This Christmas themed release from landmark irreverent animated series South Park offers a collection of seven holiday episodes of the show, featuring hilariously horrifying appearances by the likes of Santa Claus, Jesus, and Mr. Hankey.
Customer Rating
5
Hilarious!
on October 17, 2008
Posted by: CallawayMan
from Grand Forks, ND
This is very funny!! I can watch this over and over again!
The Tim Allen and Kirstie Alley comedy For Richer or Poorer comes to DVD for the first time with this release. Featuring a widescreen transfer that preserves the original theatrical aspect ratio and English soundtracks in Dolby Digital and Stereo, the disc also includes soundtracks dubbed in French and Spanish, as well as subtitles in Spanish and English. There are also production notes, cast and crew biographies, and a theatrical trailer included as bonus features.
Customer Rating
3
Disappointed
on October 17, 2008
Posted by: CallawayMan
from Grand Forks, ND
This was not Tim Allen's or Kirstie Alley's best movie.
Reggie Hudlin directs Tim Meadows in this big-screen adaptation of Meadows' Saturday Night Live character The Ladies Man. The film comes to DVD with a widescreen anamorphic transfer that preserves the original theatrical aspect ratio of 1.85:1. Closed-captioned English soundtracks are rendered in both Dolby Digital 5.1 and Dolby Digital Surround, while a French soundtrack has been recorded in Dolby Digital Surround as well. English subtitles are accessible. Supplemental materials include interviews with the cast and crew, and the theatrical trailer. Although this is a solid release from Paramount, the DVD screams for deleted scenes or more information about how Meadows created and shaped the character.
Customer Rating
5
Ooo It's Lady!
on October 17, 2008
Posted by: CallawayMan
from Grand Forks, ND
Filled with stupid comedy but I love that stuff. When it was done, my fiance stared at the screen for a few seconds then said, "That was the dumbest movie I have ever seen." Haha.
In this comedy from Austin Powers director Jay Roach, Ben Stiller plays a young man who endures a disastrous weekend at the home of his girlfriend's parents. Greg Focker (Stiller) is completely in love with Pam Byrnes (Teri Polo), and views their upcoming trip to her parents' house on Long Island (where her sister is to be married during the weekend) as a perfect opportunity to ask her to marry him. Once Greg is introduced to Pam's parents, however, things stampede steadily downhill. Pam's father, Jack (Robert De Niro), takes an instant and obvious dislike to his daughter's boyfriend, lambasting him for his job as a nurse and generally making Greg painfully aware of the differences between him and Pam's family. Where Greg is grubby, relatively unambitious, and Jewish, Pam comes from a long line of well-mannered, blue-blooded WASPs. Things go from bad to worse in less time than it takes to spin a dreidel, with Greg incurring the wrath of both Pam's father -- who, it turns out, worked for the CIA for 34 years -- and the rest of her family, and almost single-handedly destroying their house and the wedding in the process.
This reviewer is a member of the Best Buy Tech Insider Network Program. This invitation-only program provides BestBuy.com reviewers with manufacturer-supplied products for the purpose of writing honest, unbiased and usage-based reviews. Outside of receiving products to test and review, Best Buy Tech Insider Network Reviewers are not compensated in any other way.
Yes!! It is very much worth it. They make your tv look the very best that it can in your setting. I would recommend anyone doing this with a tv 42" or larger.