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    June 21, 2008
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fiddler's Reviews
<< 1 2 3 4 5 ... 8 >>
 
After years of anticipation, Schindler's List finally comes to the DVD market thanks to Amblin Entertainment and Universal Pictures. For some, the prolonged wait will no doubt stem disappointment, as Steven Spielberg's personal triumph is presented without any insight into the filmmaking process or more into the actual events. Your initial enjoyment of the disc will depend on your expectations going in, though it should be noted that what is included is quite something. Technically, the double-sided disc with digitally enhanced picture and sound is nothing short of spectacular. The stark black-and-white contrast in the 1.85:1 widescreen image is heartbreakingly beautiful, as are both the 5.1 Dolby Digital and DTS audio tracks, which underline John Williams' powerful score during the film's most hushed and tragic moments. The main extras on the disc are split up between the "Voices from the List" documentary and a featurette on the Shoah Foundation, the organization Spielberg helped create to give voice to Holocaust survivors. Clocking in at 77 minutes, the "Voices" piece is a soul-wrenching account of the Nazi invasion up to the end of the war from various surviving members of Schindler's list. Their incomparable tales of hate and despair create a gripping piece that gives unparalleled humanity and first-hand insight to what exactly Schindler did for these people, making the documentary the perfect companion to the film. As a bonus, the story of the Shoah Foundation has also been included. Narrated by Morgan Freeman, the featurette explains the genesis of the group and its goal to educate and document any living survivor of the Holocaust. While the documentary does tend to beseech its viewers by the end for additional monetary support (in addition to the fold-out donation certificate inside the booklet), the clip offers a fine view of the importance of the group in an educational and historical context. Rounding out the features are a collection of cast and crew bios and additional information on Oskar Schindler. The packaging comes in a book-like case that's also available with the full-screen edition and the Collector's Gift Set (which comes complete with a bulky Plexiglas casing, photo book, certificate of authenticity, and a film slide).
 
Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
A Wow Production
on August 3, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
We've all grown up to hear the horrors of the Holocaust full-blown. Schools devote whole units to this event. Although I do feel it's over-talked-about and over-hyped (as if this is the only human torture act in history; there have been many of those), this movie is just how we picture the Holocaust to be in our minds and is extremely well-made.
The actual even aside, it's more than just that, however, it's an inspiring tale of someone who learned humanity afterall and went against something so big to save his fellow members of the human race from a cruel fate.
I watched it once, and don't plan on watching it again anytime soon, but it's a great one-time movie to help us appreciate our lives and the generosity of others.
What's great about it: what a way to portray the Holocaust... all the effort spent!, good acting, just so real
What's not so great: a bit long and it's more of a one-time only movie. not over and over again.
I would recommend this to a friend!
+3points
3of 3voted this as helpful.
 
Enjoy all of the tunes stored on your iPod with this excellent pair of earphones.
 
Customer Rating
1 out of 5
1
Never Fit in My Ears!!
on August 3, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
I am of the few people I've been around who has found the earphones to be too big for my ear and slip right out. The only way to keep them in was to turn them sideways and shove them in, and even so, they were loose ready to fall out and uncomfortable.
It's hard to say much positive when I can hardly even keep the earphones in my hear to hear the actual music.
The sound quality was alright at best. Maybe it is better that it's a bit soft because the iPod has been known to be a solitary machine... alienating the youth from the outside world as the music blasts open our eardrums.
I would not recommend it, instead, buy one of those ear bud earphones that mold to fit your ear size. They stay in and are much more convenient and comfortable.
What's great about it: sound quality okay, gets the job done
What's not so great: too big to fit in my ear, sound a bit soft
No, I would not recommend this to a friend.
0points
0of 0voted this as helpful.
 
