Sunday, August 29, 2010

'Anchorman' coming soon to Blu-ray


There appears to be a significant release of "Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy" coming to Best Buy exclusively.

Best Buy is going to receive an exclusive two-disc Blu-ray "Rich Mahogany Edition." This will be the first time "Anchorman" will be on Blu-ray. It will probably be released in other stores later, but for now, it will only be available at Best Buy. Various websites state that it will be released on Aug. 31. However, Best Buy's weekly ad says it will be available on Aug. 29.

I would be more inclined to trust the Aug. 31 date, since that is a Tuesday. DVDs and Blu-rays are normally released on Tuesdays. But since Best Buy's weekly ad says Sunday, I will check it out in the morning to see for myself.

Special features, according to Blu-ray.com, are:
- Commentary with Adam McKay, Will Ferrell, Lou Rawls, Andy Richter, Kyle Gass, Paul Rudd, David Koechner and Christina Applegate,
- Deleted and extended scenes,
- Bloopers,
- ESPN Sports Center Audition – Ron Burgundy,
- "Wake Up, Ron Burgundy",
- Feature Introduction by Will Ferrell and Aaron Zimmerman,
- Raw Footage "Good Takes,"
- Music video: "Afternoon Delight,"
- "Afternoon Delight" recording session,
- Public Service Announcements,
- Awards Speech,
- AMC Loews Happy Birthday,
- Interviews: Rebecca Romijn, Jim Caviezel, Burt Reynolds,
- Cinemax: The Making of Ron Burgundy,
- Reel Comedy: Anchorman,
- A Conversation with Ron Burgundy,
- Cast Auditions,
- Table Read,
- Rehearsals,
- Playback Video,
- Commercial Break and
- Trailers.

It will also come with a book called "The Many Months of Burgundy" and 12 trading cards.

Fans' eyes should have gone wide upon reading "Wake Up, Ron Burgundy" listed. I know mine sure did. "Wake Up, Ron Burgundy" is a short film about him. It was previously available on DVD in a two-pack with "Anchorman" when the original DVD came out in 2004. So if you bought the movie by itself (like me) or bought it years later, you missed out.

Also with the DVD's original release, Best Buy had an exclusive bonus disc. There's some speculation online that all those features will be mixed into the Blu-ray.

With the special features all there, this would appear to be the ultimate edition of "Anchorman" and a real treat for fans. A review will come later to confirm this. But my hopes are high.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Never sleep again....


To prepare fans for the then-upcoming remake, New Line gave us a new Blu-ray edition of the Wes Craven's original "A Nightmare on Elm Street."

Those that are Freddy fans know the story by now. Fred Krueger (Robert Englund) was released from murder charges on a technicality, so the people of Springwood burned and killed him. Krueger, however, came back to kill their children in their dreams.

This Blu-ray release has a spectacular picture. The film never looked better. The black levels are black and the white levels are white. The Infinifilm DVD that came out in 2006 was a step up from the previous DVDs, and now this Blu-ray is two steps above that.

One can't ignore the audio quality as well. Freddy never sounded creepier.

If you'll notice, the cover art for the Blu-ray resembles the Infinifilm DVD cover art. So that means all the features are there, right? That's not always true. There are many examples of where that's not the case at all, but I can discuss that in a different blog entry.

Here, we are treated to most of the features from the Infinifilm edition.

Special features include:
- Ready Freddy Focus Points (alternate takes and filmmaking tips while watching the movie)
- Two commentaries
- Three alternate endings (Scary Ending, Happy Ending, and Freddy Ending)
- Three featurettes ("The House That Freddy Built: The Legacy of New Line Horror," "Never Sleep Again: The Making of A Nightmare on Elm Street," "Night Terrors: The Origins of Wes Craven's Nightmares")

The back cover mentions that also included is an interactive trivia track. However, while browsing through the features, I couldn't find it. That's a shame, but it's not a big loss. Since I bought the DVD, I only remember playing it once.

The picture and audio quality alone make this a worthwhile upgrade, especially if you never owned the Infinifilm DVD. The lesser special features have been dropped, but nothing of great importance.

I just hope that we will get the same great treatment for the rest of the series.

The Blu-ray is available on Amazon for $16.99. DVD users can pick up the Infinifilm DVD for $12.49.

Also available is a new edition of the entire series box set for $35.49. It includes all seven "Elm Street" films and "Freddy vs. Jason." I haven't checked it out myself but it sounds like the best in-print set of the whole series. There are a couple "4 Film Favorites" DVDs available too, for less money, but they are on double-sided discs. Decide for yourself how you feel about those.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

He rode a 'Blazing Saddle'


Mel Brooks was the king of parody. He tackled many genres and made his own brand of satire with films like "Young Frankenstein" and "Spaceballs." One film I don't hear much from others, though I rate it as one of his best, is "Blazing Saddles."

The western follows a black railroad worker, Bart, who is sent to become the first black sheriff. He doesn't know that this was all a plan to make the town vulnerable so the diabolical Hedley Lamarr can run the town's people out of town and make way for a railroad.

The video and audio quality of the Blu-ray is the best it has ever been. The 1974 film, made in Technicolor, isn't ever going to look like a new movie. If you want to show off the technical specs of your HD-TV and your Blu-ray player, there are more recent movies that will do that. However, the Blu-ray disc is definitely a step up from the DVD.

All of the special features from the previous 30th Anniversary Edition DVD are present on the Blu-ray in standard definition.

They include:
- Additional scenes,
- Scene-specific commentary by Mel Brooks,
- Two documentaries ("Back in the Saddle" and "Intimate Portrait: Madeline Kahn"),
- Black Bart: 1975 Pilot Episode of the proposed TV series spinoff and
- Theatrical trailer.

Fans of "Blazing Saddles" should definitely pick this up, as it is a good upgrade from the 30th Anniversary DVD. There are no new features to speak of, but the video and audio quality of the movie is a step up.

Amazon sells the Blu-ray disc for $10.49. I saw it at Walmart for $10.
If you are a DVD user, Amazon has the 30th Anniversary DVD for $5.49. Walmart had it for $5.

Introduction

It's time for me to blog again. I haven't been covering college news in a while so my other blog has been left unattended to.

So with the movies I've been watching on Blu-ray and DVD lately, I decided to start blogging short reviews as I see them. These aren't going to have the technical details of each disc. Most people probably wouldn't know what AVC is, for example. So I'm going to post reviews that are simple to understand for practical usage.

A little about me, I've always loved movies. I didn't buy many videos in the VHS era because of how fragile they were and how you could always record movies off TV and get the same quality.

I didn't get into laserdisc. The discs were too big and awkward. Laserdisc didn't feel like it was going to be the next big format.

When DVD rolled around, I bought into it heavily. I see it as the first acceptable format for movies. Not only are the discs more durable than VHS, but they brought in widescreen as the standard and included special features. I always watched the "behind the scenes" specials on TV and it was great to be able to own them with the movie.

And now Blu-ray is taking over.

There were several reasons I didn't buy into Blu-ray at first.
- Blu-ray and HD-DVD were at war with each other. I wasn't going to buy one format and watch it lose.
- I already invested so much into DVD. I didn't want to see it go away in just nine years.
- I didn't see much of a difference in quality.

If you feel the same way about the quality, I challenge you to watch only Blu-ray discs for a week (on a HDTV) and then watch DVDs. You'll see what I mean. The upgrade isn't the same leap as VHS was to DVD, but it's still a big leap.