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Plymptoons – The Complete Early Works of Bill Plympton

October 23rd, 2011 hotmovies No comments

Plymptoons – The Complete Early Works of Bill Plympton Review

Plymptoons – The Complete Early Works of Bill Plympton Feature

  • Bill Plympton brings more of his wonderful creations to the screen with this collection of short cartoons and commercials. The bulk of the material here comes from Plympton’s early career, but also includes “Your Face,” which was nominated for an Academy Award in 1988. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: ANIMATION Rating: NR Age: 767685976531 UPC: 767685976531 Manufacture

Plymptoons – The Complete Early Works of Bill Plympton Overview

Featuring more than 20 acclaimed, award-winning shorts plus never-before-seen footage, PLYMPTOONS compiles the best and the brightest work of Academy Award(r)-nominated animator and cult-hero Bill Plympton, master of the animated black comedy world. During a career spanning over 30 years, Plympton’s creativity and talent have earned him countless accolades and a worldwide cult following. This uproariously funny collection brings together the very best of his early work including commercials, animated spots and short films. P A journey through this political-cartoonist-turned-animator’s canvas of animation, PLYMPTOONS: THE COMPLETE EARLY WORKS OF BILL PLYMPTON offers up a delicious dose of mutated humor, from Plympton’s first film created during his college days, “Self Portrait”, to the Academy Award(r)-nominated “Your Face”, his first solo effort.
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[if ]

Plymptoons – The Complete Early Works of Bill Plympton Specifications

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The Andy Griffith Show – The Complete Fifth Season

October 16th, 2011 hotmovies No comments

The Andy Griffith Show – The Complete Fifth Season Review

The Andy Griffith Show – The Complete Fifth Season Overview

Hailed as “one of the greatest television shows of all time” by TV Guide, The Andy Griffith Show delighted audiences with its simple values and down-home humor. Now all 32 episodes with its landmark 5th season are available on DVD! Catch up with Sheriff Andy Taylor (Andy Griffith), his son Opie (Ron Howard), his bumbling deputy Barney (Don Knotts), Aunt Bee (Frances Bavier) and the rest of the gang in this classic collection that includes many fan-favorite episodes. This season also features memorable guest appearances by Don Rickles (Toy Story, Casino), Gavin MacLeod (The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Love Boat) and Jerry Van Dyke (Coach) and some of the funniest moments in the show’s time-honored history.
[endif]
[if When did Mayberry turn into Potterville? In IThe Andy Griffith Show/I's fifth season, Opie (Ronny Howard) buys silk stockings for an older woman, and publishes all of Mayberry's gossip in a scandal sheet. Sheriff Andy Taylor (Griffith) is accused of gross malfeasance. A former beau of Aunt Bee's tries to shake Andy down for 0. Bee herself (Frances Bavier) is a victim of a carny purse-snatching ring. And recidivists Otis (Hal Smith) and Ernest T. (Howard Morris) continue their drinking and rock-throwing unabated. As Bee wails in "Banjo-Playing Deputy," "What's this world coming to?" Not to worry. This is, after all, Mayberry, and Andy still has the patience, understanding and country smarts to restore calm and order. In "TV or Not TV," he sees through bank robbers (led by Gavin MacLeod) posing as a Hollywood film crew. In "Opie and the Carnival," he takes aim at two crooked barkers who have rigged a sharpshooting game. As the sheriff of Mayberry, much of his time is spent bailing out his hapless deputy, Barney Fife (Don Knotts). In "Barney's Uniform," Andy recruits a judo instructor to stand in when Barney is threatened by a disgruntled citizen. p Season 5 marked two notable lasts for this beloved series, which never fell below the Top Seven in the ratings. This was the last season in black and white. More devastating, it was multi-Emmy-winner Knotts' last season as Barney Fife. By the penultimate episode, "Opie and the Carnival," he is just gone, an unceremonious departure for an iconic character so integral to the show's success. That "Banjo-Playing Deputy" in the season finale is Jerry Van Dyke, who might have been a worthy replacement for Knotts. Instead, he reportedly turned down the role to star in his own sitcom, IMy Mother, the Car/I. The rest is TV infamy. By this time, though, IThe Andy Griffith Show/I's best years were behind it. But this season contains at least two classics, "Goodbye Sheriff Taylor," in which Barney is sheriff for a day while Andy interviews for a job in Raleigh, and "The Case of the Punch in the Nose," in which Barney reopens an unresolved 1946 case involving Floyd the Barber and Charley Foley. And with episodes featuring the late Howard Morris' Ernest T. ("The Education of Ernest T."), the Darling family ("The Darling Baby"), Mt. Pilot "fun girls" Skippy and Daphne ("The Arrest of the Fun Girls"), and a guest star turn by Don Rickles ("The Luck of Newton Monroe"), IAndy Griffith Show/I devotees are advised to take the IFifth/I. I--Donald Liebenson/I]

