This week is about as eclectic as Neil Young's David Byrne tribute band. We've got your zombies, we've got your criminals, we've got cartoon bears stuck in trees; it's a random act of Blu-ray on the Shelf, folks!
Does crime pay? It seems to in Michael Bay's non-blockbuster blockbuster Painthe Winnie the Pooh characters had become (and remain) among their most popular brands, spawning toys, clothing, and other bric- -brac for decades. My mom had more Eeyores than I can count. Despite what could be construed as a late-'70s cash-grab, the actual film is still a delight.
Yes, the Hundred-Acre Wood characters were, are, and will always be adorable and engaging. Why do you think they brought them back in that film the other year? Because people like them! Each of the stories is entertaining and fun, from Pooh getting stuck in a tree for days on end to being freaked out by the Heffalumps and Woozles. You know, they really are confuzzle. At only 74 minutes, it's one of Disney's shortest features (and is actually shorter than the 75 minute minimum the MPAA has today) but you'll have a quick and good time.
The Blu-ray, being for a family movie, skews young, with features mainly amounting to more Pooh shorts and sing-along stuff. But there's a 25-minute making-of ported over from the DVD release that will speak to the animation historian in you (or me).
After a relatively stable season at the Farm, the third season of AMC's smash hit The Walking Dead took the heroes to the Prison, where they had a whole new set of problems. It also introduced us to David Morrissey as The Governor, one of the smarmiest, creepiest, yet charmingly folksy villains on television. He does some real nasty stuff to people while attempting to keep safe the citizens of Woodbury and seducing the all-too gullible Andrea (Laurie Holden). Also properly introduced in this season is Michonne (Danai Gurira), who you wish would just tell people things, and Tyreese (Chad Coleman), whose group adds a new dynamic to Rick (Andrew Lincoln) and the band of survivors. Lots of folks die this season also, but you'd expect that from a show about the dead who are walking.
The set includes commentary on five episodes by various members of the cast and crew, eight featurettes about the making of the series, and 13 minutes of deleted material. If you want to spring for the deluxe limited edition set (akin to the ones from the first two seasons), you can get the Blu-rays in a box containing severed zombie heads in aquariums as seen in the Governor's private room. If you want to have that somewhere in your house, have at it, but don't call me, because you're weird.
ALSO AVAILABLE
- Another failed attempt by Baz Luhrmann to make a movie I like. This one's based on the classic F. Scott Fitzgerald novel and features anachronistic music and a glancing blow at the plot.
- Larry Cohen's weird stop-motion monster movie set in early-'80s New York. Cohen staple Michael Moriarty gives one of his most fidgety performances opposite Candy Clark, David Carradine and Richard Roundtree.
- Get this: Dolph Lundgren plays a vice cop in Houston who ends up chasing an extraterrestrial drug dealer who looks kind of like a Mad Max He-Man. This movie exists, you guys.
- The best motorcycle gang show on television has a fifth season full of Adam Arkin, Peter Weller, and more Ron Perlman than you can shake a snake-and-steel boot at.
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