From the Big Screen:
“Pitch Perfect 2.” For more information on these and other releases this week, see the Weekly Guide to Home Video Releases.
This Week’s Best Bets:
“Mister Johnson”: A decade after he broke through with “Breaker Morant” (1980) — and one year after his American hit “Driving Miss Daisy” (1989) — Australian director Bruce Beresford returned to the theme of colonialism and its effects on individuals with this acclaimed film starring Maynard Eziashi (“Bopha!”), Pierce Brosnan and Edward Woodward. Eziashi, who won the Berlin Film Festival’s Silver Bear for best actor for his role here,
The aforementioned “Breaker Morant” gets the Criterion treatment this week with a 4K digital restoration, supervised and approved by Beresford: At the turn of the 20th century, three Australian army lieutenants are court-martialed for alleged war crimes committed while fighting in South Africa. With no time to prepare, an Australian major, appointed as defense attorney, must prove they
Sony has released anniversary editions of three “kids” films to Blu-ray this week in wonderful transfers: “Jumanji: 20th Anniversary Edition” (1995), starring Robin Williams, Kirsten Dunst, Bradley Pierce, Bonnie Hunt, Bebe Neuwirth, David Alan Grier, Patricia Clarkson;
From TV to DVD:
“Arrow: The Complete Third Season” (2014-15) is a five-disc DVD and four-disc Blu-ray with all 23 episodes. from Warner … “CPO Sharkey: The Complete Second Season” (1977-78) is a three-disc set with 22 episodes, $29.95. For two seasons (1976-1978) and 37 episodes, Don Rickles brought his distinctive brand of comedy to NBC-TV as the star of “CPO Sharkey.” As a 24-year naval veteran, Chief Petty Officer Otto Sharkey had seen and heard it all. He was politically incorrect before the term existed, and the recruits he whipped into shape at the San Diego naval training center received most of his shards of wisdom. They may
“The Red Road: The Complete Second Season” (2014) is a two-disc set with all six episodes of the Sundance TV series that centers around two clashing communities: a Native American tribe, and the small town of which they are forced to coexist. The long awaited federal recognition of the tribe has exacerbated decades-old tensions and history, and the fates of Sheriff Harold Jensen and Phillip Kopus are once again tied as the relationship between their communities becomes volatile. Season Two picks up a year after the end of Season One. Phillip is on parole trying to stay out of trouble. But things have changed: Sheriff Jensen has become lieutenant and the tribe is now in talks to build a casino. Kopus must endure his own version of an ordeal, a Native American test of courage and fortitude that leads either to redemption or to death. The tribe and the community must decide their futures after they are ravaged by the deaths of some of their most prominent members. From Anchor Bay.
Buzzin’ the ‘B’s:
Nearly a decade before he donned Freddy Kruger’s famous red and green sweater, horror icon Robert Englund delivered a supremely sleazy performance in the Southern terror “Eaten Alive” (1977) from Tobe Hooper, director of “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.” Deep in the Louisiana bayou sits the ramshackle Starlight Hotel, presided over by the bumbling, mumbling Judd, who may seem like a good-natured ol’ Southern gent but has a mean temper and a large
On the Indie Front:
In “Finding Neighbors” (2013), starring Michael O’Keefe, Catherine Dent, Blake Bashoff, Julie Mond, Sean Patrick Thomas and Mike Genovese, a successful stay-at-home graphic novelist hits a mid-life and creative crisis when, after the failure of his last work, he develops writers block. Seeking inspiration, he first turns to his provocative next-door female neighbor but, to the surprise of his wife, he actually ends up spending all of his time with
Foreign:
“The Farewell Party” (2015 — Israel) is a unique, compassionate and surprisingly funny story of a group of friends at a Jerusalem retirement home who decide to help their terminally ill friend. When rumors of their assistance begin to spread, more and more people ask for their help, and the friends are faced with a life and death dilemma. From First Run Features … Acclaimed director Andre
For the Family:
Even Bikini Bottom needs protection from evildoers and the ocean’s greatest heroes are here to save the day in “SpongeBob SquarePants: The Adventures of SpongeBob SquarePants”
(2014), a collection of eight animated SpongeBob episodes. Whether it’s Patrick-Man working hard to clean up Bikini Bottom or the legendary Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy being dragged back into the crime-fighting business, there is no stopping these deep-sea heroic adventures — available together for the first time. $14.88 from Nickelodeon/Paramount … “The Beginners Bible, Volume 4” (2014) is the latest DVD installment in the acclaimed, family-friendly series based on the best-selling children’s book of the same name, features three timeless tales: “The Story of Joseph & His Brothers,” “Daniel & the Lion’s Den,” and “The Battle of Jericho”; and a bonus story “The Story of Jonah & the Whale.” $9.95 from Time Life.
