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Michael Giltz
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Tom Cruise , George Harrison , The Beatles , Bluray , DVD Reviews , Dvds , Film Reviews
, Movie Reviews , TV Reviews , Entertainment NewsReact
Inspiring Funny Hot Scary Outrageous Amazing Weird CrazyDVDs: Scorsese Stumbles, Cruise
Soars and Much More
Playing catch-up with some of the best (and most disappointing) releases from the past month, so strap
in.
MOST POPULAR ON HUFFPOST 1 of 2
Chipotle Busted For Cheating
Customers Out Of Pennies
Republican Attendees Thrown
Out After Racist Attack On
CNN Worker
RPatz Agrees To Meet KStew
But Is Selling Their Home
PHOTO: The Queen Rolls In A
Range Rover Wearing A
Hoodie
MAP: Hurricane Isaac's Path
Aims For Gulf Coast
Deaf Boy Asked To Make
Controversial Change (VIDEO)FOLLOW USCelebrity TV Political Hollywood Features Hollywood Buzz Videos
Help Us Write 'The Words'
Quick Read | Comments (27) | 08.20.2012August 29, 2012
Edition: U.S.
FRONT PAGE POLITICS BUSINESS MEDIA CELEBRITY TV COMEDY FOOD STYLE ARTS BOOKS LIVE ALL SECTIONS
Bill Moyers Dean Baker
John Hillcoat Bobby BowdenHOT ON THE BLOG
HuffPost Social Reading
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Posted: 06/01/2012 3:20 pm
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George Harrison Living in the Material World ($24.98 BluRay; UME)
Diana Ross Live in Central Park ($16.98; Shout)
Madonna Truth Or Dare ($14.99 BluRay; Miramax/Lionsgate) -- Shame on any critics who lazily
praised Living In The Material World, Martin Scorsese's documentary about George Harrison. I'm a
serious Beatles fan, so of course I watched every moment. But this is a poorly directed, poorly edited,
poorly focused film that is a major lost opportunity. No one will ever again have Paul and Ringo andGeorge Martin and Harrison's wife and son sitting down and ready to talk at length about him. AndScorsese blew it. Split into two parts, the first half spends much of its time rehashing the story of theBeatles. Before that we get a confused chronology of events that skims over his childhood, including abrief quote from two Harrison men about his childhood home. Are they his brothers, his uncles, hiscousins? I haven't the foggiest. If you're going to re-tell the story of the Beatles, obviously thisdocumentary gives you a chance to do it from a fresh perspective by focusing strictly on the experiencefrom Harrison's point of view. Scorsese doesn't bother.
Start with songwriting. What happened the first time Harrison turned up with a song? Did he go to John
or Paul first? Did he ask for permission? Did he present it to the group? Did he approach Martin? Did heaudition his song for Martin the way John and Paul did, on acoustic guitar? How did the others react?Were they proud? Jealous? Was that first song rejected? Was he encouraged? The unasked questions goon and on. Similar missed opportunities exist throughout. Spirituality is something of a thread, thougheven that isn't consistent. His career as a film producer is treated as a lark that focuses only on Life OfBrian . His lack of a cohesive solo career is perhaps understandably glossed over, though obviously
Harrison thrived in a group setting like even the modest endeavor The Traveling Wilburys more than he
did on his own. It's a deeply frustrating work.
Scorsese did a great job with the Bob Dylan project, probably because Dylan hasn't cooperated with
anyone too much so his story was quite fresh. But the chance to explore the quiet Beatle won't ever come
again in this way, and Scorsese falls very short. Of course, most pop stars can be enjoyed best on stage.
Diana Ross was at the peak of her considerable solo fame when she performed in Central Park. Happily,
this DVD contains both the rain-shortened first day and the return when she wowed the crowd with allher diva charm. Like most superstars, Ross yearns for attention and approval and love and on whatbetter stage to receive it? Now if only Mayor Bloomberg would get Billy Joel and Elton John to stage aconcert in the park, this great tradition would continue.
