I love that the re make of You've got Mail is packaged with the original film that this one comes from both are well acted and good fun movies with the same basic underlying theme. Both are fun to watch also for different reasons and I like both and glad to have them together in one package.
Two musical adventures in one Blu-ray collection. In The Blues Brothers, Jake (John Belushi) and Elwood (Dan Ackroyd) comb the back alleys of Chicago to recruit performers for their orphanage benefit concert, a house-rockin' roster that includes Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Cab Calloway and James Brown, with cops, Nazis and country-western bands in hot pursuit. And in Blues Brothers 2000, Elwood (Dan Ackroyd) tries to get the group back together with the help of a 10-year-old orphan (J. Evan Bonifant), a baritone bartender (John Goodman) and his "more or less" stepbrother (Joe Morton), with performances by Eddie Floyd, John Popper and Blues Traveler, Lonnie Brooks, Junior Wells and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. Extras include theatrical and extended versions of The Blues Brothers, interviews, behind the scenes footage, featurettes about the music, theatrical trailers and a remembrance of John Belushi.
I love both of the Blues Brothers movies and its nice to have them together in one blue ray package instead of two single cases. I also love the music of both that is so good with all of the people that are in both movies. The stories are basically the same but lots of fun in Blue Ray format.
I first saw The Best Man on one of my movie channels and very much enjoyed it but Best Man Holiday I think is a much more detailed better film that the first one and I love that Best Man Holiday was done 15 years after The Best Man, The acting is fantastic in both films and you like the characters and what happens to all of them. I also think Best Man Holiday is a much more emotional film that the first one.
I have always loved the Lethal Weapon movies and this one is by the writer of the first one. The Nice Guys has many of the same qualities that make the Weapon films so much fun to watch. This would make a very good film series and Russel Crowe is fun to watch.
Every episode of television's seminal speculative fiction series that germinated from the mind of Rod Serling is collected in high-definition in this comprehensive six-Blu ray set. Along with the original 156 episodes of the series that provided early roles for Robert Redford, William Shatner, Robert Duvall, Dennis Hopper, Carol Burnett, Burt Reynolds and others, this set includes the original unaired pilot version of "Where is Everybody?", interviews, bloopers, stills, commentary tracks and more.
The Twilight Zone has always been a great show but now it is even better on blue ray. The picture is more detailed as well as the sound is so much crisper to hear. I will love taking my time to view all of the original episodes.
Where the first one had so many great actors this sequel is boring and a waste of time. You have to give a rating for each movie and this one does not even deserve one star. I did not finish watching this one that is a total dud. Independence Day 2 was not worth the investment of the money for even the blue ray
Join Andy Griffith, Don Knotts and Ron Howard in the Andy Griffith Christmas Show Special. Includes both colorized and black and white versions of the episodes "The Christmas Story" and "The Pickle Story".
It is so much fun in seeing the pickle episode in color to see Aunt Bees pickles green color that enhances the whole episode. I love this and the other episode and am glad to see it colorized very well