That being said, this Hallmark version is garbage. The rendered resolution is quite poor. The packaging is cheap as is the printing on the DVD itself. The laser coating and artwork dye actually flake off at several places on the disc. You would think that someone cooked this "bootleg" in their basement. The disc image itself shows on my computer as "HM9352DVD01". That's right, no actual DVD title. I have never seen this before from a supposedly professional authoring studio. So I heartily recommend the movie, but detest this shoddily made product. Perhaps this is one of the few instances where it's best to only buy the digital download.
Hitched For The Holidays (Hallmark) (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
Arthur Quarry's Dance Class (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
The original first season Flintstones theme was the instrumental 1960 main title "Rise and Shine" composed by musical director Hoyt Curtin, who provided the show's distinctive musical cues. "Meet the Flintstones" emerged in 1961 with lyrics written by series co-creator William "Bill" Hanna.
The exceptional voices were provided by Alan Reed as Fred Flintstone, dino-operator/quarry worker; Jean Vander Pyl as Wilma Flintstone, his wife; Mel Blanc as Barney Rubble, Fred's bosom buddy and lifelong pal; and Bea Benaderet as Betty Rubble, Barney's wife. June Foray provides Betty's voice in the Flagstones pilot which is included in this collection.
Despite the notoriously simple art direction (thick black lines, etc.) presented in the first season, it remains my favorite because the simple art style complements the Honeymooners-inspired dialogue and situations, in addition to Hoyt Curtin's uncanny musical feel of the show. A classic show inspired by a classic show!
Features:
Featurettes
Early TV promo spots
The original pilot episode "The Flagstones"
The Big Year [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray) newly tagged "comedy"
AppId is over the quota
Actors: Steve Martin, Jack Black, Owen WilsonDirectors: David FrankelFormat: AC-3, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, Subtitled, WidescreenLanguage: English (Stereo), French (Stereo), Spanish (Stereo)Subtitles: English, SpanishDubbed: French, SpanishRegion: Region A/1 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1Number of discs: 2Rated: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Studio: 20th Century FoxDVD Release Date: January 31, 2012Run Time: 100 minutesAverage Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (356 customer reviews)ASIN: B004LWZWC4Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #17,887 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV) Learn more about "The Big Year [Blu-ray]" on IMDb
21 & Over (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
"21 and Over" is like a 21st Century version of "Animal House" and "Porky's" - only this one comes with a bit of a social conscience, as befits the times we live in.
Miles Teller, Skylar Astin. and Justin Chon play buddies from childhood, now ending their time in college, who reunite to celebrate the 21st birthday of one of them, Jeff Chang (Chon). Astin's Casey is the stuffed shirt who's already on the fast track to a career on Wall Street after he graduates; Chon's Jeff is the stressed-out A-student whose dad is pressuring him to ace a med school interview the next day; and Teller's Miller is the Stiffler-type wise-ass who refuses to grow up, convinced that the only life worth living is one patterned after the "American Pie" movies.
Against their better judgment, Astin and Teller- take Chon out for a celebratory bender, resulting in what anyone with any knowledge of how these things customarily work out in the movies can plainly predict. Yet, beyond all the drinking, brawling, sex rituals and generalized pandemonium, "21 and Over" actually has some poignant things to say about friendship and finding that fine line between becoming a mature adult and selling out to a life devoid of fun and joy. Luckily, the screenplay by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore (who also directed the film together) doesn't overdo it in the moralizing department, neatly balancing the insights with a steady stream of ultra-crass frat-boy hijinks. The movie even has some fun skewering the misogyny and sexual double standards that prevail among some of the male youth of today.
The movie is helped immeasurably by the performers who bring both humor and heart to the proceedings. They make the nonsense not only bearable but actually quite enjoyable at times.
Femalien 2 [VHS] (VHS Tape) newly tagged "comedy"
There are plenty of sex scenes. And all are good. The women are attractive, especially Bethany Lorraine. She's really the main reason to watch this. Unfortunately there's no Jacqueline Lovell in this one and Vanesa Talor only has one scene. Also, compared to Femalien 1 and other Surrender titles, this one is a little tamer. For instance, there's "sort of" a girl/girl scene in the strip club with Bethany Lorraine. But I guess Bethany would only go so far because it doesn't ever go beyond caressing and some mild kissing. However, there is another girl/girl scene where the girls are much more "interested" in each other and Bethany Lorraine does have two girl/boy scenes where she does more.
Overall, it's good softcore that is very cheap and I can easily recommend it. It's just not in the same league as Surrender's earlier titles.
Parental Guidance (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
The trailers advertising "Parental Guidance" (hereafter PG) were not only unpromising, but borderline appalling. It emphasized the tired, painful slapstick and saccharine sentiment of so many other formulaic family comedies, that I was determined to avoid it. But, visiting my mother and deciding to take in a movie before lunch at Bugaboo Creek Steakhouse, we decided upon PG because it was the only movie that had subject matter my Mom (not particularly keen on hobbits, 40-somethings, or even Lincoln) was interested in. After seeing it, we were pleasantly (if surprisingly) entertained, despite the dilapidated old "Clash of the Generations" plot. Our amusement was largely due to those reliably schticky comedy workhorses Billy Crystal and Bette Midler.
