The Man Called Flintstone
Right after their historic television run ended in 1966, The Flintstones starred in this Bond-inspired spy caper. |
Kung Fu Panda / Secrets Of The Furious Five
DreamWorks’ best in years, Kung Fu Panda is well served on disc with first rate standard supplements, though a bonus disc holding a new short is a substantially lighter proposition. |
Walt Disney Treasures: Dr Syn, Alias The Scarecrow Of Romney Marsh
Walt Disney’s much-requested mini-series comes to the Treasures line in an excellent presentation alongside its feature film version, but the supplements remain extremely lacking. |
Walt Disney Treasures: The Chronological Donald Volume Four
The thirty-one shorts highlighted on this disc pick up where the last Chronological Donald left off. We start in 1951 and end in 1961, completing the final decade of Donald’s theatrical solo shorts. The previous collection of shorts already began to see Donald’s transition from the barnyard to the suburbs. In the fifties, this was finally sealed with Donald becoming a suburban everyman with a job and hobbies and living with everyday frustrations of home and family life. In some of these shorts Donald is even married and has a family. |
Walt Disney Treasures: The Mickey Mouse Club Presents Annette
This Mickey Mouse Club serial starring Annette Funicello is wholesome Disney goodness that stands up extremely well fifty years since it aired. |
Star Wars: The Clone Wars (Two-Disc Special Edition)
The Clone Wars were a series of battles that took place between separatist star systems and the Galactic Republic. The Separatists (under the name of Confederation of Independent Systems) use battle droids to wage war against the Republic who eventually fights back with an army of cloned soldiers led by Jedi generals. The beginning of the war can be found in the film Attack of the Clones while the grand finale of the war takes place in Revenge of the Sith. This would put this latest film as well as the new TV show between Episodes 2 and 3 of the Star Wars saga. |
Popeye The Sailor: Volume 3 1941-1943
The final black and white Popeye cartoons are in this set, which means the Fleischer era is now fully on disc. There’s lots more of Pappy here, plus Popeye gets some nephews, and joins the Navy to help out against the Axis powers. |
WALL-E: 3-Disc Special Edition
Pixar’s latest is a contemporary classic, and though the Blu-ray beats it, Disney’s standard definition Special Edition set – including feature doc The Pixar Story – is a return to the great packages of old! |
Tinker Bell
Peter Pan’s little friend gets an origin story and a voice, in what is a better direct-to-video movie than many might expect. |
Shrek The Halls
DreamWorks’ television special is a festive affair that brings the Shrek franchise back to the level of the first film, not the second, but the disc is sorely lacking any surprise presents. |
The Flintstones: The Complete Series
All 166 episodes over 24 discs of Hanna-Barbera’s groundbreaking animated prime time family sitcom show in a yabba-dabba-doo set that doesn’t offer anything fresh for those with the previously released individual collections, but is an excellent treat for new fans! |
A Charlie Brown Christmas: Remastered Deluxe Edition
This is the most essential Peanuts special to own— the very first one, and perhaps still the best. |
Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume Six
The Looney Tunes Golden Collection series ends – at least for now – in style with a pot porri of curios and rarities among the all time classics, plus some classy supplements! |
Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull: 2-Disc Edition
Indy’s latest is a long, talky bore…a far cry from the adventures of old, though Paramount’s DVD packs in strong supplements that may bring about a new appreciation for the film. Or not. |
The Nightmare Before Christmas: 15th Anniversary Collector’s Edition
Tim Burton’s brilliant and original stop-motion feature gets the deluxe treatment on DVD and Blu-ray, in a wonderful set echoing the awesome achievement of the previous LaserDisc box! |
You’re Not Elected, Charlie Brown: Remastered Deluxe Edition
This Peanuts TV special may not be the most famous Charlie Brown story, but it is just as good as many of the other great specials of the 1960s and 1970s. |
Casper and Wendy’s Ghostly Adventures
Casper and Wendy’s Ghostly Adventures comes with fourteen different adventures. While the title includes Wendy’s name, this is really Casper’s collection. The DVD spans eleven years between 1951 and 1962, although the fourteen cartoons are not in chronological order. However, they can be categorized into three different themes: Casper looking for a friend, Casper and Friends (the story usually focusing on the friends rather than on Casper), and Casper’s adventures (although usually still looking for a friend). |
Speed Racer: Widescreen Edition
The Matrix‘s Wachowski Brothers are back with a brightly colored antidote to all that doom and gloom, and it’s a surprisingly intelligent and entertaining adventure for all the family! |
Jack Frost: Deluxe Edition
Rankin/Bass’ seasonal adventure is among the better of their late 1970s output, with some nice touches and a fine presentation on this otherwise barebones re-issue. |
A Boy Named Charlie Brown (Documentary)
This documentary was made for television in 1963. Though it has never aired, it did bring together Charles Schulz, Lee Mendelson, Bill Melendez, and Vince Guaraldi, leading to a partnership that would produce many wonderful TV specials. This special DVD is a wonderful gem for Peanuts fans. |
Sleeping Beauty: Platinum Edition (Blu-ray/DVD)
Disney’s latest Platinum Edition is the best for quite a while, but it drops the ball on including several supplements from previous versions, even if the few carried over do look cleaner here. |
Schoolhouse Rock!: The Election Collection
Schoolhouse Rock is re-released in a limited edition covering the American political process just in time for the Presidential Campaign of 2008. Who will run the White House for the next four years, Republicans or Democrats? We will not know until November, but the 15 shorts included in this edition cover many of the major issues in a way that even children can understand them. |
The Sylvester And Tweety Mysteries: The Complete First Season
Do cat and canary chases mix with mysteries? Sometimes yes, sometimes less so, but this is overall a nice little show. |
The Reluctant Dragon: Disney Exclusive Edition
This terrific tour of the Walt Disney Studios in its 1940s heyday is fantastically entertaining, and this new disc, while not including any extras, at least provides a way for a catch up for first timers, or a backup for those with the original Treasures collection. |
It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown: Remastered Deluxe Edition
It’s another Peanuts classic, as Linus is subjected to ridicule over his belief that The Great pumpkin will visit him in the pumpkin patch on Halloween night. A lesser but still pretty good special is also on the disc, as well as a nifty featurette. |
Those Daring Young Men In Their Jaunty Jalopies, or Monte Carlo Or Bust!
Director Ken Annakin’s follow up to Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines swaps planes for cars, the result being that Those Daring Young Men In Their Jaunty Jalopies provides just as much entertainment value. |
Won Ton Ton: The Dog Who Saved Hollywood
Director Michael Winner was an “interesting” choice to put in charge of a family film, and it’s not an entirely successful outcome, being tinged ever so slightly with some questionable material in an otherwise engaging film that’s packed with old-time screen legend cameos. |
He-Man And The Masters Of The Universe: Volume Three
The 2002-2003 series wraps up with battles galore as He-Man and the Masters face off against not only Skeletor but also King Hiss and his Snake Men. It’s a great-looking show that just manages to rise above its origins as a prolonged toy commercial. |
101 Dalmatians / 102 Dalmatians (live-action)
Disney’s live-action take on 101 Dalmatians is a surprising charmer, but its overbloated sequel certainly isn’t! Both have now been served up on new discs, but there’s not a lot here for fans to get their teeth into… |