The Andy Griffith Show – The Complete Fifth Season Specifications

When did Mayberry turn into Potterville? In IThe Andy Griffith Show/I’s fifth season, Opie (Ronny Howard) buys silk stockings for an older woman, and publishes all of Mayberry’s gossip in a scandal sheet. Sheriff Andy Taylor (Griffith) is accused of gross malfeasance. A former beau of Aunt Bee’s tries to shake Andy down for 0. Bee herself (Frances Bavier) is a victim of a carny purse-snatching ring. And recidivists Otis (Hal Smith) and Ernest T. (Howard Morris) continue their drinking and rock-throwing unabated. As Bee wails in “Banjo-Playing Deputy,” “What’s this world coming to?” Not to worry. This is, after all, Mayberry, and Andy still has the patience, understanding and country smarts to restore calm and order. In “TV or Not TV,” he sees through bank robbers (led by Gavin MacLeod) posing as a Hollywood film crew. In “Opie and the Carnival,” he takes aim at two crooked barkers who have rigged a sharpshooting game. As the sheriff of Mayberry, much of his time is spent bailing out his hapless deputy, Barney Fife (Don Knotts). In “Barney’s Uniform,” Andy recruits a judo instructor to stand in when Barney is threatened by a disgruntled citizen. p Season 5 marked two notable lasts for this beloved series, which never fell below the Top Seven in the ratings. This was the last season in black and white. More devastating, it was multi-Emmy-winner Knotts’ last season as Barney Fife. By the penultimate episode, “Opie and the Carnival,” he is just gone, an unceremonious departure for an iconic character so integral to the show’s success. That “Banjo-Playing Deputy” in the season finale is Jerry Van Dyke, who might have been a worthy replacement for Knotts. Instead, he reportedly turned down the role to star in his own sitcom, IMy Mother, the Car/I. The rest is TV infamy. By this time, though, IThe Andy Griffith Show/I’s best years were behind it. But this season contains at least two classics, “Goodbye Sheriff Taylor,” in which Barney is sheriff for a day while Andy interviews for a job in Raleigh, and “The Case of the Punch in the Nose,” in which Barney reopens an unresolved 1946 case involving Floyd the Barber and Charley Foley. And with episodes featuring the late Howard Morris’ Ernest T. (“The Education of Ernest T.”), the Darling family (“The Darling Baby”), Mt. Pilot “fun girls” Skippy and Daphne (“The Arrest of the Fun Girls”), and a guest star turn by Don Rickles (“The Luck of Newton Monroe”), IAndy Griffith Show/I devotees are advised to take the IFifth/I. I–Donald Liebenson/I

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The West Wing: The Complete Fifth Season

October 11th, 2011 hotmovies No comments

The West Wing: The Complete Fifth Season Review

The West Wing: The Complete Fifth Season Overview

Follow the drama when the government is temporarily passed from a Democratic Administration to the Republican Speaker of the House, as President Bartlet copes with the kidnapping of his youngest daughter, Zoey.
[endif]
[if Two administrative changes rocked IThe West Wing/I's fifth season. Offscreen, the ship of state steered a tad off-course with the departure of series creator Aaron Sorkin and director Thomas Schalmme. Onscreen, President Josiah Bartlet (Martin Sheen) relinquished the power of his office to Speaker of the House Glenallen Walken (John Goodman) in the wake of his daughter's kidnapping. In the season opener, "7a WF 83429," Josh Lyman (Bradley Whitford) wonders if this wasn't a mistake. What if the citizenry prefer Walken to Bartlet, he ponders. What if Walken comes off more presidential? Is he kidding? Sheen's Bartlet is the president of Hollywood's dreams, and the stuff of Rush Limbaugh's nightmares. (In a character profile included as one of the bonus features on this six-disc set, Bartlet is described as an amalgam of John F. Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, and Bill Clinton!). Not to worry, though, Bartlet is back in the Oval Office by the end of the season's second episode, "The Dogs of War." The next order of business: choosing a vice president to replace the disgraced John Hoynes. Enter Gary Cole as "Bongo Bob" Russell, who, as the season unfolds, will confound misperceptions of him. Hoynes himself (Tim Matheson) returns in "Full Disclosure," in which the former vice president dishes dirt on Bartlet and chief of staff Leo McGrarry (the late John Spencer) in advance of a tell-all book. Formidable and usually unflappable press secretary C. J. has an intensely personal reason to spearhead damage control and thwart Hoynes' publishing plans.p Allison Janney, as C. J. earned IThe West Wing/I's sole Emmy this season. One of her showcase hours is "Access," a format-breaking episode presented as a IFrontline/I-type "day-in-the-life" documentary. Other memorable episodes that helped to right IThe West Wing/I's course include "The Supremes," featuring Glenn Close as a Supreme Court nominee; the battle-of-wills episode, "Shutdown"; "Gaza," in which Donna (Janel Moloney) is severely wounded during a fact-finding mission to the Middle East; and "Memorial Day," a flashback episode that echoes "Bartlet for America" from season 3, and which ends the season on a strong note, and almost make viewers forget the ISesame Street/I Muppet cameos in the episode, "Eppu Si Muove." Almost. I--Donald Liebenson/I]