Crystal and Midler play fairly (but not completely) old-fashioned Artie and Diane Decker, parents to Type-A, harried upper-class daughter Alice Decker Simmons (Marisa Tomei). Alice is married to Phil Simmons (Tom Everett Scott) a basically easygoing engineer who, like Rick Moranis's Wayne Szalinski in the "Honey, I.." movies has converted their home into a technological, computerized, self-sustaining "house of tomorrow". Their children are Harper (Bailee Madison), who is as neurotically driven as her mother, Turner (Joshua Rush) her more levelheaded, technologically savvy brother who has a stuttering problem, and certainly not least, the mischievous, irreverent, red-haired Barker (Kyle Harrison Breitkopf) whose best friend is an invisible kangaroo named Carl (not Harvey).
Unlike the paternal grandparents, Artie and Diane have not seen their grandchildren in months, if not years. They are "the other grandparents".
Running on empty: Love on the Run (Kindle Edition) newly tagged "comedy"
When his best friend Kimber to assure him that running shoes are the way to go for the heart, was thrown into February, Cole Parker St. Gem does not work does not, and can picture himself hitting the trails. But Cole, maybe that is why he is ready to marry. In February, a certified couch potato, to move his body past the front door and the capture of Cole's heart in the process?
Mental (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
"Mental" is one of those "heartwarming" comedies that would feel corny if it was just churned out of Hollywood. But since the story comes from someone who actually lived it, it has a very genuine feeling -- especially since it tackles some heavy issues, such as mental illness. Not only does poor Shirley have a nervous breakdown after years of being treated horribly, but one of her daughters suffers from full-blown schizophrenia.
And despite that, it's still uproariously funny. Hogan makes the whole thing just a little too colorful, zany and over-the-top. It's a live-action cartoon. He careens us through the over-the-top antics of Shaz and the girls --they trash their neighbor's all-white house in a really gross way, Shaz beats up the donut girls, and attempt a commando-style infiltration of a shark exhibit. But Hogan never loses sight of the bittersweetness of a messed-up family, and never stops making you want to see things turn out all right.
If there's a complaint, it's that the movie sometimes doesn't seem to draw a distinction between real mental illness and being beaten down by life. Perhaps that's the point, but that's sort of like saying that Crohn's disease isn't too different from being pressured to go on a diet.
Toni Colette is absolutely brilliant as Shaz -- a surly, wild woman with a pitbull and knife in her boot, who never hesitates to kick normalcy in the face. But we get glimpses of a very troubled, sometimes "mental" woman underneath it all, and it leaves you wondering if she wants the Moochmore girls to replace something missing in her own life.
And the rest of the cast is quite good also -- Sullivan, Bethany Whitmore, Chelsea Bennett and Nicole Freeman are simply delightful as the girls, especially Malorie O'Neill's heartbreaking depiction of a schizophrenic child who isn't getting the help she needs. Gibney is heartbreaking as a sweet, gentle woman who has been beaten down by life, and finally gains some strength on her own. And... well, Liev Schrieber is just hilarious when he's being tortured by an acoustic guitar.
"Mental" is one of those rare comedies that can tackle heavy subjects without losing its wacky, wild attitude -- and Toni Colette's Shaz is worth the price of admission alone. Bring us the mechanical man!
Tooth Fairy 2 (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
I LOVE Larry, he is so funny. This movie is nothing like the last one, except he is the fairy. There are all different actors, and frankly it is not as funny as you would think. I am sorry Larry, but the Rock has you beat on the funny portion. This could be due to the fact that the Rock is a wrestler and actor of a different type, so to speak. And knowing Larry is in the movie you just expect it to be hilarious, I don't know. I was actually disapointed in it.
As far as the person selling this, they did a fantastic job. The items was as described, a good price, and the shipping was fast, thank you.
The Human Tornado (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
Nothing beats Dolemite's , jokin', hustlin' kung-fu ways. NOTHING!!! Step off, Batman!!!
I quote the man himself when I say: "Man, move over and let me pass, 'fore they has to be pullin' these Hush-Puppies out your ...!!"
My brother MADE me watch this, and I'm a changed man.
21 & Over (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
"21 and Over" is like a 21st Century version of "Animal House" and "Porky's" - only this one comes with a bit of a social conscience, as befits the times we live in.
Miles Teller, Skylar Astin. and Justin Chon play buddies from childhood, now ending their time in college, who reunite to celebrate the 21st birthday of one of them, Jeff Chang (Chon). Astin's Casey is the stuffed shirt who's already on the fast track to a career on Wall Street after he graduates; Chon's Jeff is the stressed-out A-student whose dad is pressuring him to ace a med school interview the next day; and Teller's Miller is the Stiffler-type wise-ass who refuses to grow up, convinced that the only life worth living is one patterned after the "American Pie" movies.
Against their better judgment, Astin and Teller- take Chon out for a celebratory bender, resulting in what anyone with any knowledge of how these things customarily work out in the movies can plainly predict. Yet, beyond all the drinking, brawling, sex rituals and generalized pandemonium, "21 and Over" actually has some poignant things to say about friendship and finding that fine line between becoming a mature adult and selling out to a life devoid of fun and joy. Luckily, the screenplay by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore (who also directed the film together) doesn't overdo it in the moralizing department, neatly balancing the insights with a steady stream of ultra-crass frat-boy hijinks. The movie even has some fun skewering the misogyny and sexual double standards that prevail among some of the male youth of today.
The movie is helped immeasurably by the performers who bring both humor and heart to the proceedings. They make the nonsense not only bearable but actually quite enjoyable at times.
