This Is Spinal Tap (Blu-Ray)

MGM

MOVIE A

SPECIAL FEATURES B+

DVD GEEK FACTOR 8.5

(OUT OF 10)

Rob Reiner’s “rockumentary” is an enduring classic that has lost
none of its charm. Christopher Guest, Michael McKean and Harry Shearer
constitute one of the greatest fake rock bands ever, and their story
remains hilarious. With songs like “Big Bottom” and “Stonehenge,”
Reiner and his cast came up with something that was, and always shall
be, extremely funny. The cold-sore scene and the moment when Guest
plays his guitar with a violin are personal favorites of mine.

SPECIAL FEATURES: More than one hour of deleted scenes and
outtakes, hilarious commentary by the band and a 2007 performance of
“Stonehenge.”

Watchmen: Director’s Cut (Blu-Ray)

WARNER

MOVIE A-

SPECIAL FEATURES A

DVD GEEK FACTOR 9

(OUT OF 10)

Alan Moore’s “unfilmable” graphic novel actually gets an even better
treatment than it did in theaters with this meaty director’s cut on
Blu-Ray.

Director Zack Snyder adds another 24 minutes to his opus, including
more stuff with the creepy President Richard Nixon and the death of the
first Nite Owl. As an insert in the Blu-Ray’s packaging touts, this is
only the beginning for Watchmen fans when it comes to home video this
year. More about that later.

As I watched the film on Blu-Ray, it became apparent just how
faithful Snyder was to the imagery in the graphic novel. Sure, he made
some big changes (there’s no giant squid in the film’s finale), but the
stuff he chose to keep in is often shot-for-shot when compared to the
novel. It’s surprising that Alan Moore refused to participate in the
making of the movie, because Snyder, for the most part, gets it
right.

The film tells the story of a band of vigilantes existing in a
parallel-universe Earth. Richard Nixon gets elected to five terms as
president, and the planet is protected by a glowing blue superhero
named Dr. Manhattan (Billy Crudup). The Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan),
one of the vigilantes known as The Watchmen, is killed in the opening
sequence, and a mysterious masked man named Rorschach (an excellent
Jackie Earle Haley) investigates.

The film has a couple of flaws—actually, the same flaws from
which the novel suffered: It’s a little preachy and perhaps
overstuffed. Still, the majority of the film is excellent and trumps
the sequences that drag on a bit.

Malin Akerman, who plays Silk Spectre II, is unquestionably the
weakest link in the cast. This isn’t to say she’s bad; she’s just not
as good as the cast surrounding her. Meanwhile, Patrick Wilson as Nite
Owl II, Haley, Morgan and Crudup are all perfectly cast.

Perhaps the film’s greatest feat was Snyder’s ability to incorporate
Dr. Manhattan into the movie so flawlessly. Reading the novel, and
taking in that character, it was hard to imagine how he would look
onscreen. However, Snyder and Crudup came up with something that truly
honors Moore’s creation.

SPECIAL FEATURES: The film is available in many different
versions, including standard-DVD director’s and theatrical cuts, and
both widescreen and full-screen versions. The director’s-cut DVD
features some of the same supplements found on the Blu-Ray version
(including excellent documentaries, video journals and a stupid My
Chemical Romance video). The Blu-Ray features something that makes it
quite extraordinary: Immersive Maximum Movie Mode goes many steps
beyond the average director’s commentary. Snyder actually appears in
front of a screen with the movie to describe his filming process. At
times, he actually pauses the film to talk, which should elate the
Watchmen geeks. You also get a trivia track, a timeline and options to
watch mini-docs while in “Immersive” mode.

It doesn’t end with these DVD versions. A five-disc ultimate
collectors’ edition is coming out in time for Christmas. Snyder will
weave Tales of the Dark Freighter into his director’s cut, and
buyers will also get the complete Watchmen Motion Comics in the
set.

For All Mankind (Blu-Ray)

CRITERION COLLECTION

MOVIE A+

SPECIAL FEATURES A

DVD GEEK FACTOR 10

(OUT OF 10)

One of the greatest documentaries I’ve ever seen. Al Reinert’s film
incorporates NASA footage of Apollo and Gemini space missions, and what
those folks managed to film boggles the mind. Before seeing this, I
thought I had seen all of the moon film footage that mankind had to
offer. Boy, was I wrong.

While the film spends a good chunk of time on Apollo 11 and the
landing on the moon, Reinert utilizes footage from many of the missions
to create one big trip; there’s even some footage of Jim Lovell and
crew dealing with trouble on Apollo 13.

Most astonishing is the footage of the Gemini space walk, with a
magnificent Earth as the backdrop. Reinert and crew assembled an
amazing record of history with this one, and you really do need to see
it.

SPECIAL FEATURES: A commentary with Reinert and Eugene
Cernan, the last man to walk on the moon. You also get An Accidental
Gift
—an excellent making-of doc—and extra footage of
astronaut interviews.