The West Wing: The Complete Fifth Season Specifications

Two administrative changes rocked IThe West Wing/I’s fifth season. Offscreen, the ship of state steered a tad off-course with the departure of series creator Aaron Sorkin and director Thomas Schalmme. Onscreen, President Josiah Bartlet (Martin Sheen) relinquished the power of his office to Speaker of the House Glenallen Walken (John Goodman) in the wake of his daughter’s kidnapping. In the season opener, “7a WF 83429,” Josh Lyman (Bradley Whitford) wonders if this wasn’t a mistake. What if the citizenry prefer Walken to Bartlet, he ponders. What if Walken comes off more presidential? Is he kidding? Sheen’s Bartlet is the president of Hollywood’s dreams, and the stuff of Rush Limbaugh’s nightmares. (In a character profile included as one of the bonus features on this six-disc set, Bartlet is described as an amalgam of John F. Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, and Bill Clinton!). Not to worry, though, Bartlet is back in the Oval Office by the end of the season’s second episode, “The Dogs of War.” The next order of business: choosing a vice president to replace the disgraced John Hoynes. Enter Gary Cole as “Bongo Bob” Russell, who, as the season unfolds, will confound misperceptions of him. Hoynes himself (Tim Matheson) returns in “Full Disclosure,” in which the former vice president dishes dirt on Bartlet and chief of staff Leo McGrarry (the late John Spencer) in advance of a tell-all book. Formidable and usually unflappable press secretary C. J. has an intensely personal reason to spearhead damage control and thwart Hoynes’ publishing plans.p Allison Janney, as C. J. earned IThe West Wing/I’s sole Emmy this season. One of her showcase hours is “Access,” a format-breaking episode presented as a IFrontline/I-type “day-in-the-life” documentary. Other memorable episodes that helped to right IThe West Wing/I’s course include “The Supremes,” featuring Glenn Close as a Supreme Court nominee; the battle-of-wills episode, “Shutdown”; “Gaza,” in which Donna (Janel Moloney) is severely wounded during a fact-finding mission to the Middle East; and “Memorial Day,” a flashback episode that echoes “Bartlet for America” from season 3, and which ends the season on a strong note, and almost make viewers forget the ISesame Street/I Muppet cameos in the episode, “Eppu Si Muove.” Almost. I–Donald Liebenson/I

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The Royle Family – The Complete First Season

October 2nd, 2011 hotmovies No comments

The Royle Family – The Complete First Season Review

The Royle Family – The Complete First Season Overview

Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 01/16/2007 Rating: Nr
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[if ]

The Royle Family – The Complete First Season Specifications

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Dallas: The Complete First Second Seasons

September 29th, 2011 hotmovies No comments

Dallas: The Complete First Second Seasons Review

Dallas: The Complete First Second Seasons Feature

  • Power, wealth, sex, glorious extravagance. One place has them all – Dallas. This 5-disc set includes all 29 of the hugely entertaining show’s First- and Second-Season Episodes, including a cast reunion special. Patrick Duffy, Victoria Principal and more play Texas sons and daughters whose lives revolve around oil, family and power. And Larry Hagman portrays petroleum magnate J.R. Ewing, whose purs

Dallas: The Complete First Second Seasons Overview

Power, wealth, sex, glorious extravagance. One place has them all – Dallas. This 5-disc set includes all 29 of the hugely entertaining show’s First- and Second-Season Episodes, including a cast reunion special. Patrick Duffy, Victoria Principal and more play Texas sons and daughters whose lives revolve around oil, family and power. And Larry Hagman portrays petroleum magnate J.R. Ewing, whose pursuit of, in no particular order, money and clout knows no limits. PbDVD Features:/bbrbAudio Commentary:/bCommentary featuring Larry Hagman, Charlene Tilton, and creator David JacobsbrbFeaturette:/bSoaptalk Dallas Reunion, SOAPnet special featuring Larry Hagman, Patrick Duffy, Linda Gray, and Charlene Tiltonbr/p
[endif]
[if IDallas: The Complete First and Second Seasons/I is an American equivalent to those British miniseries about historical chapters in that country's royal monarchy. Full of family in-fighting, political intrigue crossed with personal triumph or disappointment, and plenty of sensational infidelities and betrayals, IDallas/I is a captivating story of a wealthy oil family's power and travails. It is also uniquely fun and daringly absurd, albeit with a straight face; this hugely successful, primetime soap opera began in the late 1970s and ran 14 seasons in all, built on a handful of primary relationships that stretch credulity but never descend into self-parody. p Not unexpectedly, IDallas/I begins with a Romeo and Juliet tale that instantly exposes an old feud between two families and strips the civilized veneer from several major characters. Bobby Ewing (Patrick Duffy), youngest of three sons of independent oilman Jock Ewing (Jim Davis), arrives at the Ewing clan's Southfork ranch just outside Dallas, Texas, with a new wife, Pam Barnes Ewing (Victoria Principal). Pam is the daughter of Digger Barnes (David Wayne), an old business rival of Jock's and one-time suitor of the Ewing matriarch, Eleanor (or "Miss Ellie," played by Barbara Bel Geddes). Pam's also the sister of a state senator, Cliff Barnes (Ken Kercheval), whose vendetta against the Ewings is played out in the legislature, imposing costly regulations on their business and holding committee investigations into questionable practices of company president J.R. Ewing (Larry Hagman). Pam's status as the newest Ewing causes an uproar in the family (besides being a Barnes, she also dated the Ewings' genial but lonely foreman, Ray Krebbs, played by Steve Kanaly) and prompts IDallas/I' charming villain, J.R., to make many Iago-like attempts, over the first two seasons, to drive her from Bobby's arms. Pam has a different set of problems with the other, jealous Ewing women, including J.R.'s possibly barren and alcoholic wife, Sue Ellen (Linda Gray), and teenage Lucy (Charlene Tilton), daughter of exiled Ewing son Gary (Ted Shackleford). With new and old resentments flying and everyone deeply suspicious of everyone else's motives (even the ailing Jock doesn't trust J.R.), there's plenty of drama to chew on. Still, storylines are often larger than the sum of these parts, with lots of kidnappings, marital affairs, plane crashes, and shootings ratcheting up suspense. IDallas/I is pure pleasure, a little guilty, perhaps, but not a sin. I--Tom Keogh/I]