Smart bear (the Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
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The Seven Year Itch [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray) newly tagged "comedy"
Having sent his wife Helen and son Ricky to Maine to avoid the scorching July Manhattan summer, Richard Sherman, "keymaster" of a pocket edition publisher, stays behind to work, promising his wife to abstain from drinking and smoking. "Some husbands think just because their wives are away for the summer, they can run wild." However, the appearance of a young blonde renting his upstairs neighbours' apartment turns his life topsy-turvy, turning him into a bundle of nerves.
Sherman approves the covers of the pulp books: "Soup up the title a little, get yourself a cheerful and interesting cover. It's a question of imagination, and Mr. Sherman has a lot of it," says the narrator. To quote his wife and as a promoting film technology gag, "lately, you've been imagining in Cinemascope and Stereophonic sound." From his imagination, including a parody of the beach scene in From Here To Eternity, we learn that he doesn't feel he's good-looking or charismatic. It's his time with The Girl that changes him. His imagination ranges from the humorous, ridiculous, even paranoid. And he reveals his thoughts in soliloquys, which at times resemble trains-of-thought or even his subconscious.
The Girl turns out to be a typical blonde, but fun-loving, friendly, with simple tastes, understanding, trusting, and as it turns out, compassionate as seen from her sympathy for the creature of the black lagoon: "He wasn't really all bad. I think he just craved a little affection, you know. A sense of being wanted and needed." Oh, and she's definitely not a Rachmaninoff girl.
My take on the skirt scene?
Maybe I'd seen so many pictures of posters of it that it wasn't a big deal, and it's a bit overhyped. There's plenty of superlativememorable dialogue, much of it funny, that boosts this movie. However, the Girl has the best one. When Sherman tells her he imagines a girl to love someone like Gregory Peck, she tears into him. "You think every girl's a dope? You think a girl goes to a party and there's this one guy, a great big hunk in a fancy striped vest strutting around like a tiger, giving you that 'I'm so handsome you can't resist me look? And from this she's supposed to fall flat on her face? Well, she doesn't fall on her face. But there's another guy in the room, way over in the corner. Maybe he's kind of nervous and shy and perspiring a little. First you look past him, but then you sort of sense he's gentle and kind and worried, and he'll be tender with you. Nice and sweet. That's what's really exciting. If I were your wife, I'd be very very jealous of you." Those sentences cheered me up when I first heard them, and made me think, "Well, maybe I've got it made, even though I don't look like Tom Cruise or Patrick Swayze." After all, like Sherman, I thought, no pretty girl in her right mind wants me.
The key trends of vegetarian cuisine, the coaxial cable, 50,000,000 TV viewers, and Arthur Godfrey are time capsule elements exemplified in the America of 1955.
Tom Ewell, who reprised his role from the George Axelrod play of the same name, must be one lucky actor. After this movie, he played opposite another blonde, Jayne Mansfield in The Girl Can't Help It.
Robert Strauss is funny as Kruhulik the lecherous greasy-looking janitor, who quotes from Porgy and Bess to describe the antics of summer bachelors: "Summertime, an' the livin' is easy, when the fish are jumpin' and the cotton is high." Doro Merande has a funny line as a waitress whose pro-naturalist camp stance extends to pacifist sentiments. And Carolyn Jones, best known as Morticia Addams, plays a red-haired nurse smitten by Sherman in an imagination sequence.
For me, this is Marilyn's best picture and best character. I fell in love with her upon first seeing this. Now, though, I consider her an old friend. So, calling all the lonely creatures of the lagoon like me out there with great imagination and no esteem. Don't give up hope--there's a Girl waiting out there for you.
The monsters of the University (Plus bonus features) [HD] (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
Quality: not surprisingly, the quality of the video is gorgeous. Much more to say about the transfer. It is flawless.
Extras: there are a TON of extras!
If you like behind-the-scenes to process film, Extras here are about as extensive as I've seen. Not just the shorts to give background to the life of the Pixar campus (Campus Life), but with a lot of dedication to all aspects of the film. Of course, there are also deleted scenes.
Nice scenes that Director Dan Scalon speaks in detail and why it was cut. They are, of course, work in progress, but still interesting to see what could have been a part of the movie.
If I have one complaint, have extra materials, the layout of the menu. Although the features are blu-ray Disc, the menu does not work as a blu-ray disc menu. Generally, you will be able to work with the menu when the movie (or services) are playing on the screen. Instead, you will need to return to the menu screen selects the next option. It is a small warning, but there you go.
SPOILERS BELOW. PLEASE DO NOT READ THIS IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THE MOVIE.
If you don't care about at the end of the discussion, then by all means, read on ...
My wife and I have seen monsters in the University, and they both liked it. Many of the top critics on Rotten Tomatoes, however, appeared to be completely in the movie.
"This is a safe, predictable, edge-free, almost bland effort in the Studio rarely hedges its bets."-Richard Roeper
"[It] [Pixar] apparent drift toward average, toy sales take precedence over originality.
Huckleberry Hound (1958-1959): the Complete First Season (the Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
The Ruff and Reddy Show this was a Hanna-Barbera's second experiment in bringing comics to use animation to match the small screen with a much smaller budget, limited TV programs. Thus, it plays like a radio, Don Messick narrating and Daws Butler voiced cornocopia characters whose dialogue he called "pure butter." Visually, the show is also the feast, if minimalist, modern pattern, witty writing, such as the unforgettable Star Wars Huck, Yogi, Boo Boo, Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinks and clean, bright colors.