Special Interest:
- “The American Dreamer” (1971): A candid look into the unique mind and strange life of film legend and Hollywood rebel Dennis Hopper. In 1970, actor-director Dennis Hopper, who catapulted into stardom with his 1969 counterculture road movie” Easy Rider,” was in the midst of finishing his follow-up work, “The Last Movie,” a film that was deeply personal — but ultimately disastrous. That moment in
time became the window through which noted photojournalist Lawrence Schiller and avant-garde filmmaker L.M. Kit Carson entered to preserve Hopper’s life, who in their opinion had submerged himself in the myth of his character in “Easy Rider.” What resulted was the quasi-documentary “The American Dreamer,” a unique portrait of the pathologically rebellious Hopper, which chronicled the late artist’s agonizing, alcohol- and drug-fueled post-production of “The Last Movie.” “The American Dreamer” was first released on college campuses in the 70s and then largely vanished. In the 1990s, Hopper himself brought the film back to life when he asked for it to be screened as a companion piece to “The Last Movie” at film festivals and art houses. Etiquette Pictures — launched in July and devoted to painstakingly restoring unique and off-beat arthouse gems and rescuing them from obscurity — in partnership with the Walker Art Center and Bond 360 Studios, brings this forgotten masterpiece to home video for the very first time in a new, director-approved, 2k restoration, painstakingly reconstructed from four 16mm prints housed in the Center’s Ruben/Bentson Moving Image Collection. In a Blu-ray/DVD Combo. - “American Masters: The Women’s List” (2015): Meet 15 women who have created and defined contemporary American culture in the newest chapter of filmmaker-photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders’ List film series (The Boomer List, The Black List, The Latino List, The Out List). The documentary features intimate interviews with Madeleine Albright, Gloria Allred, Laurie Anderson, Sara Blakely, Margaret Cho, Edie Falco, Elizabeth Holmes, Betsey Johnson, Alicia Keys, Aimee Mullins, Nancy Pelosi, Rosie Perez, Shonda Rhimes, Wendy Williams and Nia Wordlaw. All trailblazers in their respective fields, these women share their experiences struggling against discrimination and overcoming challenges to make their voices heard and their influence felt. Toni Morrison opens the film with a reading of an introduction she wrote specifically for the film. Premieres nationwide Friday, September 25 on PBS (check local listings) and available the same day on DVD. From Perfect Day Films.
- “Growing Up Trans” (2015): Just a generation ago, it was adults, not kids, who changed genders. But today, many children are transitioning, too — with new medical options, and at younger and younger ages. In this program, Frontline takes viewers on an intimate and eye-opening journey inside this new frontier — where it’s now possible for kids who feel they were born in the wrong body to never have to go through the puberty of their biological sex. Eight transgender kids, ranging in ages from 9 to 19, speak with striking candor and remarkable insight about their deeply personal experiences. From PBS Distribution.
- “Harper Lee: From Mockingbird to Watchman” (2015): To everyone’s surprise, 55 years after the publication of “To Kill a Mockingbird,” Harper Lee has published another novel. “Go Set a Watchman” was written before Lee’s beloved masterpiece, as director Mary McDonagh Murphy explains in this update of her 2011 documentary “Hey, Boo: Harper Lee & To Kill a Mockingbird.” Murphy’s film sifts through the facts and speculation surrounding Lee and both her novels, and includes interviews with Lee’s older sister, close friends, and admirers including Oprah Winfrey, Scott Turow, Anna Quindlen, Tom Brokaw, Wally Lamb and more. From First Run Features.
- “Kindness Is Contagious” (2015): Heartwarming documentary by David Gaz, narrated by Catherine Ryan Hyde, the best-selling author of the novel (and film) “Pay It Forward.” It’s a film all about being nice and the benefits of being nice. CEOs, baseball players, roller girls, concert pianists, artists, street performers, soup kitchen volunteers, police officers, models and many more tell you their heartfelt stories of kindness and generosity. From Cinedigm.
- “The Other Man: F.W. De Klerk and the End Of Apartheid” (2014): It could have been a bloodbath of historic proportions. But instead, one man made the end of apartheid possible: in February 1990, President F.W. de Klerk lifted the ban on the African National Congress and ordered the release of Nelson Mandela. As the world celebrated, Mandela would go on to become South Africa’s first democratically elected president — with de Klerk as his deputy president. But de Klerk’s history is complicated. A virulent defender
of white Africans and their privileges, he helped lead the fight against ANC activists. And his own presidency was marred by violence, often at the hands of security forces he controlled. What pushed this man to reverse his beliefs and jumpstart the process of making South Africa a more equal and just nation? From First Run Features. - “Pop Life” (2015): Powerful documentary that delves into the popularity of street drugs such as Molly found in today’s EDM culture. Offers a firsthand look at the environments where this new generation of party drugs are consumed, as told by club kids, EDM DJ’s and music fest moguls. As EDM has exploded into the mainstream, illicit drugs have become rampant at concerts and with fans. Teens and young adults have grown desensitized to these popular street drugs, putting their future at high risk. From Moguldom Studios/Cinedigm.