Dallas: The Complete First Second Seasons Specifications

IDallas: The Complete First and Second Seasons/I is an American equivalent to those British miniseries about historical chapters in that country’s royal monarchy. Full of family in-fighting, political intrigue crossed with personal triumph or disappointment, and plenty of sensational infidelities and betrayals, IDallas/I is a captivating story of a wealthy oil family’s power and travails. It is also uniquely fun and daringly absurd, albeit with a straight face; this hugely successful, primetime soap opera began in the late 1970s and ran 14 seasons in all, built on a handful of primary relationships that stretch credulity but never descend into self-parody. p Not unexpectedly, IDallas/I begins with a Romeo and Juliet tale that instantly exposes an old feud between two families and strips the civilized veneer from several major characters. Bobby Ewing (Patrick Duffy), youngest of three sons of independent oilman Jock Ewing (Jim Davis), arrives at the Ewing clan’s Southfork ranch just outside Dallas, Texas, with a new wife, Pam Barnes Ewing (Victoria Principal). Pam is the daughter of Digger Barnes (David Wayne), an old business rival of Jock’s and one-time suitor of the Ewing matriarch, Eleanor (or “Miss Ellie,” played by Barbara Bel Geddes). Pam’s also the sister of a state senator, Cliff Barnes (Ken Kercheval), whose vendetta against the Ewings is played out in the legislature, imposing costly regulations on their business and holding committee investigations into questionable practices of company president J.R. Ewing (Larry Hagman). Pam’s status as the newest Ewing causes an uproar in the family (besides being a Barnes, she also dated the Ewings’ genial but lonely foreman, Ray Krebbs, played by Steve Kanaly) and prompts IDallas/I’ charming villain, J.R., to make many Iago-like attempts, over the first two seasons, to drive her from Bobby’s arms. Pam has a different set of problems with the other, jealous Ewing women, including J.R.’s possibly barren and alcoholic wife, Sue Ellen (Linda Gray), and teenage Lucy (Charlene Tilton), daughter of exiled Ewing son Gary (Ted Shackleford). With new and old resentments flying and everyone deeply suspicious of everyone else’s motives (even the ailing Jock doesn’t trust J.R.), there’s plenty of drama to chew on. Still, storylines are often larger than the sum of these parts, with lots of kidnappings, marital affairs, plane crashes, and shootings ratcheting up suspense. IDallas/I is pure pleasure, a little guilty, perhaps, but not a sin. I–Tom Keogh/I

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Gossip Girl: The Complete Third Season

September 26th, 2011 hotmovies No comments

Gossip Girl: The Complete Third Season Review

Gossip Girl: The Complete Third Season Feature

  • GOSSIP GIRL: 3RD SEASON (DVD MOVIE)

Gossip Girl: The Complete Third Season Overview

Spotted: Our beloved Upper East Siders, all grown up. Though high school may be behind most of them, you can be sure a future of love, scandal and, of course, secrets awaits. Based on the best-selling series of young-adult novels by Cecily von Ziegesar, this drama is told through the eyes of an all-knowing blogger — Gossip Girl — who, via constant, avidly read text messages, is determined to uncover and fuel every scandal possible on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, where gossip rules, and affluent young people find themselves with the money, access and appetite to explore all the temptations New York City has to offer. Keeping track of the shifting friendships, jealousies and turmoil in this wealthy and complex world isn’t easy; that’s why there’s Gossip Girl. Executive produced by Josh Schwartz (iChuck/i, iThe O.C./i) and Stephanie Savage (iThe O.C./i), iGossip Girl/i has won a legion of devoted and fashion-forward fans.
[endif]
[if For the Upper East Siders of iGossip Girl/i, their first year of college means some hierarchical changes. At NYU, Blair (Leighton Meester) gets a cold reception from the students she was hoping to make her minions; alternately, Dan (Penn Badgley) finally hits his stride, including dating a movie star (guest star Hilary Duff) but struggling with growing feelings for his bestie Vanessa (Jessica Szohr). Serena (Blake Lively) tries various jobs in an effort to be taken seriously, but as usual ends up falling for the wrong guy and getting herself in one jam after another, the most serious of which involves her daddy issues when he (guest star William Baldwin) reappears into her family's lives. Meanwhile, Chuck (Ed Westwick) is finally happy in his relationship with Blair and, buoyed by her love, launches his own hotel to emerge from his late father's shadow. As scheming and backstabbing are the bread and butter of iGossip Girl/i, many villains cycle through, including Michelle Trachtenberg's return as Georgina and Desmond Harrington (iDexter/i) as Chuck's uncle. But the true evolving baddie in the third season is Jenny (Taylor Momsen), now the Queen Bee of Constance Billard and showing a new meanness that leaves her betraying her closest friends and family, trying to steal Nate (Chace Crawford) from Serena, and (gasp!) dealing drugs. Blair and Chuck may be vicious, but at least they're multidimensional and easy to root for--they remain the central couple of the series, with Meester and Westwick's undeniable chemistry and strong acting--whereas Jenny has become (literally) the petulant child whom you just want to give a good spanking. Unfortunately, no amount of tears ever really redeems her, since her transformation from loathing the social elitism to leading the Mean Girls is so abrupt. p The best episodes are when the cast turns into the Scooby Gang to dig for the truth about someone's nefarious ways, with Serena as the far-too-trusting victim (for a girl who's far from sheltered, she's also really dense about people's ulterior motives and really horrible at learning that you should never hide things from your boyfriend). Of course, there's always a college party or a fabulous gala (this season includes a cotillion, a wedding, and a state dinner!) to bring everyone together and have an excuse to wear fabulous couture. Season 3 may take the series out of high school and into the real world, but really, the only difference is they're not wearing school uniforms. Bonus features include a featurette on the many formal events across the three seasons (the Kiss on the Lips party, the black and white party, proms, masquerade balls, etc.), including tips on how to throw your own iGossip Girl/i party; a blooper reel; and a music video from Lady Gaga, who makes a cameo in one episode. --iEllen A. Kim/i]