This is a groundbreaking show that established the Hanna-Barbera, sets the standard for TV ' toons, and inspired by the retro look of Cartoon Network, "two stupid dogs," Dexter's Lab, "and" Johnny Bravo, "within the meaning of the cartoon tributes this Genndy Tartakovsky and Scott Shaw, the animators who love the look of classic H-B. When this show aired at 6.30 pm in the time between New York City, adults and college kids consists of a large part of its 16 million viewers and I can do the imaging of children taking Huck, because the second H-hound, Scooby Doo.
Knights of the Dinner Table: Bundle of Trouble, Vol. 10 (Paperback) newly tagged "comedy"
Debuting in the gaming magazine Shadis (which Blackburn founded), KoDT came to DRAGON Magazine with issue #226 and rapidly became the most gaming strip in the short history of the hobby. "'Over the years I've often wondered just what it is about KoDT that causes all the fuss," says Blackburn. "'I'm the first to look at the typical strip and say, 'It's not all that!' It's poorly drawn. The punchlines aren't always funny. I think it goes back to all those letters about the hidden camera."
One phrase recurs with spooky frequency in KoDT fan letters: "'Jolly must have a hidden camera in my gameroom." A creepy notion, given that the Knights can spend eight hours randomly killing a towns stray animals, slaughter every citizen in Desert Gorge while trying to rob its bank, and negotiate ""equitable experience points" contracts with the gamemaster. Better than ever before, KoDT may show us the true state of gaming-brrr!
Blackburn, now 54, conceived his strip in 1990 as part of his larger creation, Shadis. (Which he launched along with his company Alderac Entertainment Group while still a seargenat in the Army. He had been a great fan of J.D. Webster's Fineous Fingers from the early DRAGON Magazine, and wanted something similar in his magazine. "Unfortunately, I couldn't find anyone willing to do a strip." he explains, "Finally I sat down and drew out a very crude cartoon showing a gamemaster and a player sitting around a table arguing over a rules call. Who knew?"
With an anthropologist's eye, Blackburn based the KoDT characters on friends and fellow players-and, in one case, on himself. "'B.A. Felton, the gamemaster, is one of those guys who just lives to GM. He likes the power that comes with the screen, and he likes to tell a story. The problem is that he feels the players are the enemy, constantly ruining his 'finely crafted' adventures."
As for the rest: "'Bob Herzog is a hack-n-slasher through and through. He just wants to kill things. One of his favorite sayings is, 'Yeah, yeah, enough flavor text. How many experience points did I get?'
"'Dave Bozwell is a hack-n-slasher too, but he's also a follower. He usually goes along with whatever Bob wants to do. He's famous for his HackMaster +12 and likes having the baddest weapon' in the book.
"Sara Felton was added to the group after so many fans wrote in to ask, 'Where's the female gamer?' She turned out to be a key figure. Every comedy act needs a straight man (er ... woman).
"Brian VanHoose is the ultimate ruleslawyer. He has to have the last word on everything. He's every GM's worst nightmare. Make a bad call, and Brian is going to call you on it."
Alderac published three issues of a KoDT comic (1994-95) before Blackburn sold his interest in the company and moved on. "I wasn't having fun and that was the reason I got in this business. I was aware of the potential for KODT by this time and took the property with me. My plan was to do it as a monthly magazine but first I needed to find the right partners. I had made friends with the folks at Kenzer & Company while I was at Shadis. We discovered we had so much in common, I decided to come aboard and throw my intellectual properties in the kitty. I became a major shareholder in the companyand I can honestly say that I'm home. This feels so right and I'm glad things panned out the way they did. Our current distribuiton level is 20,000 issues per month and doesn't even include the tradebooks and related products. We're all prettymuch stunned by what the strip is doing."
Though anthropologists frown on collaborating with their subjects, Blackburn gets many KoDT ideas from his fans. "'Almost every idea submitted has something in it I can lift and use. Every idea gets printed out and shoved in a huge binder. I'll periodically pull it down and flip through it.
"In my cultural anthropology classes they taught us to "shut up and observe.' Whenever I go to a convention and find myself around fellow gamers, I love to listen. I've gotten to the point where I can't go anywhere if I don't have a pen and notepad, because I'm afraid I'll hear something I can use."
Jolly was inducted into the Game Manufacturer Association's (GAMA) Hall of Fame in 2006. Knights of the Dinner table is the longest running gamer comic in history and is also a contender for the longest runing comic written and drawn by the same hand. He also helped write HackMaster the role-playng game (Game of the Year: 2001), Aces and Eights and numerous gaming products and books along with his partners at KenzerCo.
"I feel blessed.", Jolly recently wrote in an editorial. "I got stumbled into this business and along the way have managed to make a lot of friends and experience many wonderful adventures. You really can't ask for moree.
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel [HD] (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
By now everyone knows the story of "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel." A group of English retirees decides for various reasons (mostly financial) to move to India. The retirement hotel they choose sounds glorious from the brochure, but turns out to be a rundown, if once-grand, hulk run by a young Indian with much more enthusiasm than skill. A lot of comedy ensues, and a little conflict and tragedy; attitudes are changed, old bonds broken, and new bonds forged.
The ensemble cast of British character actors ranges among the super-famous (Judi Dench, Maggie Smith), the moderately famous (Tom Wilkinson, Bill Nighy, Penelope Wilton) and the not-so-famous (Ronald Pickup, Celia Imrie), with the addition of one young rising star (Dev Patel, of "Slumdog Millionaire" fame). All of them are as charming, funny and touching as they possibly could be. Meanwhile, Madden and screenwriter Ol Parker do an excellent job of blending and articulating the various plotlines, aided by the gorgeous photography by Ben Davis and the insinuating score by Thomas Newman. Considering the effort all these master professionals made to give an audience a good time, it seems churlish to give "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" any less than five stars.
