Disc 2

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Special Edition DVDs, bonus features, outtakes, upgrades and more
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You've probably seen it on the bestsellers list already, but The Dark Knight, the biggest movie of the year (of the last several years really, since Titanic), is coming out on December 9 and is now available for pre-order on two-disc Blu-ray, two-disc special edition DVD, widescreen single-disc DVD, and full-screen single-disc DVD.  Here are some advance specs we've gotten for the special features:

Blu-ray:

  • Movie with Focus Points (picture in picture)
  • BD Live
  • Gotham Uncovered: Creation of a Scene: Director Christopher Nolan and creative collaborators unmask the incredible detail and planning behind the film, including stunt staging, filming in IMAX®, and the new Bat-suit and Bat-pod.
  • Batman Tech: The incredible gadgets and tools (in HD)
  • Batman Unmasked: The Psychology of The Dark Knight: Delve into the psyche of Bruce Wayne and the world of Batman through real-world psychotherapy (in HD)   
  • Gotham Tonight: 6 episodes of Gotham Cable's premier news program 
  • The Galleries: The Joker cards, concept art, poster art, production stills, trailers and TV spots
  • Digital Copy of the feature film

Two-disc DVD:

  • Gotham Uncovered: How Christopher Nolan and his team developed the new Bat-suit and Bat-pod and composer Hans Zimmer musically characterized the Joker’s reign of chaos.
  • The Dark Knight IMAX® Scenes: View these 6 action-packed sequences--shot on the largest format possible--in their original IMAX framing, just as they were intended
  • Gotham Tonight: 6 episodes of Gotham Cable's premier news program 
  • The Galleries: Poster art and production stills
  • Digital Copy of the feature film

--David

Related links in our blog:

Whilst enjoying the third season of Felicity, one of my favorite series of all time, I stumbled upon a bonus feature I'd never checked out: The "Docuventary"--the name for Sean (Greg Grunberg)'s confessional documentary filming all season in hopes of getting aired on TV--makes a welcome reappearance, with Grunberg tracking down all the actors after the show had ended to film new interviews. The camera caught the entire cast, including Donald Faison (Tracy) and Scott Foley (Noel) on the set of Scrubs, Ian Gomez (Javier) at a production office, co-creators J.J. Abrams and Matt Reeves, and even Robert Patrick Benedict (Richard).

A couple nuggets from the interviews: Amy Jo Johnson (Julie) revealed that she left the show because her mother had passed away as the show began and the schedule didn't give her a chance to grieve, and Kristen Lehman, who played gunshot victim-turned-Ben-pursuer Avery, says her audition scene was sympathetic, and that she didn't know she was supposed to be a villainess until she got her first script. Keri Russell laments her hair's "awkward growing-out period," and others have a laugh making fun of Scott Speedman's penchance for whispering. Good times. -- Ellen

In topics: Disc 2, TV, Watch this!
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Below are our Significant Seven selections for the Best of the Month. For more about the DVDs on this list, plus our picks for Seven on the Side, visit our Best of the Month store. -- Ellen

Kiss of the Spider Woman (Amazon.com Exclusive)
Starring: William Hurt, Raul Julia
Directed by: Hector Babenco
Significance in Seven Words: Groundbreaking, Oscar-winning indie released for first time







The Counterfeiters

Starring: Karl Markovics, August Diehl
Directed by: Stefan Ruzowitzky
Significance in Seven Words: Best Foreign-Language Film winner also compelling docudrama








The Band's Visit

Starring: Sasson Gabai, Ronit Elkabetz
Directed by: Eran Kolirin
Significance in Seven Words: Egyptian band stuck in "bloody nowhere": Delightful!







In Bruges
Starring: Colin Farrell, Brendan Gleeson
Directed by: Martin McDonagh
Significance in Seven Words: Hit-man comedy is Farrell's best work yet.








Weeds
Starring: Mary-Louise Parker, Elizabeth Perkins
Significance in Seven Words: Third season involves gangs, guns, and chaos.









Centennial
Starring: Robert Conrad, Richard Chamberlain
Significance in Seven Words: 1978 miniseries is 26.5 hours of greatness.









Funny Games
Starring: Naomi Watts, Tim Roth
Significance in Seven Words: Shot-by-shot remake of Haneke's suspense shocks again.

I'm Enchanted by "The D-Files"

by Armchair Commentary at 5:40 PM PDT, March 29, 2008
I really enjoyed Enchanted's parody/homage approach to classic Disney movies, so I was eager to try "The D-Files," a special feature on the Blu-ray disc. It's a game that gives you pop-up questions about which movie is being referred in a certain scene. For example, when Giselle and Robert are out for pizza: which Disney classic also has an Italian-restaurant scene? Or which song is "Happy Working Song" based most closely on? If you pick the correct multiple-choice answer, you jump to an interview with director Kevin Lima or with songwriters Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz, or to a side-by-side comparison with the classic scene. It can be a little frustrating if time expires or if you pick the wrong answer (you can chapter-skip back for another try, but then you don't get to watch the video), and a normal commentary or pop-up-trivia track probably would have been more informative (for example, they point out the cameo by Paige O'Hara, who sang the part of Belle, but not the one by Judy Kuhn, who sang in Pocahontas, and Giselle running through the grass field with her arms outstretched doesn't merit a question--presumably because that's not from a Disney film). But it's a fun feature that kids can participate in, and the classic clips appear to be remastered for high definition. If that's what a Beauty and the Beast Blu-ray is going to look like... well, I can't wait to see it! --David
Watch an exclusive deleted scene from Juno below, or visit our Juno store. --Libby

Amazon Wire #54

by Amazon Wire at 10:01 AM PST, December 19, 2007
This week on Amazon Wire we're talking to Ridley Scott about the new Blade Runner: Ultimate Collector's Edition.