Madonna's career will surely inspire countless documentaries and studies in the future. But the Truth Or
GOP Approves Abortion Ban
Isaac Balloons Into A
Hurricane, New Orleans
Threatened
Limbaugh's Wild Isaac
Conspiracy
DON'T MISS HUFFPOST BLOGGERS 1 of 5
Bill Moyers
WATCH: Both Parties Give
Invisible Americans the Silent
Treatment
Dean Baker
Poverty: The New Growth Industry
in America
TOP VIDEO PICKS 1 of 7
MOST DISCUSSED RIGHT NOW 1 of 2
HOT ON FACEBOOK 1 of 3Like 4k
Recommend 9k
Recommend 696
Like 7k
Kim Kardashian Wants a Star on
the Hollywood Walk of Fame
First Video of Snooki With
Her New Baby Boy
First Look at Snooki's Baby
Boy
What's Your Favorite
Michael Jackson Memory?
13 Movies That Changed
The Way We View Poverty
Madonna's Message For
Americans: 'Don't Get Fat
And Lazy'
Dare film -- which might have been a concert throwaway -- is in fact a pretty enduring look at media
manipulation and how she exploited the spotlight and turned the attention into its own provocative
performance. True, the offstage footage is far more compelling than the actual performances, but
Madonna would grow as a live entertainer by leaps and bounds (thanks to hard work) in the years tocome.
HOT ON TWITTER 1 of 2
HUFFPOST'S BIG NEWS PAGES
Celebrity
babies
Hurricane Isaac
2012
Detroit Crime
New Orleans
Afghanistan
Oasis 2012
Barack Obama
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Marlo Thomas
MORE BIG NEWS PAGES »
WATCH: Raging Grannies
Have Some Words For
Todd Akin
ricky_martin
RetweetMake Room for (the New) Daddy
http://t.co/Q6eIDokm via
@huffingtonpost
feliciaday
RetweetThink on it: Cambridge scientists
say all mammals, birds, manyothers including octopi, havehuman-like consciousness.
http://t.co/aF6W2ZQh
Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol ($44.99 BluRay DVD combo; Paramount)
Chronicle ($39.99 BluRay DVD combo; Fox)
Pariah ($34.98 BluRay; Universal)
Albert Nobbs ($39.99 BluRay; Lionsgate)
Coriolanus ($29.99 BluRay; Weinstein Company)
Michael ($27.99; Strand) -- Ghost Protocol is a triumph for everyone involved. It's Tom Cruise's best
starring role in many years and puts him back on top of his game. It's easily the best Mission Impossible
movie -- they finally got the spirit of the TV show. And it's a great live action debut for Pixar vet BradBird. The clarity and fun of the action scenes is surely to his enormous credit.
Chronicle is a great surprise. Despite the hoopla, I wasn't holding out much hope for this tale of
teenagers who get superhero powers. But it's exactly what you want from a B movie -- a clever premise
delivered with no muss or fuss. It almost -- almost -- reaches greatness though the climax doesn't quite
satisfy as much as it might emotionally. But it comes close.
Pariah is a notable debut but it's such a personal project for writer-director Dee Rees about growing up
gay in Brookyn that I'm not certain whether this is the beginning of a major career or simply the one
story she was born to tell. Well acted and done all around; I'll certainly keep an eye out for her second
film.
Glenn Close also delivered a passion project with Albert Nobbs , her long-gestating tale of a woman who
disguises herself as a man so she can get a job and support herself. It's ultimately a curiosity, but Close
and Janet McTeer have fun and Aaron Johnson continues to impress me as the real deal.
Ralph Fiennes has fun with one of Shakespeare's lesser plays and Gerard Butler handles the verse better
than one would expect. Coriolanus is sure to be a teacher's favorite in high school English classes for
years to come.
And Michael tells a very creepy tale very well. The protagonist is an anonymous drone who has a little
boy chained up in his basement. Watching him go about his daily life while having this horrific secret is
dreadful and compelling. The scene where he is trying to lure another little boy is as tense and dramatic
as any action scene you'll see. It becomes a bit of a cold-blooded case study but for its sheer technical
mastery, this is a very, very intriguing and promising debut by director Marcus Schleinzer. I can't wait to
see what he does next.
Rout 66 -- The Complete Series ($129.99; Shout)
Hell on Wheels -- The Complete First Season ($44.98 BluRay; EOne)
The Dick Van Dyke Show -- Carl Reiner's Favorites ($24.98; Image)
Murdoch Mysteries -- Season Four ($59.99; Acorn) -- I'm very conflicted about Route 66. It's a
landmark series and good to see available however poorly its presentation. An earlier company put out
three seasons of very variable quality and then disappeared. Shout stepped in and now we have all four
seasons in a compact set with good graphics. But the hardcore fans who bought the first three seasonsmust buy them all over again to get season four. And the presentation simply isn't up to the Shout
Factory standards. They rescued an orphan here from oblivion, but this show deserves better.