The Last One (Part 1 and Part 2) (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
It truly is an end of an era. We have grown to love these 6 characters and to say goodbye is quite hard!
Season 10 is where the growing up develops.
So much happens in the final season!
Monica and Chandler finally become parents
Rachel and Ross finally get back together
Phoebe finally gets married to Mike
and Joey, well, I dunno....
This has to be my second favourite Season of all time. Watching the last episode bums me out everytime, because I really want to know where these characters go after it all ends.
This season is a must have in any collection!
This time there are only 18 episodes so saying goodbye is cut short. By the end of the series I am just happy for these characters as they have grown up so much since they had their first coffee at Central Perk 10 Years ago.
On The Hilarious meter, tere are some really funny episodes here, The funniest for me has to be The One Where Ross Is Fine. David Schwimmer is so funnyin that episode, it is a must see!
Ok then, well My Last 5 Personal Favourite Episodes from Season 10 Are:
The One Where Ross Is Fine
The One Where the Stripper Cries (The Final Flashback episode!)
The One with Phoebe's Wedding
The One With Rachel's Going Away Party (The Second to Last!)
THE LAST ONE (The Goodbye episode, one of my favourites EVER)
Well After Ten Years, 230 episodes, and so many laughs, Friends ends with a bang.
10 years well spent!
See ya!
DreamWorks Dragons Double Pack: Gift of the Night Fury / Book of Dragons (Two-Disc DVD Pack + Online Video Game) (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
Dragons: Gift of the Night Fury Review:
I'm not going to give away the story, only what I liked and what I didn't. First, I'm a huge fan of the movie, I actually enjoyed Legend of the Boneknapper Dragon (contrary to other reviews on here), and I think it's the most original family flick to come out in years. So when I heard that they were releasing two new features, I was excited, but can I say that now?
The Good:
The first movie I watched was Gift of the Night Fury and in the previews they made it look like that Dreamworks really pinched the penny on the animation, but looks are deceiving, and in all reality it actually wasn't bad. The story, though short, was enjoyable and had a lot of good comedy parts as well as some good action. I like it how they gave Fishlegs a bigger role than in the movie. Oh and yeah, I do got to admit, the baby dragons were cute...there I said it.
The Bad:
(Updated 11.17.11):
Too short! I know they have a budget though, but come on guys, two movies (one 22 minutes/one 18 minutes...correct me if I'm wrong), but it just feels a bit too short.
I rewatched it again and now I really don't mind Toothless appearance. I thought he looked weird, but after I watched it again, they were only a few parts where I thought he looked kind of odd, but I take back what I said. If anything, I didn't like how they had a lot less of Toothless, but it makes sense considering the ending.
Astrid was another problem. She didn't have the girl power like she did in the movie and seemed more like a very watered down version.
She didn't have the attitude and seemed to me she was brainwashed by Disney. Yeah, she just acted way too happy for my taste. *Update* After watching this a few more times, meh, it's actually kind of cute in a way, but I still miss the girl power Astrid.
Final Rating: 4/5 Stars - I actually found myself laughing a lot more watching it the second time. There were some problems, but it's worth a rewatch.
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Book of Dragons:
The Good: It was basically profiling all the dragons that live among the people of Bourke which made it seem fun. The dragon ideas were creative and hopefully some of them will make an appearance in the sequel coming out in 2014.
The Bad: Although some parts were amusing in humor, they weren't laugh out loud funny. I really can't say more about it, because it was more of a movie profiling all the dragons that are known in Bourke and nothing else really.
3/5 Stars: It did what it was meant to do and that is tell you the different species of dragons. Nothing too special.
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Extras:
This is probably the main reason why I gave it one less star was because I was dissapointed with the extras. They were okay: they had deleted scenes for Gift of the Night Fury, they had Gobber's Dragon Training, but other than that the rest wasn't really worth it, I guess. I'll be honest, I haven't checked them all out yet, but the rest seem more generated towards kids, and that's fine. But I think something on the sequel would be cool, maybe an interview with one of the directors or what have you talking about the upcoming sequel. An interview with the actors would've been great as well.
Dreamworks could of done better, but it wasn't all that bad I suppose. I'm going to rewatch it tonight and see if I can see something I didn't before, but for right now that's the first review out there on this.
The Guilt Trip (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1Number of discs: 1Rated: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Studio: ParamountDVD Release Date: April 30, 2013Run Time: 95 minutesAverage Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1,945 customer reviews)ASIN: B0087ITBPCAmazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,164 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV) Learn more about "The Guilt Trip" on IMDb
Divas Never Flinch (Paperback) newly tagged "comedy"
Then a dear friend suggested I read the works of E.F. Benson, a British writer from the 1930's and 40's. I was just in the mood for his amusing tales of a group of society women in a small English village. Oh the shenanigans. There was more intrigue and manipulation amongst these ladies than within the Balkan countries before World War I. I was totally hooked. I read all of his Queen Lucia books and slowly realized how the social scene of my own little town of Santa Fe, New Mexico resembled the society in this small English village. Then lightning struck. And out of this electrical incident came Divas Never Flinch my first satirical novel.