Thanks for listening!

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Old-timers (relatively speaking) might remember that Blade Runner was released very early in the DVD era, but only in a director's cut--if you wanted to see the version you saw in theaters you were out of luck. Now here comes Blade Runner: The Final Cut in one of the most ambitious--and confusing--DVD releases yet. First of all, the Final Cut is what director Ridley Scott says is his definitive version of the movie. But you have many choices in how much Blade Runner you want. You can find complete details in our guide, but here's a quick run-down:
  • Two-Disc Special Edition: has the Final Cut plus a feature-length documentary called Dangerous Days
  • Four-Disc Collector's Edition: same as above, plus a third disc with three additional cuts of the movie (including the theatrical cut with Harrison Ford's narration, the international cut, and the previously available director's cut) and a fourth disc of featurettes and promotional material.
  • Five-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition: same as above, plus a fifth disc with yet another version of the movie (a "workprint" version), all in a plastic Deckard-style limited-edition briefcase with miniature spinner car, origami unicorn, photos, and more.
But that's just for the standard-definition DVD. If you want a high-definition version, you have four more choices:
Well, that's a lot of choices. Yeah, some people may want still more choices, like the five-disc DVD without the briefcase or the Blu-ray and HD DVD versions without the additional cuts. But give Warner credit for offering this many options, pricing them reasonably (especially the versions without the briefcase), and continuing to straddle the fence on high-definition so both Blu-ray and HD DVD camps can enjoy this. Want more info? We talked to Ridley Scott and Sean Young about the movie and the Final Cut, and you can watch it here. --David


It's a truth universally acknowledged that thoughts of Mr. Darcy can put a temporary strain on even the happiest marriages. New editions of Pride & Prejudice (starring Keira Knightley) have just been released, and while we hope Austen fans will continue to enjoy the film, we'd like to offer these reality checks should viewers find themselves on Matthew Macfadyen-overload. (Hint: If you watch the film once through, then the highlights, then again with commentary all in a 24-hour period you should put down the remote and begin treatment immediately.)

1. The courtship period is not real life. Sure, in the beginning it's all "I scarcely dared hope that you could love me," but sooner than later it turns into "I scarcely dared hope that you would pick Fitzwilliam Jr. up from riding practice--and you didn't. Thanks for nothing!"
2. How well do we really know Darcy? It's not like we've spent much quality time together. A couple of balls? Those few days when Jane was sick? If we got to know him better we might find that he was into puns and cockfighting.
3. In-law trouble. We've all had mixed feelings about our in-laws from time to time, but imagine Mrs. Bennett and Lady Catherine sitting down together for Christmas dinner. That's a two bromide night if there ever was one.
4. Huge castle=management challenge. What do you think Lizzie's going to do all day? Shopping, then salon, then lunch with Charlotte? Wrong. There's menu planning, spring cleaning for 96 rooms, and talk about the HR issues. Why is it so hard to find a decent footman??? It isn't rocket science!
5. Your husband has his own acts of heroism. Maybe he never rescued your little sister from a lifetime of shame, but he did do almost all the dinner dishes three nights ago.

If all else fails, encourage your mate to brood every once and while. The secret to romance is mystery, so whether it's the office or the playoffs, keeping all that pain inside--now and then--can go a long way.

--Leah

In topics: Drama, Comedy, Disc 2
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"Floating Head" Crimes, Part II

by Armchair Commentary at 12:10 PM PDT, September 26, 2007
In a previous post we looked at cool theatrical posters that disappeared when the DVD needed to be marketed, where conceptual art gets replaced by the dreaded "floating heads."

Here's another example. Does this movie not seem more intriguing when it looks like this:


instead of this?





But there's a silver lining: Thankfully, they at least kept it for the blu-ray version...



Guess that's what you spend the extra $10 on... -- Ellen
Comic-Con's over, but the discussions have just begun: Has it gotten too big/too commercial/too (insert complaint here)? Is the TV show/movie created by/starring (insert talented and/or gorgeous person here) really a must-see? I'll dive right in with some highlights:

Hollywood Reporter declared it the year of TV, and I can't disagree. The Lost session was huge (spoiler post coming next -- consider yourself warned) and the Heroes session huger, with thousands of people inside and hundreds outside, dying to hear tidbits like the fact that Kevin Smith will write and direct the first episode of the spinoff Heroes: Origins. Expect new episodes of the main show starting Sept. 24.

At the Warner Brothers session, comics legend Frank Miller addressed the notion that 300 (which will be released on DVD and video download Tuesday) is somehow about George Bush and the Middle East: "It's a wonderful story and you can politicize it, but why make it boring?" Director Zack Snyder (who also directed Dawn of the Dead) lightened the mood by describing a possible sequel to 300: "They come back as zombie Spartans!"

A little later, famed director Ridley Scott promised that he hasn't "pulled a George Lucas" with Blade Runner: The Final Cut. However, he admitted to reshooting the scene where Zora (Joanna Cassidy) smashes through panes of glass, replacing a stunt double with an apparently ageless Cassidy herself, who told fans: "What an opportunity it was to come back 25 years later and put on the costume -- and have it fit!" 

The newest (and ostensibly, last) version of the 1982 sci-fi classic will come out as part of a five-disc "ultimate" set Dec. 18, featuring  nearly an hour of deleted scenes, the "workprint" version, a new documentary about the making of the film ("It was a bitch," Harrison Ford said in a clip shared with eager Comic-Conners). Oh, and -- spoiler alert -- Scott re-confirmed what most hardcore fans already seem to agree upon: He thinks Deckard (Ford's character) is a replicant. And if he had an idea for a sequel, he'd already have made it. Hmmmm .... zombie replicants?

-- Stephanie Reid-Simons, TV Freak