Gossip Girl: The Complete Third Season Specifications

For the Upper East Siders of iGossip Girl/i, their first year of college means some hierarchical changes. At NYU, Blair (Leighton Meester) gets a cold reception from the students she was hoping to make her minions; alternately, Dan (Penn Badgley) finally hits his stride, including dating a movie star (guest star Hilary Duff) but struggling with growing feelings for his bestie Vanessa (Jessica Szohr). Serena (Blake Lively) tries various jobs in an effort to be taken seriously, but as usual ends up falling for the wrong guy and getting herself in one jam after another, the most serious of which involves her daddy issues when he (guest star William Baldwin) reappears into her family’s lives. Meanwhile, Chuck (Ed Westwick) is finally happy in his relationship with Blair and, buoyed by her love, launches his own hotel to emerge from his late father’s shadow. As scheming and backstabbing are the bread and butter of iGossip Girl/i, many villains cycle through, including Michelle Trachtenberg’s return as Georgina and Desmond Harrington (iDexter/i) as Chuck’s uncle. But the true evolving baddie in the third season is Jenny (Taylor Momsen), now the Queen Bee of Constance Billard and showing a new meanness that leaves her betraying her closest friends and family, trying to steal Nate (Chace Crawford) from Serena, and (gasp!) dealing drugs. Blair and Chuck may be vicious, but at least they’re multidimensional and easy to root for–they remain the central couple of the series, with Meester and Westwick’s undeniable chemistry and strong acting–whereas Jenny has become (literally) the petulant child whom you just want to give a good spanking. Unfortunately, no amount of tears ever really redeems her, since her transformation from loathing the social elitism to leading the Mean Girls is so abrupt. p The best episodes are when the cast turns into the Scooby Gang to dig for the truth about someone’s nefarious ways, with Serena as the far-too-trusting victim (for a girl who’s far from sheltered, she’s also really dense about people’s ulterior motives and really horrible at learning that you should never hide things from your boyfriend). Of course, there’s always a college party or a fabulous gala (this season includes a cotillion, a wedding, and a state dinner!) to bring everyone together and have an excuse to wear fabulous couture. Season 3 may take the series out of high school and into the real world, but really, the only difference is they’re not wearing school uniforms. Bonus features include a featurette on the many formal events across the three seasons (the Kiss on the Lips party, the black and white party, proms, masquerade balls, etc.), including tips on how to throw your own iGossip Girl/i party; a blooper reel; and a music video from Lady Gaga, who makes a cameo in one episode. –iEllen A. Kim/i

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South Park – The Complete Ninth Season

