The Hunger Games tops this week’s home entertainment slate that also include some potent TV offerings with Dexter, Glee, Community, and Doctor Who releases, along with the final season of the original TMNT cartoon series (that also includes 2 "lost" episodes from Season 5), plus a beautiful Blu-ray edition of the movie that is credited with inventing the summer "event" film.
Theatrical Movies
This week’s top-selling home entertainment release will undoubtedly be The Hunger Games (Lionsgate, "PG-13," $30.98, BD $39.99). With The Avengers (and soon The Dark Knight Rises) having passed The Hunger Games, it is easy to forget the most successful Q1 release ever. The movie adaptation of the first book in Suzanne Collins’ bestselling YA novel series earned a superb $409 million at the domestic box office and should do exceptionally well on disc. It’s rare that a new "franchise" gets off to such an auspicious start and with a built-in fan base from the novels it is hard to see how this series can falter. Director Gary Ross is departing and won’t helm the sequel, but that may be addition by subtraction since the Ross-sanctioned shaky camerawork is the worst thing about this bizarre dystopian saga that owes more than a little to Battle Royale.
The fake teenage hell of The Hunger Games can’t hold a candle to the real teenage hell of the West Memphis Three, teens who spent 18 years in prison for a horrific crime that they did not commit. Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory (Docurama, Not Rated, $29.95) is a 2011 documentary, the third in a series that played a significant role in the eventual release of the trio. This third installment tracks their final days in prison and their release after a long and grueling legal battle.
TV on DVD
There are some high profile contemporary TV series due this week including Dexter: The Sixth Season (Showtime, $54.99, BD $65.99), the popular cable show about a "sympathetic" serial killer who works in a forensics lab, Glee: The Complete Third Season (Fox, $59.98, BD $69.99), as well as the quirky single-camera sitcom Community: The Complete Third Season (Sony, $45.99).
Animated TV shows due this week include The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Season 10-The Complete Final Season (Lionsgate, 184 min., $14.98), which includes the final ten episodes of the original TMNT animated series. With a new Turtles series debuting on Nickelodeon on September 29th (see "New 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' Toon Debut Set" for a look at the new more martial arts-oriented iteration of the TMNT), this could be the perfect time to check out the original cartoon series that made the quartet of heroes on the half-shell worldwide stars. As a special bonus this release includes two episodes from the Fifth Season, "Once Upon a Time Machine," and "Planet of the Turtleoids," which have never been released before on DVD.
Also of great interest to fans of TV cartoon shows is Angry Beavers: Season 3, Part 2 (Shout Factory, 240 min., $19.93), the series created by Mitch Schauer that debuted on Nickelodeon in 1997 and lasted for four seasons. Those who watched this series know that it is certainly no "pile of spoot."
Another popular kids’ show due this week is Power Rangers Samurai: Season 2, Vol.1—The Superpowered Black Box (Lionsgate, 92 min., $14.98), which collects the first four episodes of the second 20-episode Power Rangers Samurai season (the 19th season for the Power Rangers overall) that debuted on Nickelodeon in February of this year. Also due this week is Power Rangers Samurai: Season 2, Vol. 2—Super Showdown (Lionsgate, 176 min., $14.98), another single-disc release that includes 4 additional episodes of the popular series. Power Rangers Samurai is the first Power Rangers series to be photographed and broadcast in high definition, and the series is averaging 2 million viewers per episode, so these well-produced discs should find an audience.
Power Rangers completists might consider The Might Morphin’ Power Rangers Seasons 1-7 (TimeLife, 6690 min., $219.95), which covers various iterations of the live-action super group from "Mighty Morphin'" to "Lost Galaxy."
U.K. offerings this week are led by Doctor Who Story 051: Spearhead From Space Special Edition (BBC, 97 min., $24.98), the first serial of the seventh season of the vintage series. It featured the Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee) who battles the invasion of the manikin-like Autons with the help of his new companion Liz Shaw (Caroline John), and Doctor Who Story #155: The Greatest Show in the Galaxy (BBC, 98 min., $24.98), the fourth and final serial of the 25th season of the original Doctor Who series, which was broadcast in 1988 and featured Sylvester McCoy as the Seventh Doctor, who along with his companion Ace (Sophie Aldred) visits the mysterious Psychic Circus on the planet Segonax.
Other U.K. releases include the "odd couple" police drama Dalziel and Pascoe: Season Six (BBC, 360 min., $29.98), and the crusading legal drama Judge John Deed: Season Six (BBC, 240 min., $29.98), but the most interesting title from across the pond is The Forsyte Saga Collection (Acorn Media, 702 min., $79.99), which contains the 6-episode 2002 series The Forsyte Saga, which adapted the first two books and the first interlude of John Galsworthy’s generations-spanning saga and the subsequent 4-episode The Forsyte Saga: To Let from 2003. Excellent performances by a stellar cast led by Damian Lewis (Band of Brothers) and solid production values are the hallmarks of this Grenada TV-produced series that was shown on Masterpiece Theater on PBS. Both series are beautifully presented in anamorphic widescreen with stereo sound, plus an excellent “making-of” featurette.