Macaulay Culkin lookalike (and sound-alike) Mike Weinberg steps into the role of resourceful youngster Kevin McAllister in this made-for-TV sequel to the immensely popular theatrical Home Alone trilogy. On this occasion, young Kevin finds himself stranded in the computerized "safe house" owned by Natalie (Joanna Going), the predatory new girlfriend of Kevin's recently divorced dad Peter (Jason Beghe). Combining the technology of the house with his own improvisational brilliance, Kevin endeavors to save a royal heir from a trio of kidnappers, one of whom is the boy's old burglar nemesis Marv Merchants (French Stewart, replacing the first two films' Daniel Stern). Needless to say, Kevin also finds time to befriend an adult "outcast" and to bring his parents back together. Home Alone 4 originally aired November 3, 2002, as an episode of the ABC anthology The Wonderful World of Disney.
 
Customer Rating
2 out of 5
2
Modern Attempt Fails for Fans, but Ok to Kids
on August 2, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
By stretching the Home Alone into a series, they're doing nothing really positive to its name. Nothing can live up to the first two Macaulay Culken hits. Ask anyone in the world an American movie they've seen, many of them would say Home Alone.
The name is legendary to children of the past and even of today. This more modern attempt with all the high-tech gadgets aims to continue to wow kids with how fast technology is progressing these days and pushes the imagination from something that one creates himself in his mind to something he sees somewhere else and is awestruck by it.
It's not a good movie at all. The plot is quite shaky and isn't that entertaining. Kids who aren't in love with the old Home Alones might like it, but not love it, that's for sure.
What's great about it: the main kid is cute... not a Macaulay Culken but witty still, keeps alive the Home Alone legacy-- family and separatio
What's not so great: too high tech and less of the everyday household item traps, strange villains, tacky acting, nothing-special story
No, I would not recommend this to a friend.
0points
1of 2voted this as helpful.
 
While production companies quickly realized that consumers prefer that DVDs come in the widescreen format, it remains common for them to release family films only in the pan and scan format. Perhaps they feel that children don't deserve the same kind of high quality that adults expect. Perhaps they don't realize that adults are also family members who enjoy such films as Witches or Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. The first DVD release of the wonderful Fly Away Home may have been botched but thankfully Columbia has realized their mistake and issued this exceptional special edition DVD of the Carroll Ballard film. Cinematographer Caleb Deschanel's (whose credits include The Natural and The Black Stallion) camera work here is spectacular and is captured on this flawless widescreen anamorphic transfer. Ballard and Deschanel have a long working relationship and are justly famous for making movies in the great outdoors. Their audio commentary is compelling and entertaining and should be of interest to both movie and nature buffs. The Dolby Digital 5.1 Stereo audio track is crystalline and showcases Mark Isham's impressive score. Isham also has an audio commentary and the movie features his lovely collaboration with Mary Chapin Carpenter. Since convoluted legal and financial reasons kept a soundtrack album from being issued, this DVD is a real boon for fans. The fictional movie is also based on the real exploits of Bill Lishman and the DVD features documentaries on this very cool Canadian and also other featurettes on the making of the movie Lishman inspired. Fly Away Home truly is a family film in the best sense of the word and this is a DVD that will be enjoyed by any member of a family, regardless of age.
 
Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
Perfect Meaningful Movie for Kids and Family
on August 2, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
Face it, kids are fidgety. They can't sit still and truthfully soak up and appreciate any beyond-superficial meaning of any movie. Movies like Finding Neverland, though suitable for kids, just does not suffice their need for something to grab their short attention spans and force them to watch.
Fly Away Home is the exception. We watched this in 2nd grade, at a time when kids are becoming a bit bratty, but the impact it left on me and many of the classmates was inspirational. It's about a girl finding herself and her family through the innocence of motherless geese--an adventure through the skies... the one thing we that is there no matter where we are and makes us feel so small.
It's beautifully put together and a great watch for the whole family.
What's great about it: inspiring story, appreciative of nature and families, great thrill and fun, good acting
What's not so great: very different from kids movies of today, but I see that as a good thing
I would recommend this to a friend!
+1point
1of 1voted this as helpful.
 