Now I had written before - but not fiction. I'd written stage and screen plays - all unsuccessfully, except for a performance of one of my plays at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles. So Divas was my first venture into fiction. Many short stories (collected in Gotta Dance with the One Who Brung Ya), and other novels followed. And I find that I am most content writing fiction. And to my surprise I seem to have a penchant for dry humor. Who woudda thunk it? In any case I hope you enjoy my stumbling efforts.
Author's website is: www.jonmcdonaldauthor.com
After Ever After (MP3 Music) newly tagged "comedy"
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Femalien 2 - The Search For Kara (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
There are plenty of sex scenes. And all are good. The women are attractive, especially Bethany Lorraine. She's really the main reason to watch this. Unfortunately there's no Jacqueline Lovell in this one and Vanesa Talor only has one scene. Also, compared to Femalien 1 and other Surrender titles, this one is a little tamer. For instance, there's "sort of" a girl/girl scene in the strip club with Bethany Lorraine. But I guess Bethany would only go so far because it doesn't ever go beyond caressing and some mild kissing. However, there is another girl/girl scene where the girls are much more "interested" in each other and Bethany Lorraine does have two girl/boy scenes where she does more.
Overall, it's good softcore that is very cheap and I can easily recommend it. It's just not in the same league as Surrender's earlier titles.
When things were rotten (1975) (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
at the time of writing this again in offline mode!
In the first place was on VHS, was excited about is the ability to subscribe to dvd!
Plus more episodes on vhs release is not available.
This production is not expected to dissapoint, I look at it now!
The transfer quality is good, not great--no, I would say great!
Sometimes you can read reviews of dvd products, which has been published for the first time on DVD,
complaints, such as "it appeared to be transferred to video tape"
So here!
good resolution, good color!
guests at the Cid Caesar, Dudley Moore, Paul Williams, and more
about dvd playability you usually read that when it is a dvd on demand, that it can not play
DVD recorders, but I have a LG brand dvd tuner/Player/Recorder, it plays well, of course
results may vary!
A Thousand Words (+UltraViolet) (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
The thoughts and depth of the movie may be the definition of cliche, but it was good.
I mean surprisingly, it was good!
The movie touched on the comedic side at times, coming across as not hard to navigate. Meaning I saw parts coming.
The end was gratifying, the middle pretty good. The beginning was a little slow or rather a little predictable, but not bad.
I liked it, which shocks me more than you know.
In the end, reading the reviews from other users spoiled a little bit of the movies path, but I recommend this movie. It is about 3.5 to 4 stars, and had a good message.
Haganai: I do not have a lot of friends, vol. 3 (Paperback) newly tagged "comedy"
The third volume of the main characters in "Haganai" ("Boku wa Tomodachi ga Sukunai" or "I don't have a lot of friends"), and eventually becomes the story, even though they had seen in the prologue of the first part. We are going to meet new members of the "neighbours", devoted to the culture and Maria Rika Shiguma? doujin Takayama, Adviser to the neighbors of the Club, which is actually ten years old.
In fact, these characters – the girl doujin comics, for example – are nothing unusual in the recent Japanese manga ("Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei," "Mayo Chiki," "Lucky Star", etc.), but "Haganai" manages to make these familiar characters very interesting by highlighting the idiosyncratic traits. You're not a point when Rika (his name also means "Science" in Japanese) is so passionate about Gundam-like mecha battle stories. Sexual innuendos with plenty of period alone. No wonder that the book is rated for "older than 16".
Word Play such as a dual meaning in the play "Haganai," a significant role, especially in the first episode of this volume, where the gags and jokes stemming from the Japanese traditional comedy styles, such as manzai, a storyteller, and Yoshimoto Shinkigeki.
But what is most impressive about the third part of the cartoon version of "Haganai" is, of course, the role of the characters Kobato Rika Hasegawa, the protagonist, Maria and Kodaka's younger sister. The fierce competition in the Maria and Kodaka is also one of the highlights of the volume. To enjoy it.
The Simpsons Season 2 (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
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Ferris Bueller's Day Off (DVD) newly tagged "comedy"
Matthew Broderick plays Ferris, for all his fast talk and con artist ways, as really the most innocent character in the movie, almost childlike in his belief he can accomplish anything. Ferris Bueller is an ultimate refutation of one of the great archetypes of comedy, The Fool.
The Fool is a person of childlike innocence, who naively believes he can accomplish anything, and our amusement comes from watching him fail. The classic example of The Fool is Charlie Brown. For decades, Lucy Van Pelt said to him, "Come on, Charlie Brown, kick the football, I won't move it." Time after time, he fell for it. When Lucy swiped the ball out of the way at the last moment and he went flying through the air to crash down on his back, we laughed and said to ourselves, "What a moron! I'd never be tricked like that." We felt good about ourselves by contrast. The thing is, our amusement at The Fool is essentially meanspirited and soul-deadening. The Fool says to us, "You can't win. The game is fixed. Any belief in yourself, that you can accomplish wonders, is false and foredoomed to failure." What Ferris Bueller says to us is, "If you believe in yourself....you can accomplish anything." Then he goes ahead and does exactly that, right before our eyes.
I first saw Ferris Bueller's Day Off in 1986 at the Ventura Boulevard Cinema in the San Fernando Valley. It played there for, like, four or five months. It was incredible. People simply didn't get tired of seeing it, thus the long engagement - especially by LA standards where movies tend to be there and gone. Though Matthew Broderick's portrayal of Ferris is obviously the linchpin that holds the movie together, what really made the film for me, bringing me back to see it time and again, was Alan Ruck as Cameron Frye. Without getting into a display of emotional scars here, let's just say that while I admired Ferris, I identified strongly with Cameron. Ferris is the kid we all wished we could be. Cameron is the kid so many of us really were. When Cameron explodes all over the Ferrari, he's expressing the rage for all of us.
