/Jerry Bruckheimer production into a legend. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Identity Thief

    IDENTITY THIEF Jason Bateman Melissa McCarthy

    I don’t believe I’ve come across a screenplay as fundamentally flawed as
    “Identity Thief” in quite some time. It’s a comedy that’s not really
    much of a comedy, and it forces the audience to sympathize with a
    monster of a woman, even while she shows no remorse for her awful
    crimes. If there was some type of comedic mayhem in play, with
    characters tossed around the frame for a breezy 80 minute sit, perhaps
    the feature could’ve skated by on delicious madness. Instead, “Identity
    Thief” stops for violence and tears as it lumbers through nearly two
    hours of strident performances and faux heart, convinced there’s a soul
    in here worth the laborious effort to find it. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Side Effects

    SIDE EFFECTS Rooney Mara

    If there’s any filmmaker working today who should go after the
    labyrinthine pharmaceutical industry, it’s Steven Soderbergh. A helmer
    who enjoys the challenges of cinematic control and thematic precision,
    Soderbergh knows how to wield a whip. Unfortunately, “Side Effects” is a
    mystery with only a fringe appreciation of pills and the process of
    medical zombification, using the elements as a Trojan Horse to smuggle
    in a routine thriller that sinisterly slides into view after a
    particularly haunting opening half. While it seems like material with a
    lot on its mind about the state of the world, “Side Effects” would
    rather work out an implausible scheme of betrayals, robbing the audience
    of the agitation they deserve. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Sound City

    SOUND CITY Buckingham Nicks

    “Sound City” is more of a rabid appreciation for the life and times of
    Sound City Studios (located in Los Angeles) than a crisp documentary of
    its history. However, the raw energy works in the movie’s favor, zipping
    along at top speed as its worships iconic music created sparingly,
    preferring talent over touch-ups. It’s a fan film from musician Dave
    Grohl, who directs and appears in the effort, straining to impart his
    enthusiasm for the essentials of musical recording, fetishizing a dumpy
    studio located in an industrial park that gave the world sonic booms
    delivered by bands such as Fleetwood Mac, Nirvana, Rage Against the
    Machine, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, and Metallica. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The ABCs of Death

    ABCs OF DEATH Dog

    “The ABCs of Death” is an unusual experiment in omnibus filmmaking, but
    its uniqueness doesn’t wash away its persistent unpleasantness. Looking
    to shock, tickle, and horrify its audience, the production bends over
    backward to be the vilest movie of 2013, and it succeeds in many cases.
    However, being unrepentantly ugly isn’t enough to support two hours of
    twisted entertainment, and while there is a handful of highlights to
    hold out hope that the feature may be coming to its senses, the majority
    of the effort is either deathly dull, superhumanly moronic, or just
    plain angry for reasons best communicated to a therapist. If “The ABCs
    of Death” doesn’t put you to sleep, it’ll have you repeatedly lunging
    for the fast-forward button. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – 56 Up

    56 UP Still 1

    It’s been an extraordinary journey for director Michael Apted and his
    longstanding “Up” series of documentaries. It’s a singular event that’s
    managed to carry on for decades, arriving at its latest stop, “56 Up.”
    We return to familiar faces and places with the new effort, catching up
    with individuals who’ve been followed on film since 1964’s “Seven Up,”
    and with this reintroduction comes an additional inspection of life in
    motion, watching the participants come to terms with their families,
    vocational and educational choices, and their very existence. Absorbing
    as always, “56 Up” has the benefit of age, able to look back on these
    personalities and gather a larger appreciation for their contributions
    to this historic documentary odyssey. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com