This is a great continuation where the show left off. The only thing missing is Batgirl since she was in the show when it ended. Other than that it was great.
This is a great follow up to the 2014 reboot. The additional new characters expands the story. With the introduction of Krang the movie shows in future stories they could go to other dimensions. Over all this is a good movie.
This is a good movie everything is spelled out or after watching the movie a couple of times the pieces that are not right in your face about what is going on show them selves buy the view putting the pieces together.. Then the 2+ hours of bonus features take the viewer behind the scenes.
The detective series Father Dowling Mysteries bore an unusual and rocky history. It began with a one-off feature on NBC, Fatal Confession: A Father Dowling Mystery, that aired November 30, 1987 and earned encouraging ratings, but didn't generate a weekly series until January 1989. Later, it jumped ship and remained on ABC until the fall of 1991. The subject of all this back-and-forth was a gentle, laid-back program about an elderly Chicago priest (Tom Bosley) with a proclivity for finding and solving local murder mysteries in his community. He did so with the help of Sister Steve (Tracy Nelson) a clever and resourceful young nun - resourceful enough that she could pick locks or wheedle information out of street people with great ease. Episodes, which were light on violence but heavy on wry humor, followed the pair's adventures. This box set contains the program's eight installments from early January 1989, but omits the pilot film. Episodes seen here include Pretty Baby Mystery, What Do You Call a Call Girl Mystery, and The Man Who Came to Dinner Mystery.
Roger Spottiswoode directs Tom Hanks and a dog in the comedy Turner & Hooch, which comes to DVD with a standard full-frame transfer that preserves the original theatrical aspect ratio of 1.33:1. The English soundtrack is rendered in Dolby Digital Stereo. There are neither subtitles nor closed-captions on this release. There are no supplemental materials of any consequence, marking this is a sub-par release from Disney/Buena Vista.
One of the screen's most enduring and endearing characters returns in director Hugh Hudson's Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan -- arriving on DVD courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment. The feature is presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen and offers audio rendered in closed-captioned English Dolby Digital 5.1 with optional English, Spanish, and French subtitles. In addition to offering an all new 20th anniversary transfer featuring scenes not included in the original theatrical version, this disc also offers commentary by director Hudson and associate producer Garth Thomas, as well as a theatrical trailer.
Great movie especially if you know the origins of the graphic novels used to pen this script. Don't pay attention to the length of the movie just enjoy it.
Waldemar
theatrical better
July 22, 2016
Doesn't the R rating say something that the ultimate edition is worse because of violence and if you watch the theatrical version a couple of times you can figure everything out that was cut from the PG-13 version.