This week: Edward and Bella finally tie the knot in "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1," the mystery author behind Shakespeare's works is explored in "Anonymous," John Cho and Kal Penn fight through the haze to find a perfect Christmas tree in "A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas," and "Ben-Hur" gets a biblical Blu-ray debut.
'The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1'
Box Office: $281 million
Rotten Tomatoes: 25% Rotten
Storyline: The love triangle between vampire Edward (Robert Pattinson), Bella (Kristen Stewart) and werewolf Jacob (Taylor Lautner) is finally resolved when Edward and Bella get married in this first part of the final "Twilight" story. The honeymoon is cut short when Bella becomes pregnant and the fast-growing hybrid unborn baby threatens to kill her and destroy the delicate truce between vampires and werewolves.
Extras! Both the DVD and Blu-ray contain "Bella and Edward's Wedding Video," a souvenir of...
'The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1'
Box Office: $281 million
Rotten Tomatoes: 25% Rotten
Storyline: The love triangle between vampire Edward (Robert Pattinson), Bella (Kristen Stewart) and werewolf Jacob (Taylor Lautner) is finally resolved when Edward and Bella get married in this first part of the final "Twilight" story. The honeymoon is cut short when Bella becomes pregnant and the fast-growing hybrid unborn baby threatens to kill her and destroy the delicate truce between vampires and werewolves.
Extras! Both the DVD and Blu-ray contain "Bella and Edward's Wedding Video," a souvenir of...
- 2/6/2012
- by Robert DeSalvo
- NextMovie
Ramon Novarro, Barbara La Marr, Trifling Women Ramon Novarro Brutal Death Pt.2: Convicted Killer Blames Catholicism Ramon Novarro's extant films for Rex Ingram, The Prisoner of Zenda (1922), in which he plays the sly villain Rupert of Hentzau, and Scaramouche (1923), in the heroic title role, are also well worth a look. I haven't watched The Arab (1924), which has been recently brought back to the United States from foreign archives. My understanding is that the print is incomplete; even so, here's hoping The Arab will soon be restored and shown on TCM. The now lost Ingram-Novarro collaboration Trifling Women (1922) would probably have been a sumptuous treat — cinematographer John F. Seitz's work in that Gothic melodrama seems to have inspired his later chiaroscuro lighting for Billy Wilder's Sunset Blvd. The same goes for the idyllic Where the Pavement Ends (1923), a tale of interethnic romance set on a South Pacific...
- 10/31/2011
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
Chicago – It may not even be Halloween yet, but Warner Brothers is in full holiday gift set mode, hoping that one of their lavish packages will make its way on to your wish list. Will it be the glorious seventh anniversary edition of “Citizen Kane”? Or perhaps the upcoming gift set of “Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory” with collectibles and a 144-page booklet? For many, the choice will be simple — a film with an iconic actor that set records at the 1959 Oscars as any in history — “Ben-Hur,” strikingly transferred in 1080p and available in a Limited Edition box set that will look fantastic on any hardcore movie fan’s shelf.
DVD Rating: 5.0/5.0
We were lucky enough to get our hands on the Ultimate Collector’s Edition of “Ben-Hur” and while some of these WB holiday releases often feel perfunctory (another release for “Christmas Vacation”?), this one seems perfectly in line...
DVD Rating: 5.0/5.0
We were lucky enough to get our hands on the Ultimate Collector’s Edition of “Ben-Hur” and while some of these WB holiday releases often feel perfunctory (another release for “Christmas Vacation”?), this one seems perfectly in line...
- 10/6/2011
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
It was set for a 50th Anniversary release back in 2009, only to be delayed due to the sheer extent of restoration work done to upgrade this classic film. Read on to discover whether the wait for the ultimate edition of Ben-Hur was really worth it!
Produced in an era that bore a number of epic Biblical tales, Ben-Hur is possibly one of the most celebrated of a bunch of films that reflect this time period within Hollywood. Made by MGM in 1959 for $15 million (a staggering amount of money for the time and one that meant the film was the most expensive the studio had ever produced), Ben-Hur is an ostentatious symbol of all that is great about Tinsel Town and the sheen and glamour it churns out. However, the film is also a lot more than a simple big-budget Hollywood romp of excess and high-polish: at the heart of the...
Produced in an era that bore a number of epic Biblical tales, Ben-Hur is possibly one of the most celebrated of a bunch of films that reflect this time period within Hollywood. Made by MGM in 1959 for $15 million (a staggering amount of money for the time and one that meant the film was the most expensive the studio had ever produced), Ben-Hur is an ostentatious symbol of all that is great about Tinsel Town and the sheen and glamour it churns out. However, the film is also a lot more than a simple big-budget Hollywood romp of excess and high-polish: at the heart of the...
- 9/26/2011
- by Stuart Cummins
- Obsessed with Film
Disc Dish has all the details on Warner’s highly anticipated Ben-Hur 50th Anniversary Collector’s Edition DVD and Blu-ray that we wrote about several months back and that’s officially debuting on September 27. This release marks the classic film’s premiere in a high-definition format.
This latest release of the Academy Award-winning 1959 classic (which is technically being release two years after its 50th Anniversary, but we’re not complaining!) has undergone a $1 million restoration—a frame-by-frame undertaking from an 8k scan of the original 65 mm camera negative. According to Warner Bros, it’s the highest resolution restoration ever completed by the studio.
Charlton Heston rides his white horses glory in 1959's Ben-Hur.
The restoration of the classic action-adventure epic drama is almost trumped by some newly-uncovered home movies, shot by the family of star Charlton Heston (Dark City) in Italy during the movie’s production. It’s believed to...
This latest release of the Academy Award-winning 1959 classic (which is technically being release two years after its 50th Anniversary, but we’re not complaining!) has undergone a $1 million restoration—a frame-by-frame undertaking from an 8k scan of the original 65 mm camera negative. According to Warner Bros, it’s the highest resolution restoration ever completed by the studio.
Charlton Heston rides his white horses glory in 1959's Ben-Hur.
The restoration of the classic action-adventure epic drama is almost trumped by some newly-uncovered home movies, shot by the family of star Charlton Heston (Dark City) in Italy during the movie’s production. It’s believed to...
- 6/20/2011
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
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