It's a wonderful fantasy there could be such a friend as Ferris, who could see our (Cameron's) pain, would move heaven and earth to help him, and the person would find the strength to take advantage of it. There's a bit of a messiah complex to Ferris Bueller, a desire to save those he deems worthy of salvation. I'm sure one of the reasons he's been friends with Cameron for so long is that Cameron so obviously needs help. Cameron Frye is a long running personal project for Ferris Bueller, and one of the engines driving Ferris' actions in the movie is the realization he's running out of time, if he wants to effect lasting, positive change in Cameron's life it's got to be NOW. My favorite moment of the film, really THE pivotal moment, is when Cameron says, "No. I'll take the heat." And sitting there in the theatre, I smiled and whispered, "Good for you."
Part 2: Cast and Characters
The four main characters, Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick), Cameron Frye (Alan Ruck), Paige Peterson (Mia Sara) and Edward R. Rooney (Jeffrey Jones) are perfectly cast. Really, all four actors do such marvelous work it's impossible to imagine anyone else in these roles.
Of Matthew Broderick's portrayal of Ferris Bueller, what can I say? Wonderful. Beyond that, any poor words of mine couldn't do his work here justice. For there it stands, magnificent in its own right. See the movie, you'll know what I mean.
For all the talk I've heard over the years of Ferris being "the perfect kid," he's hardly a perfect person. There are aspects to his personality that aren't particularly admirable. He's deceitful and manipulative, probably a compulsive liar. When things don't go his way he becomes aggressive and abusive, shown most extremely when he slaps Cameron. But Ferris does have many good qualities. His lies are frequently in the service of the underdog, his deceptions designed to punish those who really have it coming. While Ferris manipulates those around him in the movie, most notably Cameron, he justifies it by saying it's really for Cameron's own good. From what we see in the film, he's absolutely right.
It's interesting to note that, based on the director's commentary, I've always seen Ferris as being a much nicer person than his creator does. One of Ferris' most impressive qualities is a complete lack of snobbishness. We see from Ferris' home life his parents are solidly middle class. Cameron's family is rich. Paige, by her class and polish, was probably born with a silver spoon in her mouth, too. But Ferris can be friends with a white trash greaser like Garth Volbeck (Charlie Sheen's druggie character) as easily as a rich kid like Cameron. He simply doesn't see any reason he shouldn't. This total absence of classism is one of the things that wins Ferris such admiration among his peers. His friends at school go from the top of the social structure all the way to the bottom. When Grace, Rooney's secretary, lists all the various cliques at school that adore Ferris, and sums up, "They think he's a righteous dude," she's right. He IS a righteous dude. To paraphrase Kipling, all men count with him, but none too much. ["If" by Rudyard Kipling.] That whole "walk with kings - nor lose the common touch" thing isn't an unattainable ideal with Ferris. It's who he is.
For all his prevarication, when Ferris realizes he must take responsibility for his actions, or even something not, strictly speaking, his fault, to protect a friend, he'll do it. Something else people admire about him. After the Ferrari goes though the window and into the ravine, this is the only time in the movie Ferris is scared. He knows this is bigtime. This isn't ditching school, it's the destruction of a $200,000 automobile. When he says to Cameron, "We'll tell your father I did it. I'll take the heat," he means it. When push comes to shove, when the rubber meets the road, Ferris is a stand-up guy.
Alan Ruck is amazingly good as Cameron Frye. All four leads seem chosen for their mobile, expressive features, but none more so than Ruck. I'm telling ya, the face of Plastic Man, folks. Ruck's features are so malleable he reminds me of a young Jim Carrey - without the goofiness.
Mia Sara, as John Hughes says during the director's commentary, is a perfect Paige Peterson. This role required someone very pretty, very elegant, but also strong enough to tolerate and control Ferris Bueller. I would go further. Not only tolerate - enjoy. There's a theory in psychology called relationship balancing, the idea we subconsciously look for a partner who's strong where we're weak. Thus these two people together form in essence one fully functional personality. Paige is stable, and quite up to keeping her cool in the face of Ferris' weirdness. When Ferris asks her, "You want to get married?" I'm sure at least part of the reason is to tweak her, to see how she reacts. She's completely unfazed, just takes it in stride. It makes sense a person with Ferris' chaotic lifestyle would be attracted to someone with her poise. But also, beneath that calm exterior, there's enough of a wild child to Paige she can truly enjoy Ferris, and pitch in wholeheartedly, a willing partner in crime to his schemes. Really, she's perfect for him.
Could anyone else on Earth have portrayed Edward R. Rooney as well as Jeffrey Jones? I think not. It's totally believable that Rooney and Ferris would loathe each other. Rooney is the sort of stupid, pompous, authoritarian control freak that a free spirit like Ferris would instantly, and correctly, recognize as a natural enemy. And vice versa.
These four actors, all arguably doing the best work of their careers, are the heart of this movie.
Part 3: The DVD
There's only one "extra" on the DVD. John Hughes' (writer and director of Ferris Bueller's Day Off) commentary track can be run with the movie. Much more so than many director tracks, there's some really good stuff here. For instance:
* Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck worked extensively with each other on Broadway before doing Ferris Bueller's Day Off, which helps explain their easy chemistry. It's no stretch to watch these two guys react to each other, and believe they've been friends for years.