Customer Rating
4 out of 5
4
First Time I Actually Noticed Kidz Bop
on August 2, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
Kidz Bop TV commercials seem to come on all the time, and I (and my younger sister) never noticed them. A few times, we'd be humming at the tunes but nothing sounded nearly as good as the originals and a lot of so-so songs were remade, so nothing spectacular.
This one has a number of good tracks that actually sound alright when the kids re-sing it. Don't Stop the Music, Feels like Tonight, and my favorite Pocketful of Sunshine to name a few.
It's a different idea to have kids re-sing popular songs instead of other adult bands, so naturally, it is appealing to kids. But this one, even adults can enjoy with the kids, so check out the song list and give it a chance!
What's great about it: good songs remade by kids, 'different' idea, fun, kids enjoy it
What's not so great: not always the best sounding, but fun
I would recommend this to a friend!
0points
0of 0voted this as helpful.
 
Customer Rating
3 out of 5
3
Clean Teen Drama
on July 31, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
I am not afraid to admit I love the Hilary Duff of the Lizzie McGuire days. She was a great role model for growing-up girls and showed herself like a normal pretty girl. Her innocence and ability to refrain from the wild lifestyle some of her peers went through made her someone to look up to.
She plays a Lizzie McGuire type role in this movie as well. It's what Lizzie McGuire would be like without her sidekick Miranda.
She's a girl who lost her spark once her brother died but followed through with his last request that urged her to forget what her dad thinks and pursue her talent in singing at a summer music school. She learns to find her voice, basically, through this movie... with new friends, a cute boy, and family struggles on the way.
It's a cute movie. I think teen girls would enjoy this. Many can relate. I wouldn't watch it again though. Once was enough for me. It was a bit on the corny side.
What's great about it: not the overly dramatic and secular teen drama, very clean and innocent, fun movie, joy of young musicians, Duff cute
What's not so great: nothing particularly striking about the movie, acting not the best, a bit cliche and tacky
I would recommend this to a friend!
0points
0of 0voted this as helpful.
 
Artisan Entertainment's release of Alejandro Amenabar's surreal thriller Abre Los Ojos offers a passable presentation of this masterful psychological thriller, even if it does fall slightly short in terms of extras and a more insightful view into a film that certainly invites the closer inspection that the DVD format offers. Presented in the original 1.85:1 widescreen aspect ratio (and enhanced for 16 x 9 televisions), the image is sharp and detailed, offering solid blacks, realistic skin tones, and no notable edge enhancement or artifacting. The rich greens of the park sequences, the darker images of Cesar's increasingly disturbing voyage, and the beautifully filmed dream sequences all shine on this format, offering a rich visual presentation that serves to draw the viewer into the increasingly bizarre story. Large, white subtitles are translated well, not overly intrusive, and easy to read with bold outlines. The audio presentation, unfortunately, leaves a little more to be desired in terms of effectiveness and creativity. The low and undistinguished Dolby Surround mix only makes one wonder what could have been accomplished with a more involving Dolby Digital or DTS audio scheme. With voices, music, and sound effects not fully utilizing directional effects and the full capabilities of the format, viewers are not as drawn into Cesar's disturbing experience as they may be if more attention had been focused on creating a more involving audio mix. Also sadly lacking is a director's audio commentary track. Amenabar has crafted a complex story of reality versus fantasy with many twists that also deals with many sensitive subjects such as personal perception and loss of identity. It's a shame that viewers are not offered the insight that would no doubt lay the grounds for a fascinating peek inside the director's motivations in regards to story and presentation. Production notes and a brief insert only serve to whet ones appetite for such insight, and though they are well presented, they only provide an exclamation to the disc's few shortcomings. The menu screen is a beautiful and easily navigable combination of the film's more seductive imagery and offers easy access to the disc's all-too-few special features. Though Artisan's disc's shortcomings are sometimes frustrating in light of what could have been, Abre Los Ojos was, at the time of the DVD's release, only a small foreign release by a relatively unknown talent. With the director gaining prominence and Hollywood momentum with The Others, and a big-budget remake starring Tom Cruise hitting theaters in late 2001, maybe Abre Los Ojos will get a more suitable DVD presentation somewhere down the road.
 