I'll admit I lost interest in AMC's Hell on Wheels as the first season progressed. But it's a western and TV
doesn't have nearly enough of them; besides, the post-Civil War setting is specific and interesting enough
to bring me back. I'll catch up on what happened before season two begins.
The Dick Van Dyke Show is a great show and happily has what every long-running sitcom of quality
deserves. Every season available in great sets and a smart greatest hits package. That Fan Favorite set
contains 20 episodes. Here are another 20 chosen by creator Carl Reiner. So for a very small price youcan have 40 of the best episodes of one of TV's greats. Every show should be so lucky.
Season 4 of Murdoch Mysteries, the genial Canadian series about Victorian-era crime fighters, is good
fun for fans of the genre. Murdoch (Yannick Bisson) is a lot better at catching bad guys than at
pretending he doesn't care anymore for Dr. Julia Ogden (Helene Joy) and thank goodness.
FOLLOW ENTERTAINMENT
Shia LaBeouf: The
Unnecessary
Career Death Of...
Guns N' Roses
Slash Once Caught
David...
Samuel L. Jackson:
'Unfair' Hurricane
Isaac Avoid...
Robin Williams As
Dwight D.
Eisenhower In...The Woman in Black ($35.99 BluRay; Sony)
The Innkeepers ($34.98 BluRay: Dark Sky Films)
True Blood -- The Complete Fourth Season ($79.98 BluRay: HBO)
Ganja & Hess ($29.95; Kino)
The Red House ($15.99 BluRay; HD Cinema Classics) -- Daniel Radcliffe delivers his most mature film
performance to date in the enjoyably old fashioned horror movie The Woman In Black . It's a pity the
resolution isn't as good as the set-up but it's quite fun for a while.
The Innkeepers is very similar -- this story of employees at a spooky old Victorian inn on its last legs is
another throwback to the era when horror films meant atmosphere and fine actors hamming it up rather
than blood and gore. Kelly McGillis has great fun as a drunken psychic though again the finale lets youdown.
Fans of True Blood haven't felt let down by the series yet, no matter how outrageous it becomes. You'll be
utterly adrift for a while but like any soap you catch up quick so no need to fear jumping right in. As
always, HBO offers top quality extras.
Ganja & Hess is a landmark blaxploitation vampire movie (yep, that's right) I've always found more
interesting in the abstract than to actually watch. One problem is that it wants to be taken seriously. But
it's presented with great care here by Kino.Finally, it's not strictly a horror film but since screams in the woods set off the action in this spooky tale
of a farmer (Edward G. Robinson), his daughter and the secret of the abandoned red house, I think it fitsin nicely. Consider The Red House from 1947 to be horror-noir.
_______________________________________
Most titles listed here will be available in multiple formats and in multiple combinations, includingDVD, Blu ray, digital download, video on demand, streaming and the like. The format listed is the
format provided for review, not all the formats available. It is often the most expensive version with the
most extras. Do check individual titles for availability in all their various guises and price points.
Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop culture podcast that
reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day and features top journalists and opinion
makers as guests. It's available for free on iTunes. Visit Michael Giltz at his website and his daily blog .
Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show, also called Popsurfing and alsoavailable for free on iTunes. Link to him on Netflix and gain access to thousands of ratings and reviews.
Note : Michael Giltz is provided with free copies of DVDs and BluRays with the understanding that he
would be considering them for review. Generally, he does not guarantee to review and he receives far
more titles than he can cover.
Follow Michael Giltz on Twitter: www.twitter.com/michaelgiltz
More in Entertainment...
Recency | PopularityLike 75k GET ALERTS
Comments 0 Pending Comments 0 View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
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Copyright © 2012 TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. | "The Huffington Post" is a registered trademark of TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. All rights reserved.
Part of AOL-HuffPost Entertainment
Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from
HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Michael Giltz
Freelance writerGET UPDATES FROM MICHAEL GILTZ
Follow
Tom Cruise , George Harrison , The Beatles , Bluray , DVD Reviews , Dvds , Film Reviews
, Movie Reviews , TV Reviews , Entertainment NewsReact
Inspiring Funny Hot Scary Outrageous Amazing Weird CrazyDVDs: Scorsese Stumbles, Cruise
Soars and Much More
Playing catch-up with some of the best (and most disappointing) releases from the past month, so strap
in.