* The best bit of commentary, for my money, is when Hughes discusses the sequence set in the Art Institute of Chicago, which was a kind of sanctuary for him when he was in high school. The paintings in this scene are those that were his favorites. Hughes' tone of voice, the emotions he expresses during this scene, are really touching. Prior to Ferris Bueller's Day Off, the interior of this building had never been filmed for a movie, and it was a big deal for Hughes to go back to this place that had been so important to him, and show people how beautiful it is.
* Charlie Sheen was only brought in for one day to play Garth Volbeck during the police station scene. With little or no time to rehearse, he burned up the celluloid anyway. If I can believe the Internet, Charlie stayed awake for 48 hours before shooting to give himself the proper strung-out look. In this scene he looks so much like his Dad at the same age it's eerie.
* The parade sequence was filmed during a real parade in downtown Chicago. This wasn't a situation where the street was cordoned off and filled with extras. The Ferris crew had a float in the actual parade. No one knew who they were. The crowd didn't know, probably the city fathers didn't know. When the music for "Twist and Shout" started blasting, totally of their own accord, people from the surrounding areas were drawn in, started dancing and singing along. All the shots of individual faces from the crowd weren't actors, they were "real people," there because they wanted to be, looking like they were having fun because they were. The construction worker dancing on a scaffold, way up on that half-finished building? A real construction worker. John Hughes saw him dancing, grabbed a cameraman and said, "You've got to get this guy." Then he looked at the street, saw it absolutely packed with thousands of people, all dancing and singing along with "Ferris," totally into it, and said to the guy on the camera crane, "TELL me we got that shot." Because there's no way they could have afforded to stage it, or even imagined something that wild. It just happened. TOO cool.
* There were several sequences actually filmed but cut from the final version of Ferris Bueller's Day Off. In one, Ferris goes on a radio program and talks about wanting to be the first teenager to ride the space shuttle. This was actually included in what would have been the final cut, and a trailer went out with some of that material in it. Unfortunately, the day after the trailer was released the Challenger exploded; the studio pulled the trailer and Hughes had to recut the movie to trim the shuttle stuff. I actually remember that trailer. I saw it during the day or two it was in release. If I remember correctly, a voice asks various people, "What do you think of Ferris Bueller?" and one of the respondents, a high school kid, says, "Ferris Bueller? He's going to be the first teenager to ride the space shuttle."
* Also cut was Ferris' relationship with the Volbecks, the Charlie Sheen character's family. Garth Volbeck's father owns the tow company that hauls away Ed Rooney's car.
* Another excised bit: In the restaurant, when Ferris, Paige and Cameron are brought menus, none of them want to admit they can't read French so they order something, then start eating, having no idea what it is. Then we get to see their reactions when they find out it's pancreas. This is referred to later in the cab scene when Ferris, listing to Cameron the things they've done that day, says, "We ate pancreas."
It would have been nice to have the original trailer, revised trailer, and deleted scenes included on the DVD. While chances of seeing that level of work put into the DVD for a 20 year old movie, no matter how good, are slim (even assuming the chopped footage still exists) I can dream that maybe one day, on a future version of this DVD, it might happen. I'd buy it in a heartbeat.
While we're on the subject of wishes, why oh why was the music from Ferris Bueller's Day Off never released as a soundtrack? A crime, since it's got one of best combination of songs I've ever heard in a movie. Another "I'd buy it in a heartbeat" situation that'll probably never happen at this late date.
The later "Bueller, Bueller" edition of the film does not feature this excellent commentary track.
Three Men and a Comic Book (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
AppId is over the quota
We'll take you to the Microsoft website to install Silverlight. It's free, quick, and you only have to do this once.
Get SilverlightUse the install instructions provided by Microsoft. When you're done, return to this window and your video will start playing. If it doesn't and you still see this message, try refreshing your browser window.
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Amazon Instant Video uses the Adobe Flash. We can take you to the Adobe website where you can quickly install the latest free version of the Flash.
Install Adobe FlashUse the install instructions provided by Adobe. When you're done, then return here to continue watching.
Demos of Season 1 [HD] (Amazon Instant Video) newly tagged "comedy"
Is mandatory for stereotypes, who better to see the other episodes. It would not be a stereotype, if there was a small piece of the truth.
I don't know if it has legs, but I'm going to watch every episode, until I can find.
Joe Dinicol is a revelation. It feels like I've known him forever, but honestly, not seen any of her IMDB, which was recognizable to me. Maybe it's just his pitch perfect delivery of Joshua Malina.
Ed Begley, Jr. is perfect. I'm pretty sure that I was married to him sometime in the 70 's. If I was married in the 70 's. Kind of just playing himself, once again, which is quite acceptable.
Femalien 2 - The Search For Kara [VHS] (VHS Tape) newly tagged "comedy"
There are plenty of sex scenes. And all are good. The women are attractive, especially Bethany Lorraine. She's really the main reason to watch this. Unfortunately there's no Jacqueline Lovell in this one and Vanesa Talor only has one scene. Also, compared to Femalien 1 and other Surrender titles, this one is a little tamer. For instance, there's "sort of" a girl/girl scene in the strip club with Bethany Lorraine. But I guess Bethany would only go so far because it doesn't ever go beyond caressing and some mild kissing. However, there is another girl/girl scene where the girls are much more "interested" in each other and Bethany Lorraine does have two girl/boy scenes where she does more.
Overall, it's good softcore that is very cheap and I can easily recommend it. It's just not in the same league as Surrender's earlier titles.