Customer Rating
4 out of 5
4
Thought-Provoking Thriller
on July 31, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
Nothing like watching a provocative Spanish thriller like this all alone in the dark at 2 AM. Not only was the 'riddle' of Cesar's reality a test to my tired mind, but the sudden thrills sneaked up on me and kept me active with the movie. I recommend such a scenario when you watch it. It's quite the thing to see before going to sleep.
Not the best movie ever, but an excellent watch nevertheless. I wish it was less confusing, especially when things appear to be making sense. It's a movie with romance, betrayal, friendship, identity-crisis, fantasy vs. reality, and science.
Cesar and Sofia, though Cesar, the womanizer rich boy jumps into getting intimate with her for superficial reasons, develop a deep meaningful relationship that is tested once Cesar enters what appears to be a nightmare... a nightmare where he can't tell the difference between Sofia and the haunting ghost of his girlfriend Nuria.
It's hard to explain without giving it away, but if you like sci-fi thrillers and want to check out a movie of a different country, try this.
What's great about it: interesting concept, touch of Spanish culture, distinct characters, entertaining and engaging
What's not so great: the quick Spanish can be difficult to follow, confusing
I would recommend this to a friend!
0points
0of 0voted this as helpful.
 
Customer Rating
3 out of 5
3
Cute, but Inaccurate and a Bit Stretched.
on July 30, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
From books to looks--that's the basic lowdown of this movie. A stereotypically nerdy girl who, from what she knew, could recite the principles of physics more easily than she could apply lipgloss learns that her strength of smarts is not her passion, rather, a newfound glory, skating is what her heart yearns for.
It's about her convincing herself and her Get-into-Harvard-Single-Working-Needs-the-Cash-mother that she herself really does have her heart set to getting into the Ivy League and getting the best education, and accepting that it's okay to fall in love with something that may not require the best of education or award you the highest pay, or last a whole lifetime (physical strength fades as intellectual strength grows).
After rereading what I wrote, I make this move sound 10x better than it really is. The fundamental flaws of this movie is what makes it appear less than it could have been, but the heart at least makes this movie enough to suffice a dreamy little girl's craving for passion.
The Big Problem: The girl may have been excellent on computers and science, but any ice skater will tell you that this girls extremely quick jump into some of skating's most difficult moves is HIGHLY unrealistic. It just doesn't happen. It gives girls the false pretense that anyone can jump into it and excel, which just leads to disappointment. Now, in general, encouraging people to never fear trying something out is not bad... but I think they should have made everything a bit less stretched and it could have been just as warming.
Some may have an issue of the movie being less universal by having a bit extreme stereotypes behind the smart girl and the ice princesses. The smart girl being so absorbed in books that her social skills lag entirely and the ice princesses so spoiled and snobby and glamorous that not just anyone could be accepted. I think I agree with that to a certain extent. Perhaps, the movie was meant to show girls that anyone...no matter how lacking they are in a certain department, has an equal chance to become something glamorous.
Another inspiring girls to enter the glamor world movie/show, eh?
Despite all this, while watching the movie, I never thought "I want to watch this again and again!" It was okay, nothing spectacular. Warm and feel-good. I loved Michelle Trachtenburg when she was a kid in The Adventures of Pete and Pete and Harriet the Spy. This movie takes a more serious, teenage role and puts her back on TV screens.
All and all, I actually feel this movie can be skipped. It seemed that this movie really wanted the skating to be a big focus, and making it unrealistic didn't help. Watch 'Bend it Like Beckham' instead. This movie is a too good to be true, why can't something like that happen to me type movie. I mean, this beautiful girl is BOTH is a spectacle in science and in skating.
What's great about it: Michelle Trachtenburg is charming and sincere in her role, good effort, young non-skating girls might like it
What's not so great: seems to be a bit rigidly stereotypical, not accurate for an ice skater, a bit predictable
No, I would not recommend this to a friend.
0points
0of 0voted this as helpful.
 
