Sunday, November 27, 2011

Blu-ray 15th November Release

Larry Crowne [Blu-ray]

Universal / 2011 / 99 Minutes / Rated PG-13
Street Date: November 15, 2011








Genres: Drama, romance,

Starring: Tom Hanks and Sarah Mahoney
Director: Tom Hanks

Plot Synopsis: Academy Award® winners Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts come together for a romantic and optimistic comedy about how it's never too late to reinvent yourself. When he suddenly finds himself without his long-standing blue-collar job, Larry Crowne (Hanks) enrolls at his local college to start over. There, he becomes part of an eclectic community of students and develops a crush on his teacher (Roberts). Now this simple guy will discover that when you think everything worth having has passed you by, you just might find your reason to live.


Disc Features:
  • The Making of Larry Crowne (HD, 11 min) — Tracing the usual steps of the movie's production, this EPK piece comes with cast & crew interviews explaining the script story, characterization, working with Hanks as director versus actor, and the plot's cultural relevancy.
  • Fun on Set (HD, 11 min) — An assortment of clips filmed on set, showing the good-natured humor of the production and everyone having a good time.
  • Deleted Scenes (HD, 8 min)

West Side Story (50th Anniversary Edition) [Blu-ray]

20th Century Fox / 1961 / 152 Minutes / Unrated
Street Date: November 15, 2011






Genres: Musical, Classic, 60's

Starring: Natalie Wood, Rita Moreno
Director: Robert Wise

Plot Synopsis: The winner of 10 Academy Awards, this 1961 musical by choreographer Jerome Robbins and director Robert Wise (The Sound of Music) remains irresistible. Based on a smash Broadway play updating Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet to the 1950s era of juvenile delinquency, the film stars Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer as the star-crossed lovers from different neighborhoods--and ethnicities. The film's real selling points, however, are the highly charged and inventive song-and-dance numbers, the passionate ballads, the moody sets, colorful support from Rita Moreno, and the sheer accomplishment of Hollywood talent and technology producing a film so stirring. Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim wrote the score.


 Other releases/ Back catalog releases:










Sunday, November 20, 2011

The Immortals Champs Box Office Nov.11 - Nov.13






           Young men put down the videogame controllers and returned to the box office in large numbers this weekend, giving "Immortals" a strong $32 million opening domestically, according to studio data.
           That's $7 million more than Relativity Media had predicted for its R-rated swords-and-sandals epic, which finished No. 1 at the weekend box office. The $75 million film also grossed $34 million opening up overseas for a worldwide premiere total of $68 million.
           With war game "Modern Warfare 3" moving 6.5 million units on its first day on store shelves last week, young men had been a vanishing breed at the domestic box office. But they came out in droves for "Immortals," with 60 percent of the audience male and 75 percent under the age of 35.
            I think people were concerned about young males, but I think they came out for 'Immortals,'" Kyle Davies, Relativity's president of worldwide distribution, told TheWrap Sunday.
Also read: 'Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3' Breaks All-Time Sales Record.
           Sony's Adam Sandler comedy, "Jack and Jill," meanwhile, grossed an estimated $26 million. While that's on the high end of the studio's expectations for the PG-rated movie, it does not compare well to the numbers most Adam Sandler films generate in opening weekend. Most of Sony's Sandler comedies have opened to well over $30 million.
           Still, it was enough to put "Jack and Jill" at No. 2 for the weekend, just ahead of DreamWorks Animation's "Puss in Boots." That movie, in its third weekend of release, grossed an estimated $25.5 million. The animated film has declined less than 25 percent from its opening two weeks ago.
           The third movie in wide release this weekend, the Warner Bros. biopic "J. Edgar," is still searching for its audience. The R-rated movie with a stellar pedigree -- it stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Armie Hammer, was directed by Clint Eastwood and written by Academy Award-winner Dustin Lance Black -- opened in fifth place, taking in only $11.6 million.
           Universal's "Tower Heist," the comedy featuring former Oscar producer Brett Ratner as director and would-be Oscar host Eddie Murphy as star, was No. 4 at the box office in its second weekend of release. It took an estimated $13.2 million -- a solid 45 percent drop from last weekend.
But this weekend was all about "Immortals."
           "The past few weekends, the box office has been suppressed -- a lot of people were getting concerned about when there would be a kick-start," Relativity's Davies said. "I think 'Immortals' did that."
The movie, which had a "B" Cinemascore, opened in 3,112 locations. It is Relativity's highest-opening movie as a distributor. The movie's 3D worked well -- 66 percent of the gross came from 3D screens.
Also read: Steve Jobs' 'Love Letter to His Wife' Makes Waves in Asia
            Relativity had a whole lot riding on "Immortals." The movie, directed by Tarsem Singh and starring Henry Cavill, Mickey RourkeStephen Dorff, Freida Pinto, Luke Evans and John Hurt, is the studio's most ambitious project so far.
            It had a budget estimated at $75 million after tax rebates for shooting in Canada. Relativity says it hedged its bets by pre-selling foreign rights well in advance.
Still, there was pressure on Relativity to make a movie that performed well.
"Immortals" did.
It was well above both the studio's internal tracking and projections from outside box-office watchers.
Also read: Jay-Z to Profit From Occupy Wall Street -- But Won't Share the Wealth
           Relativity notes that "Immortals" is the third-highest R-rated film debut this year behind "Hangover 2," which opened to $85 million, and "Paranormal Activity 3," which opened to $52 million.
           The movie is about Theseus, a mortal played by Cavill, who is chosen by Zeus to lead the fight against the evil King Hyperion, played by Rourke. The fate of both mankind and the gods both are at stake.
"Immortals" overperformed on Friday, grossing $15 million. It dropped to an estimated $10.17 million on Saturday and a projected $6.83 million Sunday.
Davies attributed the strong Friday to Veterans Day.
"With Veterans Day falling on a Friday, half the schools were closed," he said.
Meanwhile, Sony's comedy "Jack and Jill" managed to beat DreamWorks Animation's "Puss in Boots" for second place.
The PG movie, directed by Dennis Dugan and starring Sandler and Al Pacino, grossed $26 million. It had a budget estimated at $79 million.
            "When you have this type of film ... it's going to have a great multiple," Rory Bruer, Sony's president of worldwide distribution, told TheWrap Sunday. "But quite frankly, Adam's movies always have great multiples. The play has always been to open on this earlier date with the big reward working into the holiday weekend -- the big Thanksgiving weekend."
              Sony said that 53 percent of the film's opening weekend ticket sales came from families, and that 52 percent came from moviegoers 25 and older; 57 percent of the audience was female.
The movie has a Thanksgiving theme. It's about Jack Sadelstein, a guy who dreads Thanksgiving because it means a visit from his twin sister, Jill.
"Jack and Jill" had a Cinemascore of "B" and opened at 3,438 locations.
             The Eastwood-directed "J. Edgar," the Warner Bros. biopic of former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, had a budget estimated at $35 million and barely met studio expectations.
             Still, Warner Bros. distribution chief Dan Fellman told TheWrap that he was pleased with the weekend.
"We positioned the movie in a way to get the opening that we did," he said. "We're going into the Hollywood playtime right now, and we're the only real adult choice in the marketplace."
Fellman added that the movie is "certainly in position as we move forward into the holiday season with a lot of family movies, to capture the adult audience -- and, of course, we're looking at some year-end accolades as well."
"J. Edgar," which had a Cinemascore of "B," opened in 1,910 locations.
In limited release, the Lars von Trier movie "Melancholia" grossed $270,000 at 19 locations, for a strong per-screen average of just over $14,200 a theater. [Source from: reuters.com]

# Title Nov 11 - 13


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 Immortals $ 32,206,425


1
$ 32,206,425 Relativity
2 Jack and Jill 25,003,575


1
25,003,575 Sony
3 Puss in Boots 24,726,193


3
108,035,359 Paramount
4 Tower Heist 12,773,765


2
43,465,615 Universal
5 J. Edgar 11,217,324


1
11,315,858 Warner Bros.
6 A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas 5,915,143