August 26th, 2011 hotmovies No comments

South Park – The Complete Ninth Season Review

South Park – The Complete Ninth Season Overview

All fourteen episodes from South Park’s infamous ninth season are now available for the first time in this exclusive 3-disc collector’s set. This season features Kenny’s epic battle between heaven and hell, uprising of redheads and adventures surrounding a certain closet. For these boys, it’s all part of growing up in South Park!
[endif]
[if A lot can happen in the middle of nowhere. The tiny mountain town of South Park, Colorado has proven that beyond a doubt for the last eight seasons. Fortunately for fans of this Comedy Central pillar, series creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker obviously had no lack of ideas for their ninth season. Over the course of fourteen episodes, Mr. Garrison gets a sex change, Cartman thwarts a hippie music festival that threatens to destroy the town, the boys (Cartman, Kyle, Stan, and Kenny) start a talent agency, Kenny leads angelic forces in an epic battle against Satan’s minions at the gates of heaven, and the boys become really bad at losing at baseball. And that’s just the first half of the season. The most notable episode from this season is definitely the controversial "Trapped in the Closet," where Stan is "recognized" as the reincarnation of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, and a dejected Tom Cruise locks himself in Stan’s closet. Naturally, over the course of the episode, TV reporters get to decry that "Tom Cruise still won’t come out of the closet." It's funny enough on its own, but when John Travolta and R. Kelly end up in the closet as well (all singing together "Now I’m trapped in the closet. I’m trapped in the closet too"), that’s worth the price of the set on its own. p After nine seasons it’s also nice to see that one of the series key running gags, the perpetual cluelessness of the adults, still isn’t getting old. It's as if the adult townspeople only know how to behave based on movies they’ve seen (this season’s cinematic targets include iRocky/i (in "The Losing Edge"), iThe Day After Tomorrow/i ("Two Days Before the Day After Tomorrow"), and iPet Cemetery/i ("Marjorine"), and their inevitably clichéd over-reactions still provide many of the show’s best moments. The commentaries from Parker and Stone are once again typically short; they usually last only a few minutes into each show before they end it with "Ok, onto the next show now" not even trying to conceal that they really want to get through the recording session as quickly as possible. That might seem lame on other shows, but on iSouth Park/i--a show where 8-year-olds send a talking killer whale to the moon through the Mexican Space Agency for 0,--somehow it’s totally fitting. i--Daniel Vancini/ipspan class="h1"strongStills from I South Park: The Complete Ninth Season /I (click for larger image)/strong/spantable border="0" cellpadding="4" width="100%" cellspacing="4"pptr align="center" valign="top"tdimg border="0" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark1-lo.jpg"br/tdpptdimg border="0" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark2-lo.jpg"br/tdptdimg border="0" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark3-lo.jpg"br/tdp/trtr align="center" valign="top"ptdimg border="0" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark4-lo.jpg"br/tdptdimg border="0" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark5-lo.jpg"br/tdpptdimg border="0" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark6-lo.jpg"br/tdpp/tr/table]

South Park – The Complete Ninth Season Specifications

A lot can happen in the middle of nowhere. The tiny mountain town of South Park, Colorado has proven that beyond a doubt for the last eight seasons. Fortunately for fans of this Comedy Central pillar, series creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker obviously had no lack of ideas for their ninth season. Over the course of fourteen episodes, Mr. Garrison gets a sex change, Cartman thwarts a hippie music festival that threatens to destroy the town, the boys (Cartman, Kyle, Stan, and Kenny) start a talent agency, Kenny leads angelic forces in an epic battle against Satan’s minions at the gates of heaven, and the boys become really bad at losing at baseball. And that’s just the first half of the season. The most notable episode from this season is definitely the controversial “Trapped in the Closet,” where Stan is “recognized” as the reincarnation of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, and a dejected Tom Cruise locks himself in Stan’s closet. Naturally, over the course of the episode, TV reporters get to decry that “Tom Cruise still won’t come out of the closet.” It’s funny enough on its own, but when John Travolta and R. Kelly end up in the closet as well (all singing together “Now I’m trapped in the closet. I’m trapped in the closet too”), that’s worth the price of the set on its own. p After nine seasons it’s also nice to see that one of the series key running gags, the perpetual cluelessness of the adults, still isn’t getting old. It’s as if the adult townspeople only know how to behave based on movies they’ve seen (this season’s cinematic targets include iRocky/i (in “The Losing Edge”), iThe Day After Tomorrow/i (“Two Days Before the Day After Tomorrow”), and iPet Cemetery/i (“Marjorine”), and their inevitably clichéd over-reactions still provide many of the show’s best moments. The commentaries from Parker and Stone are once again typically short; they usually last only a few minutes into each show before they end it with “Ok, onto the next show now” not even trying to conceal that they really want to get through the recording session as quickly as possible. That might seem lame on other shows, but on iSouth Park/i–a show where 8-year-olds send a talking killer whale to the moon through the Mexican Space Agency for 0,–somehow it’s totally fitting. i–Daniel Vancini/ipspan class=”h1″strongStills from I South Park: The Complete Ninth Season /I (click for larger image)/strong/spantable border=”0″ cellpadding=”4″ width=”100%” cellspacing=”4″pptr align=”center” valign=”top”tdimg border=”0″ src=”http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark1-lo.jpg”br/tdpptdimg border=”0″ src=”http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark2-lo.jpg”br/tdptdimg border=”0″ src=”http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark3-lo.jpg”br/tdp/trtr align=”center” valign=”top”ptdimg border=”0″ src=”http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark4-lo.jpg”br/tdptdimg border=”0″ src=”http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark5-lo.jpg”br/tdpptdimg border=”0″ src=”http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/dvd/aplus/southparkS9/spark6-lo.jpg”br/tdpp/tr/table

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F-Troop: The Complete Seasons 1 and 2

July 15th, 2011 hotmovies No comments

F-Troop: The Complete Seasons 1 and 2 Review

F-Troop: The Complete Seasons 1 and 2 Feature

  • F Troop is set at Fort Courage, Kansas, a fictional Army outpost in the West, in 1865, the year the Civil War ended. The commanding officer at Fort Courage is the gallant but chronically clumsy and accident-prone Captain Wilton Parmenter (Ken Berry), the descendant of a long line of military leaders. He is awarded the Medal of Honor after accidentally instigating the final charge at Appomattox: he

