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Pearson: DVD of the week, March 27
Published March 27, 2007 at midnight
Children of Men
Universal. DVD, HD-DVD. 110 minutes. Rated R. $29.98.
Grade: B+
This fascinating and disturbing film based on a P.D. James novel envisions a future in which the world is in chaos and only London has retained a measure of stability.
Alcoholic bureaucrat Theo (Clive Owens) was an activist in his youth a muscle hes forced to exercise again when his ex-wife (Julianne Moore), now a rebel leader, presses him into service to smuggle a pregnant woman out of the country.
Why? Because her fetus represents the first baby to be born anywhere in 18 years. Both the government and the rebels would surely use the child for propaganda.
Director Alfonso Cuaron makes no attempt to salve our anxiety with cute touches; his movie, set in the near future of 2027, looks as sad as its characters. Still, its a fascinating study in the antihero.
Extras: several deleted scenes, features on design and special effects and a chat with futurists and philosophers about the bleak world of Children of Men.
Happy Feet
Warner. DVD, Blu-ray, HD-DVD. 109 minutes. Rated PG. $29.98/$39.98.
Grade: C+
An animated movie about saving the ecosystem? We havent seen that before.
Actually we have, but Happy Feet puts a new spin on the ecology message: It adds a huge measure of angst to animation.
That may sound harsh, but the filmmakers have loaded this movie with so much message that it leaves little room for pure entertainment.
Happy Feet tells the story of Mumble (voice by Elijah Wood), an Emperor Penguin born with a handicap. In a flock that prizes voices (thats how you woo a mate), Mumble cant sing, much to the shame of his parents. His compensating talent? He can dance, much to the chagrin of the flocks elders.
Determined to find his place in the world, Mumble heads across the ice to find out where the fish have gone. Hes determined to learn why his fellow birds are starving (the area is overrun with fishing trawlers) and to put an end to it.
Happy Feet wants to be all things to all audiences: A cartoon for kids, a message movie for adults, and a soundtrack force for Warner Brothers, which must have made up with the artist formerly know as its employee. There are several Prince songs (including Kiss) woven into the plot.
Despite some impressive digital animation the ocean chase scenes are amazing Happy Feet never wins you over. Its often so earnest that even the kids will be asleep before its done.
Extras: Two deleted scenes, including a tribute to the late Steve Irwin, a dance tutorial with tap master Savion Glover and two music videos.
Curse of the Golden Flower
Sony. DVD, PSP. 114 minutes. Rated R. $28.95.
Grade: B-
Compared to his last two films, Hero and House of Flying Daggers, director Zhang Yimous Curse of the Golden Flower is a bit of a puzzle.
Its opulent, dramatic and larded with the saturated colors for which hes known. Its also badly paced, pivoting between exciting moments and endless ones.
Imagine King Lear and Macbeth filtered through Dynasty. Set 1,000 years ago during Chinas Tang Dynasty, Flower is the story of a powerful emperor (Chow Yun Fat) and his dysfunctional family. Dad is trying to poison the empress (Gong Li), while she is plotting a palace coup with the help of one of her three sons. Another son the crown prince is in love with a servant. And the youngest son is seething with discontent. No one takes him seriously.
Curse of the Golden Flower is about what goes on behind the golden palace gates. Despite their wealth, none of the royals are happy. Old vendettas surface and warmth is a fleeting commodity. We dont like the characters, but we marvel at their ruthlessness.
Yimou gets fine performances from his cast, especially Gong Li as a woman who knows shes being poisoned, and the film is a visual tour de force.
Sadly, much of the intrigue comes in the form of whispered conspiracies. For every five minutes of battle footage there are 15 of verbal exposition.
Extras: A making-of featurette.
New dvds this week
Also in stores:
The Pursuit of Happyness: Will Smith stars in a fact-based tale of a down-on-his-luck man who makes a fortune as a stockbroker.
Curse of the Golden Flower: A sumptuous tale of Chinese court intrigue from the director who brought us Hero
Happy Feet: A Penguin who wants to dance? One of last year's Oscar-nominated animated features.
Van Wilder: The Rise of Raj: If you liked Van Wilder, the sequel (minus Ryan Reynolds) may hold appeal.
In stores next week: The Good Shepherd, Black Christmas, Volver, Charlotte's Web, Death of a President
Top five dvds
RENTALS
1 Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (20th Century Fox)
2 The Departed (Warner Home Video)
3 Stranger Than Fiction (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)
4 The Prestige (Touchstone Home Video)
5 Man of the Year (DreamWorks Home Entertainment)
SALES
1 Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (20th Century Fox)
2 Peter Pan (Walt Disney Home Entertainment)
3 The Departed (Warner Home Video)
4 Flushed Away (DreamWorks Home Entertainment)
5 The Prestige (Touchstone Home Video)
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