MOST POPULAR ON HUFFPOST 1 of 2
Chipotle Busted For Cheating
Customers Out Of Pennies
Republican Attendees Thrown
Out After Racist Attack On
CNN Worker
RPatz Agrees To Meet KStew
But Is Selling Their Home
PHOTO: The Queen Rolls In A
Range Rover Wearing A
Hoodie
MAP: Hurricane Isaac's Path
Aims For Gulf Coast
Deaf Boy Asked To Make
Controversial Change (VIDEO)FOLLOW USCelebrity TV Political Hollywood Features Hollywood Buzz Videos
Help Us Write 'The Words'
Quick Read | Comments (27) | 08.20.2012August 29, 2012
Edition: U.S.
FRONT PAGE POLITICS BUSINESS MEDIA CELEBRITY TV COMEDY FOOD STYLE ARTS BOOKS LIVE ALL SECTIONS
Bill Moyers Dean Baker
John Hillcoat Bobby BowdenHOT ON THE BLOG
HuffPost Social Reading
Like 102
Posted: 06/01/2012 3:20 pm
SHARE THIS STORY
Submit this storySPONSOR GENERATED POST
Like 1k
Like 12k
Like 82
Like 1k
Recommend 283Political Hollywood Movie Trailers The Avengers Electronic Dance Music More Log in Create Account
George Harrison Living in the Material World ($24.98 BluRay; UME)
Diana Ross Live in Central Park ($16.98; Shout)
Madonna Truth Or Dare ($14.99 BluRay; Miramax/Lionsgate) -- Shame on any critics who lazily
praised Living In The Material World, Martin Scorsese's documentary about George Harrison. I'm a
serious Beatles fan, so of course I watched every moment. But this is a poorly directed, poorly edited,
poorly focused film that is a major lost opportunity. No one will ever again have Paul and Ringo andGeorge Martin and Harrison's wife and son sitting down and ready to talk at length about him. AndScorsese blew it. Split into two parts, the first half spends much of its time rehashing the story of theBeatles. Before that we get a confused chronology of events that skims over his childhood, including abrief quote from two Harrison men about his childhood home. Are they his brothers, his uncles, hiscousins? I haven't the foggiest. If you're going to re-tell the story of the Beatles, obviously thisdocumentary gives you a chance to do it from a fresh perspective by focusing strictly on the experiencefrom Harrison's point of view. Scorsese doesn't bother.
Start with songwriting. What happened the first time Harrison turned up with a song? Did he go to John
or Paul first? Did he ask for permission? Did he present it to the group? Did he approach Martin? Did heaudition his song for Martin the way John and Paul did, on acoustic guitar? How did the others react?Were they proud? Jealous? Was that first song rejected? Was he encouraged? The unasked questions goon and on. Similar missed opportunities exist throughout. Spirituality is something of a thread, thougheven that isn't consistent. His career as a film producer is treated as a lark that focuses only on Life OfBrian . His lack of a cohesive solo career is perhaps understandably glossed over, though obviously
Harrison thrived in a group setting like even the modest endeavor The Traveling Wilburys more than he
did on his own. It's a deeply frustrating work.
Scorsese did a great job with the Bob Dylan project, probably because Dylan hasn't cooperated with
anyone too much so his story was quite fresh. But the chance to explore the quiet Beatle won't ever come
again in this way, and Scorsese falls very short. Of course, most pop stars can be enjoyed best on stage.
Diana Ross was at the peak of her considerable solo fame when she performed in Central Park. Happily,
this DVD contains both the rain-shortened first day and the return when she wowed the crowd with allher diva charm. Like most superstars, Ross yearns for attention and approval and love and on whatbetter stage to receive it? Now if only Mayor Bloomberg would get Billy Joel and Elton John to stage aconcert in the park, this great tradition would continue.
