Movies New on DVD - MSN Movies

New on DVD

:

Movies

'Drillbit Taylor'/Paramount
"You get what you pay for," promised the original ads for this comedy. It probably wasn't meant to refer to the film itself, a budget-minded production from the Judd Apatow comedy assembly line, but it makes for an appropriate thumbnail review. Owen Wilson is the title character, a self-proclaimed Army special forces veteran (he's actually a deserter) hired by a trio of high school freshmen (Nate Hartley, Troy Gentile and David Dorfman) as a low-rent bodyguard. His job is to protect them from a borderline sociopathic bully (Alex Frost) and his partner in torment (Josh Peck). Then, after fleecing the hapless nerds for all he can, he inevitably rises to his responsibility, posing as a substitute teacher to watch over his charges. "A junior-league 'Superbad' with an aftertaste of 'The Pacifier,' 'Drillbit Taylor' is a just passable pubescent comedy with a modest laugh count by Apatow factory standards," writes Variety critic Todd McCarthy. Wilson largely carries this lazy high school comedy with his laid-back intensity and amiable show of confidence, and Leslie Mann holds her own just fine in her brief scenes with Wilson. Danny McBride co-stars as a fellow panhandler who tries to muscle in on Drillbit's scam.

Available in both the original PG-13 theatrical cut and an "Extended Survival Edition" that runs seven minutes longer. Both feature equally meandering, laid-back commentary by director Steven Brill, co-writer Kristofor Brown and the three young stars, who each wander in to briefly discuss their characters and their scenes; a 12-minute, audio-only phone conversation between Brown and co-writer Seth Rogen (illustrated with production stills), which is both livelier and funnier; the usual deleted and extended scenes; a "Line-o-Rama" montage of alternate improvised lines; and a gag reel. The "Extended Survival Edition" also includes a handful of bite-sized featurettes that are less documentaries than distractions -- entertaining enough snapshots of fun on the set without much insight.

DVD InfoExclusive Clip: "Bodyguard" | Buy DVD | Buy Blu-ray 
©The Weinstein Company
My Blueberry Nights
The English language debut of Hong Kong filmmaker Wong Kar Wai ("In the Mood for Love") is a road film starring Norah Jones (in her film debut) as a spurned lover traveling through a movie-made America of damaged loves, broken romances and wounded hearts. The script, co-written by Wong and American crime novelist Lawrence Block, is more a suggestion of stories than actual drama, always threatening to dissolve in the woozy, color-saturated images, but the sensuous texture and rich atmosphere holds it together. This is a movie about moments captured in time, about the sensuality of image, about the overwhelming emotional assault of loving and living. Jones may not be a great actress, but her face, all doe eyes, lush lips and melancholy yearning, is the most expressive landscape in Wong's movie-fantasy recreation of America. Jude Law plays a New York diner cook who offers Jones a sympathetic ear and a slice of pie, and Rachel Weisz, David Strathairn and Natalie Portman co-star. Includes the featurette "Making My Blueberry Nights" and an 18-minute "Q&A With Director Wong Kar Wai" (shot at the Museum of the Moving Image in 2008).
©Anchor Bay
Sex and Death 101
"Heathers" writer Daniel Waters dives back into black comedy with this odd tale of a handsome New York executive (Simon Baker) whose happy life and impending marriage are turned upside down when he gets an e-mail with the name of every woman he's ever had sex with. The problem is that it continues on to list every woman he will have sex with, and it's a long list. It's a strange comedy with an interesting premise (his fated sex binge becomes a curse he can't escape and a chore that loses all pleasure) and a weird subplot about a serial killer (Winona Ryder) who hunts men guilty of sex crimes against women. Robert Wisdom and Patton Oswalt appear in comic interludes as the technicians of the celestial computer that sent out the fateful list, and Leslie Bibb and Mindy Cohn co-star. Features commentary by writer/director Waters and the making-of featurette "101 Perversions" (and if that's not a title guaranteed to attract supplement browsers, I don't know what is).
©Miramax Films
City of Men
The men of "City of Men," a big-screen continuation of the TV series spin-off of Fernando Meirelles' Brazilian crime epic "City of God," are two 17-year-old best friends (Douglas Silva and Darlan Cunha) from fatherless homes in the violent slums of Rio de Janeiro. As one searches for the father he never knew, the other is forced to take responsibility for his own son. But, when a rival drug dealer targets them, both have to go on the run. Produced by Meirelles and directed by his longtime collaborator, Paulo Morelli, it's another vivid look at the doomed lives and limited options of youth in a world where drug dealers rule their neighborhoods like junior warlords. Includes the featurette "Building a City of Men."
©New Yorker
Sunflower
Zhang Yang's family drama charts three decades in the troubled relationship between an overbearing father (Sun Haiying, playing a once gifted painter who returns from a labor camp unable to paint), the rebellious son (Gao Ge) he pushes to fulfill his own dreams, and the wife and mother (Joan Chen) caught between them. The family portrait also becomes a survey of the changing social and physical landscape of Beijing, from the waning days of the cultural revolution to the modernity of the present. Includes the featurette "The Making of Sunflower."

In addition to his regular contributions to MSN Movies, Sean Axmaker is a film critic for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and a DVD columnist for MSN Entertainment. He is also a contributing writer for GreenCine.com, Turner Classic Movies Online and Asian Cult Cinema, among other publications.

advertisement
Featured Articles
Get Smart! Please!
In honor of bumbling Maxwell Smart, a brief history of our favorite clueless detectives
What's in Your DVD Player, John and Joan Cusack?
We chat with the siblings about their new film, 'War, Inc.,' and their DVD-watching habits
Frat Boy or Everyman?
The brilliant best and infantile worst of Adam Sandler
What's in Your DVD Player, Todd Haynes?
We chat with the filmmaker of the enigmatic Bob Dylan 'biography' 'I'm Not There'
On the Rocks
With 'Iron Man' and 'Hancock' featuring heavy-drinking protagonists, we reflect on the most memorable drunks in movie history
Unclassics
Though they may be listed among the greatest films of all time, these 10 movies deserve to be downgraded