The home video debut of Toy Story 3 is the big news this week, but there are quite a few other new items of interest including BDs of the new V TV series as well as Adult Swim’s Metalocalypse, and a complete edition of Garry Shandling’s The Larry Sanders Show, as well as two vintage Doctor Who sagas, a great Midsomer Murders collection, and a very funny documentary about the “Angriest Man Alive.”
Theatrical
Toy Story 3 has earned $414 million at the domestic box office making it the highest grossing film released in 2010 so far (Avatar debuted in 2009). Toy Story 3 (Disney, “G” $29.99, BD $45.99) will also surely be one of the top DVD releases of the year, if not the biggest. Pixar has had an amazing track record with an unbroken string of hits, but perhaps the computer animation studio’s most amazing feat is the way in which each film in the Toy Story series has been better than its predecessor. Pixar’s ability to mix humor and “heart” is unmatched, and it’s just as important to the studio’s success as its unparalleled technical mastery. Blu-ray is definitely the way to go with the highly visual Toy Story 3, and the 4-disc Combo Pack includes a standard DVD version as well as a slew of interesting extras.
TV on DVD
Once again there are a number of interesting releases in the TV category including V: The Complete First Season (Warner Bros., $39.98, BD $49.98), which contains the complete first season of the remake of the 1980s science fiction mini-series. Other shows that are getting the Blu-ray treatment include the vintage science fiction series Space 1999: The Complete First Season (A&E, 1008 min., $99.95), which originally aired in 1975, and The Pacific: The Complete Series, (HBO, 400 min., $79.98, BD $99.98), the epic 10-part mini-series about the Pacific theater in World War II that reached new heights of realism in tracing the intertwined odysseys of three marines across the Pacific. Also getting the Blu-ray treatment is the Adult Swim heavy metal cartoon series, Metalocalypse: Season 3 (Warner Bros., 217 min., $29.98, BD $39.99) and the supernaturally-themed 2006 ABC Family miniseries Fallen (Image, 253 min., $17.97).
Continuing series releases include The Fugitive: Season 4, Part 1 (
Special mention should be made of the innovative and highly satirical faux talk show series The Larry Sanders Show, which starred Garry Shandling as the vain and neurotic Johnny Carson wannabe. In spite of its popularity on HBO, only one season of the show was released on DVD in 2002. At last all 89 episodes are available on The Larry Sanders: The Complete Series (Shout Factory, 2,800 min., $149.99), a deluxe 17-disc set that includes a 68-page booklet, all-new deleted scenes and outtakes, a special feature with Judd Apatow and Shandling discussing the writing process, a feature-length documentary on “The Making of the Gary Shandling Show,” and Shandling’s lectures at the University of Southern California. Shout Factory is also releasing The Larry Sanders Show: Season 2 (Shout Factory, 450 min., $34.93), which means that those who want to buy the show season-by-season will eventually have the opportunity to do so, but why wait.
Top
It’s hard to argue with the notion that the most enjoyable
Fans of the more conventional classic British drawing room mysteries will certainly enjoy Marple: The Geraldine McEwan Collection (Acorn Media, 1140 min., $99.99), which includes all 12 feature-length mysteries featuring Geraldine McEwan as Christie’s spinster sleuth. Exceedingly well-produced with excellent period details, these lavish productions aired between 2004 and 2009, and featured top flight guest stars including Jane Seymour, Herbert Lom, Peter Davison, Tom Baker, Timothy Dalton, Francesca Annis, and Derek Jacobi.
Derek Jacobi stars in another prime mystery series out this week. Cadfael: The Complete Collection (Acorn Media, 975 min., $99.99) includes all 13 feature-length mysteries based on the bestselling books by Ellis Peters (Edith Pargeter) about Brother Cadfael, a Benedictine monk living in Shrewsbury in western England between 1135 and 1145 during “The Anarchy,” a turbulent time in which King Stephen and Empress Maud fought for control of the English crown. While Cadfael doesn’t have access to modern forensic science (no fingerprints or DNA), his familiarity with the natural world (he is a herbalist) and his extensive experience in the Crusades (he only became a monk in middle age), allow him to solve perplexing crimes in this well-produced and always entertaining series that was broadcast in the U.S. as part of the PBS Mystery lineup.
Anime
The top new release this week is Oh!
The other major release of new (to the
Re-priced series include the classic Dirty Pair: The Original TV Series Part 1 (Nozumi Entertainment, “13+,” 325 min., $49.99) produced by
Documentaries
Ben Steinbauer’s Winnebago Man (Kino, Not Rated, 85 min., $29.95) is a fascinating look at Jack Rebney, “The Angriest Man in the World,” whose outtake tirades while producing a promotional video for the Winnebago Corporation in the full heat and humidity of an Iowa summer in the 1980s were cut together by members of the crew that shot the movie and passed around on video tape. Rebney’s profane outbursts went “viral” before there even was a YouTube. The videotapes were copied and passed around and they soon became notorious enough that Rebney lost his job. Steinbauer’s film explores the phenomenon of unwanted celebrity, which has become so prevalent in the age of the Internet. He finds Rebney living as a virtual recluse on a mountaintop in