F-Troop: The Complete Seasons 1 and 2 Overview

F Troop is set at Fort Courage, Kansas, a fictional Army outpost in the West, in 1865, the year the Civil War ended. The commanding officer at Fort Courage is the gallant but chronically clumsy and accident-prone Captain Wilton Parmenter (Ken Berry), the descendant of a long line of military leaders. He is awarded the Medal of Honor after accidentally instigating the final charge at Appomattox: he is meant to call “retreat”, but he sneezes just as he is about to speak and his troops mistake this for the order “Charge!” His superiors soon realize his ineptitude and post him to remote Fort Courage, a dumping ground for the least useful or trustworthy soldiers.
[endif]
[if ]

F-Troop: The Complete Seasons 1 and 2 Specifications

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The Middle: The Complete First Season

June 20th, 2011 hotmovies No comments

The Middle: The Complete First Season Review

The Middle: The Complete First Season Feature

  • MIDDLE, THE: COMPLETE 1ST SEASON (DVD MOVIE)

The Middle: The Complete First Season Overview

Patricia Heaton stars as Frankie Heck in this warm and witty single-camera comedy about raising a family and lowering your expectations. Frankie Heck is a superhero. Well, no, not an actual superhero – but sometimes it seems to Frankie as though getting her kids out the door for school every morning is a superheroic act. Middle aged, middle class and living in the middle of the country, this harried wife and working mother of three uses her wry wit and sense of humor to try to get her family through each day intact.
[endif]
[if iThe Middle/i is the most honest--and, for that reason, the funniest--sitcom about middle class family life since iRoseanne/i. Frankie Heck (Patricia Heaton, iEverybody Loves Raymond/i) wearily runs a cluttered, chaotic household with her husband Mike (Neil Flynn, iScrubs/i) and three unruly kids: sullen teen jock Axl (Charlie McDermott), hopeless klutz Sue (Eden Sher), and smart but socially awkward Brick (Atticus Shaffer). The plots revolve around the kind of mild crises that make domestic life so difficult: Frankie and Mike can't find time to be alone together; debts force difficult choices; the kids spend more time watching television than talking to each other. Again and again, Frankie longs to teach her kids good values but realizes she isn't living up to those values herself--and her reluctant efforts to muster virtue within herself can be achingly funny. Frankie is superbly well realized, a perfect match of writing and performer. Heaton portrays her contradictory impulses (virtue vs. convenience, open-heartedness vs. a hunger for just a little time alone) with wonderful subtlety; the wary look in her eyes flickers between sincerity and cynicism. p The supporting cast is every bit as strong. These kids actually look and act like kids, in all their obnoxious, oblivious, naive glory, not like glossy supermodels in training. Flynn pulls his own deft balancing act, making husband Mike blunt and a little insensitive without seeming like a jerk or a caricature. The show is still working out some kinks--Chris Kattan (iSaturday Night Live/i) plays a hapless coworker of Frankie's; the character has possibilities and Kattan seems game for anything, but the writers don't quite know what to do with him yet. A host of guest stars--including Brooke Shields as a white trash neighbor and Betty White as an imperious librarian--fit nicely into the show's world, rather than sticking out like stunt casting. iThe Middle/i treats middle America with compassion, intelligence, and genuine appreciation. i--Bret Fetzer/i]

The Middle: The Complete First Season Specifications

iThe Middle/i is the most honest–and, for that reason, the funniest–sitcom about middle class family life since iRoseanne/i. Frankie Heck (Patricia Heaton, iEverybody Loves Raymond/i) wearily runs a cluttered, chaotic household with her husband Mike (Neil Flynn, iScrubs/i) and three unruly kids: sullen teen jock Axl (Charlie McDermott), hopeless klutz Sue (Eden Sher), and smart but socially awkward Brick (Atticus Shaffer). The plots revolve around the kind of mild crises that make domestic life so difficult: Frankie and Mike can’t find time to be alone together; debts force difficult choices; the kids spend more time watching television than talking to each other. Again and again, Frankie longs to teach her kids good values but realizes she isn’t living up to those values herself–and her reluctant efforts to muster virtue within herself can be achingly funny. Frankie is superbly well realized, a perfect match of writing and performer. Heaton portrays her contradictory impulses (virtue vs. convenience, open-heartedness vs. a hunger for just a little time alone) with wonderful subtlety; the wary look in her eyes flickers between sincerity and cynicism. p The supporting cast is every bit as strong. These kids actually look and act like kids, in all their obnoxious, oblivious, naive glory, not like glossy supermodels in training. Flynn pulls his own deft balancing act, making husband Mike blunt and a little insensitive without seeming like a jerk or a caricature. The show is still working out some kinks–Chris Kattan (iSaturday Night Live/i) plays a hapless coworker of Frankie’s; the character has possibilities and Kattan seems game for anything, but the writers don’t quite know what to do with him yet. A host of guest stars–including Brooke Shields as a white trash neighbor and Betty White as an imperious librarian–fit nicely into the show’s world, rather than sticking out like stunt casting. iThe Middle/i treats middle America with compassion, intelligence, and genuine appreciation. i–Bret Fetzer/i

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Star Trek Voyager – The Complete Fifth Season