Madonna's career will surely inspire countless documentaries and studies in the future. But the Truth Or
GOP Approves Abortion Ban
Isaac Balloons Into A
Hurricane, New Orleans
Threatened
Limbaugh's Wild Isaac
Conspiracy
DON'T MISS HUFFPOST BLOGGERS 1 of 5
Bill Moyers
WATCH: Both Parties Give
Invisible Americans the Silent
Treatment
Dean Baker
Poverty: The New Growth Industry
in America
TOP VIDEO PICKS 1 of 7
MOST DISCUSSED RIGHT NOW 1 of 2
HOT ON FACEBOOK 1 of 3Like 4k
Recommend 9k
Recommend 696
Like 7k
Kim Kardashian Wants a Star on
the Hollywood Walk of Fame
First Video of Snooki With
Her New Baby Boy
First Look at Snooki's Baby
Boy
What's Your Favorite
Michael Jackson Memory?
13 Movies That Changed
The Way We View Poverty
Madonna's Message For
Americans: 'Don't Get Fat
And Lazy'
Dare film -- which might have been a concert throwaway -- is in fact a pretty enduring look at media
manipulation and how she exploited the spotlight and turned the attention into its own provocative
performance. True, the offstage footage is far more compelling than the actual performances, but
Madonna would grow as a live entertainer by leaps and bounds (thanks to hard work) in the years tocome.
HOT ON TWITTER 1 of 2
HUFFPOST'S BIG NEWS PAGES
Celebrity
babies
Hurricane Isaac
2012
Detroit Crime
New Orleans
Afghanistan
Oasis 2012
Barack Obama
Yoga
Marlo Thomas
MORE BIG NEWS PAGES »
WATCH: Raging Grannies
Have Some Words For
Todd Akin
ricky_martin
RetweetMake Room for (the New) Daddy
http://t.co/Q6eIDokm via
@huffingtonpost
feliciaday
RetweetThink on it: Cambridge scientists
say all mammals, birds, manyothers including octopi, havehuman-like consciousness.
http://t.co/aF6W2ZQh
Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol ($44.99 BluRay DVD combo; Paramount)
Chronicle ($39.99 BluRay DVD combo; Fox)
Pariah ($34.98 BluRay; Universal)
Albert Nobbs ($39.99 BluRay; Lionsgate)
Coriolanus ($29.99 BluRay; Weinstein Company)
Michael ($27.99; Strand) -- Ghost Protocol is a triumph for everyone involved. It's Tom Cruise's best
starring role in many years and puts him back on top of his game. It's easily the best Mission Impossible
movie -- they finally got the spirit of the TV show. And it's a great live action debut for Pixar vet BradBird. The clarity and fun of the action scenes is surely to his enormous credit.
Chronicle is a great surprise. Despite the hoopla, I wasn't holding out much hope for this tale of
teenagers who get superhero powers. But it's exactly what you want from a B movie -- a clever premise
delivered with no muss or fuss. It almost -- almost -- reaches greatness though the climax doesn't quite
satisfy as much as it might emotionally. But it comes close.
Pariah is a notable debut but it's such a personal project for writer-director Dee Rees about growing up
gay in Brookyn that I'm not certain whether this is the beginning of a major career or simply the one
story she was born to tell. Well acted and done all around; I'll certainly keep an eye out for her second
film.
Glenn Close also delivered a passion project with Albert Nobbs , her long-gestating tale of a woman who
disguises herself as a man so she can get a job and support herself. It's ultimately a curiosity, but Close
and Janet McTeer have fun and Aaron Johnson continues to impress me as the real deal.
Ralph Fiennes has fun with one of Shakespeare's lesser plays and Gerard Butler handles the verse better
than one would expect. Coriolanus is sure to be a teacher's favorite in high school English classes for
years to come.
And Michael tells a very creepy tale very well. The protagonist is an anonymous drone who has a little
boy chained up in his basement. Watching him go about his daily life while having this horrific secret is
dreadful and compelling. The scene where he is trying to lure another little boy is as tense and dramatic
as any action scene you'll see. It becomes a bit of a cold-blooded case study but for its sheer technical
mastery, this is a very, very intriguing and promising debut by director Marcus Schleinzer. I can't wait to
see what he does next.