Anime
The top release this week is Oblivion Island: Haruka and the Magic Mirror (Funimation, All Ages, 100 min., $19.98, BD $24.98), a 2009 computer-animated feature film directed by Shinsuke Sato (The Princess Blade). This sensitive tale of a young teenage girl who loses a treasured mirror given to her by her late mother was nominated for the Japan Academy Prize. The heroine goes to a local shrine to pray for the return of the mirror and meets a strange little creature who takes her to the island of forgotten items where cherished toys and treasures go when their owners neglect them.
Also new this week is This Boy Can Fight Aliens! (Sentai Filmworks, "13+," 28 min., $19.98, BD $24.98), an 28-minute OAV about a 15 year-old boy, who has lost his memory, but who may be mankind’s only hope to fend off an alien invasion.
There is a cornucopia of re-priced re-releases this week led by the One Piece DVD Collection 7 Uncut (Funimation, "14+," 625 min., $34.98), which includes episodes 157-182 of the popular pirate anime saga. Also due this week are the Ah! My Buddha Nirvana Collection (Animeworks, "13+," 650 min., $19.99), the Dojin Work Complete Collection (Animeworks, "13+," 300 min., $19.99), the Nighthead Genesis Complete Collection (Animeworks, "13+," 600 min., $19.99), and the Trinity Blood Complete Series (FUNimation, "17+," 600 min. $39.98).
Classics on Blu-ray
Steven Spielberg’s Jaws (Universal, "PG," BD $29.98), which electrified audiences in 1975 and became the first film to earn $100 million, is credited with creating or at the very least fashioning the template for the summer film blockbuster. Now it’s available in a Blu-ray transfer supervised by Spielberg that presents the sharpest version of the film ever available in a home entertainment release. The new Blu-ray contains a host of extras including The Shark Is Still Working, a feature length documentary from 2007, a vintage "Making Of" documentary, deleted scenes and an HD feature on the restoration of the film.
--Tom Flinn
The opinions expressed in this column do not necessarily reflect those of the editorial staff of ICv2.
Just as fascinating and influential in its own way is Louis Feuillade’s Les Vampires (Kino, Not Rated, 416 min., $39.95), a 10-episode serial from 1915 that is 6 and one-half hours long (and is considered one of the longest films ever made). Though it was shown in installments, Les Vampires has none of the Perils of Pauline’s cliffhanger endings. Instead it forms one surreal twisting narrative that is not about blood-sucking supernatural creatures, but follows the exploits of a journalist who attempts to expose and stop a ruthless underground criminal gang known as Les Vampires (certain of these French gangs of that era were known as "Apache" due to their savagery, which was reported to equal that attributed to the Apache tribe in the American Southwest).
Kino’s 2-disc Blu-ray box of Les Vampires brings to North America the Cinematheque Francaise's superlative restoration of the silent classic that features very sharp images throughout and comes complete with tinting and an excellent score. Les Vampires is a true cinema classic that had a profound influence on the films of Fritz Lang and Alfred Hitchcock, but watching it in one sitting is definitely a tough go for modern audiences. Feuillade’s film has none of the cross-cutting, moving camera, and technical mastery of other films of the era like D.W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation and its pace can seem glacial to contemporary audiences at times. Feuillade’s genius lies in his surrealistic plotting (Luis Bunuel cites him as a major influence) and in his penchant for remarkably bizarre imagery, especially the shots of Musidora as the Irma Vep, the most deadly and elusive member of Les Vampires, who skyrocketed to fame with audiences during World War I and remains fetching in her one-piece catsuit almost hundred years later.
Kino’s 2-disc Blu-ray box of Les Vampires brings to North America the Cinematheque Francaise's superlative restoration of the silent classic that features very sharp images throughout and comes complete with tinting and an excellent score. Les Vampires is a true cinema classic that had a profound influence on the films of Fritz Lang and Alfred Hitchcock, but watching it in one sitting is definitely a tough go for modern audiences. Feuillade’s film has none of the cross-cutting, moving camera, and technical mastery of other films of the era like D.W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation and its pace can seem glacial to contemporary audiences at times. Feuillade’s genius lies in his surrealistic plotting (Luis Bunuel cites him as a major influence) and in his penchant for remarkably bizarre imagery, especially the shots of Musidora as the Irma Vep, the most deadly and elusive member of Les Vampires, who skyrocketed to fame with audiences during World War I and remains fetching in her one-piece catsuit almost hundred years later.
--Tom Flinn
The opinions expressed in this column do not necessarily reflect those of the editorial staff of ICv2.