June 7th, 2011 hotmovies No comments

Star Trek Voyager – The Complete Fifth Season Review

Star Trek Voyager – The Complete Fifth Season Overview

STAR TREK VOYAGER: THE COMPLETE FIFTH SEASON features the adventures of the Voyager crew led by Capt. Janeway (Mulgrew). Throughout the season, the Voyager crew plunges into a vast, empty, star-less expanse, makes a surprising discovery in a most unexpected place, has a chance encounter with the remains of a destroyed Borg vessel that results in an unusual effect on Seven of Nine, and suddenly discovers a wormhole that apparently leads to Earth.
[endif]
[if After Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) spent much of IVoyager/I's fourth season trying to resist the pull of the Borg, and just when the tide of battle seemed to be turning, she returns to the Collective in a memorable confrontation with the Borg Queen (Susanna Thompson) in the centerpiece story of the fifth season, the two-part "Dark Frontier." The Borg also factor into the nightmare-laden "Infinite Regress" as well as "Drone," in which a strange Borg-human-EMH hybrid teaches Seven the experience of parenthood, of sorts. Species 8472 returns as well, in another of the season's gritty episodes, "In the Flesh." p The series' historic 100th episode "Timeless" goes back in history as Kim (Garrett Wang) and Chakotay (Robert Beltran) try to repair a past mistake (directed by and guest-starring ITNG/I's LeVar Burton), and in another dizzying episode, "Relativity," Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) is spending her first day on IVoyager/I when she discovers Seven, who has traveled back in time to prevent an act of sabotage. It was also a good season for buddies Kim and Paris (Robert Duncan MacNeill). In addition to "Timeless," Kim takes center stage in "The Disease" when he embarks on a dangerous romance. Paris is thrown in the brig in "Thirty Days," and his Captain Proton holodeck simulation goes haywire in "Bride of Chaotica!" In "Course Oblivion," a ship wedding is the prelude to a deadly displacement for the entire crew. p It wasn't all slam-bang action. The Doctor's (Robert Picardo) buried memories lead to an ethical conflict in "Latent Image," and he and Seven (the two most consistently interesting crew members) dabble in the most unlikely of romances in one of the series' most touching and memorable episodes "Someone to Watch Over Me." Also, Jason Alexander (then in ISeinfeld/I) guest-stars as a scheming alien in "Think Tank." IVoyager/I didn't always close its season with a cliffhanger, but in "Equinox, Part 1" an attempt to aid another Federation starship in the Delta Quadrant uncovers a threat that might destroy them both.p The bonus features include a season recap, crew profiles of IVoyager/I's resident couple, B'Elanna Torres and Paris, a 19-minute spotlight on the makeup process (Neelix was created as a combination of Timon and Pumbaa in IThe Lion King/I), and "The Borg Queen Speaks," in which Susanna Thompson discusses the difficulties of shooting and how she had originally auditioned for the same role in IStar Trek: First Contact/I. I--David Horiuchi/I]

Star Trek Voyager – The Complete Fifth Season Specifications

After Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) spent much of IVoyager/I’s fourth season trying to resist the pull of the Borg, and just when the tide of battle seemed to be turning, she returns to the Collective in a memorable confrontation with the Borg Queen (Susanna Thompson) in the centerpiece story of the fifth season, the two-part “Dark Frontier.” The Borg also factor into the nightmare-laden “Infinite Regress” as well as “Drone,” in which a strange Borg-human-EMH hybrid teaches Seven the experience of parenthood, of sorts. Species 8472 returns as well, in another of the season’s gritty episodes, “In the Flesh.” p The series’ historic 100th episode “Timeless” goes back in history as Kim (Garrett Wang) and Chakotay (Robert Beltran) try to repair a past mistake (directed by and guest-starring ITNG/I’s LeVar Burton), and in another dizzying episode, “Relativity,” Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) is spending her first day on IVoyager/I when she discovers Seven, who has traveled back in time to prevent an act of sabotage. It was also a good season for buddies Kim and Paris (Robert Duncan MacNeill). In addition to “Timeless,” Kim takes center stage in “The Disease” when he embarks on a dangerous romance. Paris is thrown in the brig in “Thirty Days,” and his Captain Proton holodeck simulation goes haywire in “Bride of Chaotica!” In “Course Oblivion,” a ship wedding is the prelude to a deadly displacement for the entire crew. p It wasn’t all slam-bang action. The Doctor’s (Robert Picardo) buried memories lead to an ethical conflict in “Latent Image,” and he and Seven (the two most consistently interesting crew members) dabble in the most unlikely of romances in one of the series’ most touching and memorable episodes “Someone to Watch Over Me.” Also, Jason Alexander (then in ISeinfeld/I) guest-stars as a scheming alien in “Think Tank.” IVoyager/I didn’t always close its season with a cliffhanger, but in “Equinox, Part 1″ an attempt to aid another Federation starship in the Delta Quadrant uncovers a threat that might destroy them both.p The bonus features include a season recap, crew profiles of IVoyager/I’s resident couple, B’Elanna Torres and Paris, a 19-minute spotlight on the makeup process (Neelix was created as a combination of Timon and Pumbaa in IThe Lion King/I), and “The Borg Queen Speaks,” in which Susanna Thompson discusses the difficulties of shooting and how she had originally auditioned for the same role in IStar Trek: First Contact/I. I–David Horiuchi/I

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