Rout 66 -- The Complete Series ($129.99; Shout)
Hell on Wheels -- The Complete First Season ($44.98 BluRay; EOne)
The Dick Van Dyke Show -- Carl Reiner's Favorites ($24.98; Image)
Murdoch Mysteries -- Season Four ($59.99; Acorn) -- I'm very conflicted about Route 66. It's a
landmark series and good to see available however poorly its presentation. An earlier company put out
three seasons of very variable quality and then disappeared. Shout stepped in and now we have all four
seasons in a compact set with good graphics. But the hardcore fans who bought the first three seasonsmust buy them all over again to get season four. And the presentation simply isn't up to the Shout
Factory standards. They rescued an orphan here from oblivion, but this show deserves better.
I'll admit I lost interest in AMC's Hell on Wheels as the first season progressed. But it's a western and TV
doesn't have nearly enough of them; besides, the post-Civil War setting is specific and interesting enough
to bring me back. I'll catch up on what happened before season two begins.
The Dick Van Dyke Show is a great show and happily has what every long-running sitcom of quality
deserves. Every season available in great sets and a smart greatest hits package. That Fan Favorite set
contains 20 episodes. Here are another 20 chosen by creator Carl Reiner. So for a very small price youcan have 40 of the best episodes of one of TV's greats. Every show should be so lucky.
Season 4 of Murdoch Mysteries, the genial Canadian series about Victorian-era crime fighters, is good
fun for fans of the genre. Murdoch (Yannick Bisson) is a lot better at catching bad guys than at
pretending he doesn't care anymore for Dr. Julia Ogden (Helene Joy) and thank goodness.
FOLLOW ENTERTAINMENT
Shia LaBeouf: The
Unnecessary
Career Death Of...
Guns N' Roses
Slash Once Caught
David...
Samuel L. Jackson:
'Unfair' Hurricane
Isaac Avoid...
Robin Williams As
Dwight D.
Eisenhower In...The Woman in Black ($35.99 BluRay; Sony)
The Innkeepers ($34.98 BluRay: Dark Sky Films)
True Blood -- The Complete Fourth Season ($79.98 BluRay: HBO)
Ganja & Hess ($29.95; Kino)
The Red House ($15.99 BluRay; HD Cinema Classics) -- Daniel Radcliffe delivers his most mature film
performance to date in the enjoyably old fashioned horror movie The Woman In Black . It's a pity the
resolution isn't as good as the set-up but it's quite fun for a while.
The Innkeepers is very similar -- this story of employees at a spooky old Victorian inn on its last legs is
another throwback to the era when horror films meant atmosphere and fine actors hamming it up rather
than blood and gore. Kelly McGillis has great fun as a drunken psychic though again the finale lets youdown.
Fans of True Blood haven't felt let down by the series yet, no matter how outrageous it becomes. You'll be
utterly adrift for a while but like any soap you catch up quick so no need to fear jumping right in. As
always, HBO offers top quality extras.
Ganja & Hess is a landmark blaxploitation vampire movie (yep, that's right) I've always found more
interesting in the abstract than to actually watch. One problem is that it wants to be taken seriously. But
it's presented with great care here by Kino.Finally, it's not strictly a horror film but since screams in the woods set off the action in this spooky tale
of a farmer (Edward G. Robinson), his daughter and the secret of the abandoned red house, I think it fitsin nicely. Consider The Red House from 1947 to be horror-noir.
_______________________________________
Most titles listed here will be available in multiple formats and in multiple combinations, includingDVD, Blu ray, digital download, video on demand, streaming and the like. The format listed is the
format provided for review, not all the formats available. It is often the most expensive version with the
most extras. Do check individual titles for availability in all their various guises and price points.
Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop culture podcast that
reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day and features top journalists and opinion
makers as guests. It's available for free on iTunes. Visit Michael Giltz at his website and his daily blog .
Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show, also called Popsurfing and alsoavailable for free on iTunes. Link to him on Netflix and gain access to thousands of ratings and reviews.
Note : Michael Giltz is provided with free copies of DVDs and BluRays with the understanding that he
would be considering them for review. Generally, he does not guarantee to review and he receives far
more titles than he can cover.
Follow Michael Giltz on Twitter: www.twitter.com/michaelgiltz
More in Entertainment...
Recency | PopularityLike 75k GET ALERTS
Comments 0 Pending Comments 0 View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Advertise | Make HuffPost your Home Page | RSS | Careers | FAQ
User Agreement | Privacy | Comment Policy | About Us | About Our Ads | Contact Us
Copyright © 2012 TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. | "The Huffington Post" is a registered trademark of TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. All rights reserved.
Part of AOL-HuffPost Entertainment