Franklin J. Schaffner's epic about Russian aristocracy comes to DVD with a widescreen transfer that preserves the original theatrical aspect ratio of 2.35:1. The English soundtrack is rendered in Dolby Digital Mono. English, Spanish, and French subtitles are accessible. This disc offers the original full-length version of the film, talent files, a theatrical trailer, never-before-seen footage, and an interesting featurette made at the time of the film's production. Anyone with a taste for epics will want to take a look at this fine disc.
 
Customer Rating
4 out of 5
4
European History to Life
on July 29, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
For an American kid taking AP Euro, this is a great watch. European history is so complicated with all sorts of royalty and wars next to American history. So much more to remember. Watching some movies about certain important European events in history certainly helps.
This is about particularly Russia and Czar Nicholas and his wife and family. It's a subtle movie, not rushed at all, which can make it peaceful to watch but also at times boring. It seemed to be not so wild at the moments it should be and too quiet when need not be.
Overall, It was an enjoyable experience, but the type of movie you'd only want to watch once every few years.
I'd give it a 3.5 stars.
What's great about it: first time watch is interesting, good for people taking AP European History, involved
What's not so great: feels very very long and dragging
I would recommend this to a friend!
0points
0of 0voted this as helpful.
 
This winner of 11 Academy Awards is presented in widescreen anamorphic with an uncommon but well-suited aspect ratio of 2.76:1. Given its lengthy running time, the film has been divided onto two sides of a single disc with the flip occurring (thankfully) during the "Intermission" break. The transfer itself has few flaws, but the actual print shows countless signs of age, including color loss and grain. The audio is in English (Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround) and French (Dolby Digital 2.0) with English, French, Spanish and Portuguese subtitles. Special features include a "Cast and Crew" section that is a mere film credit listing (no bios). An audio commentary track is provided by Charlton Heston and, though repetitive, it is an invaluable source of great stories and his own unique viewpoints. The track does not cover the entire length of the film, so the disc has a special, built-in "fast forward" feature which links the commentary sections together. Unfortunately, the language subtitle feature cannot be deployed during the commentary. Side B of the disc features additional extras, including an hour-long documentary entitled "Ben-Hur: The Making of an Epic." This excellent piece examines the entire history of Ben-Hur, from the initial novel to early theatrical productions and up to the film adaptations. Side B also includes a seven-minute "Screen Test" section which features actors Leslie Nelson and Cesare Danova in the roles of Ben-Hur and Messala, as well as a one-minute silent film of actress Haya Harareet that looks to be a makeup and wardrobe test. Rounding out the special features is a rather barren photo gallery with ten stills and illustrations, plus a theatrical teaser and trailer and an awards list. This disc does not match its subject's epic stature, but it's worthwhile viewing nonetheless.
 
Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
Classic Excellence
on July 29, 2008
Posted by: fiddler
What classic doesn't have an amazingly deep and pure plot behind it?
For this generation, young people actually have to be forced in classes to watch old classics to ever actually watch them. With all the crazy special effects and amazingly good looking (with makeup, expensive gowns, fake tans, surgery, personal trainer) actors there's nothing visually "WOW!" about classical movies that would lure the youth into it. I am an example of this.
We watched this in Latin class in high school twice a year for five years, and I enjoyed it every time. It's a quiet not overly dramatic, and innocently sweet masterpiece bringing to life the roman history we have been taught.
What's great about it: entertaining, educating, modest and innocent
What's not so great: seems long
I would recommend this to a friend!
+2points
2of 2voted this as helpful.
 
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