2
23,237,525 Warner Bros.
7 In Time 4,081,881


3
30,598,618 Fox
8 Paranormal Activity 3 3,611,283


4
100,808,835 Paramount
9 Footloose 2,726,736


5
48,767,514 Paramount
10 Real Steel 1,864,688


6
81,612,804 Disney










11 Moneyball 1,066,267


8
71,857,836 Sony
12 Courageous 1,012,220


7
31,565,808 Sony
13 The Ides of March 944,292


6
38,358,318 Sony
14 The Rum Diary 803,456


3
12,371,440 FilmDistrict
15 Dolphin Tale 693,294


8
69,634,072 Warner Bros.
16 Anonymous 582,527


3
3,753,918 Sony
17 Margin Call 545,521


4
3,312,204 Roadside Attr.
18 50/50 507,529


7
33,841,644 Summit
19 Like Crazy 504,512


3
1,055,778 Paramount
20 The Three Musketeers 496,871


4
19,167,175 Summit

Blu-ray 8th & 11th November Release

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2 (Three-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo + UltraViolet Digital Copy)



Warner Brothers / 2010 / 130 Minutes / Rated PG-13
Street Date: November 11, 2011

Overall Grade 5 out of 5 Must own. No compromise.



Genres: Fantasy, adventure, family,
Starring: Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson
Director: David Yates
 
Plot Synopsis: The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 is the film all Harry Potter fans have waited 10 years to see, and the good news is that it's worth the hype--visually stunning, action packed, faithful to the book, and mature not just in its themes and emotion but in the acting by its cast, some of whom had spent half their lives making Harry Potter movies. Part 2 cuts right to the chase: Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) has stolen the Elder Wand, one of the three objects required to give someone power over death (a.k.a. the Deathly Hallows), with the intent to hunt and kill Harry. Meanwhile, Harry's quest to destroy the rest of the Horcruxes (each containing a bit of Voldemort's soul) leads him first to a thrilling (and hilarious--love that Polyjuice Potion!) trip to Gringotts Bank, then back to Hogwarts, where a spectacular battle pitting the young students and professors (a showcase of the British thesps who have stolen every scene of the series: Maggie Smith's McGonagall, Jim Broadbent's Slughorn, David Thewlis's Lupin) against a dark army of Dementors, ogres, and Bellatrix Lestrange (Helena Bonham Carter, with far less crazy eyes to make this round). As predicted all throughout the saga, Harry also has his final showdown with Voldemort--neither can live while the other survives--though the physics of that predicament might need a set of crib notes to explain. But while each installment has become progressively grimmer, this finale is the most balanced between light and dark (the dark is quite dark--several familiar characters die, with one significant death particularly grisly); the humor is sprinkled in at the most welcome times, thanks to the deft adaptation by Steve Kloves (who scribed all but one of the films from J.K. Rowling's books) and direction by four-time Potter director David Yates. The climactic kiss between Ron (Rupert Grint) and Hermione (Emma Watson), capping off a decade of romantic tension, is perfectly tuned to their idiosyncratic relationship, and Daniel Radcliffe has, over the last decade, certainly proven he was the right kid for the job all along. As Prof. Snape, the most perfect of casting choices in the best-cast franchise of all time, Alan Rickman breaks your heart. Only the epilogue (and the lack of chemistry between Harry and love Ginny Weasley, barely present here) stand a little shaky, but no matter: the most lucrative franchise in movie history to date has just reached its conclusion, and it's done so without losing its soul.

Disc Features:
Disc 1
  • Focus Points (HD, 26 min.) – This is a collection of short featurettes that covers a variety of behind the scenes material.

  • Pottermore (HD, 1 min.) – A commercial for the online experience called 'Pottermore' with J.K. Rowling teasing fans about even more 'Potter'-filled fun.
  • Final Farewells From the Cast (HD, 3 min.) – A few of the big name actors reminisce about the last decade working on these movies.
Disc 2
  • Deleted Scenes (HD, 6 min.) – There are quite a few good scenes in this short six minutes. Scenes that would have added a bit more to the movie and could've been used for some kind of director's cut if possible. There's a scene that explains much more about where Hermione got clothes that looked like Bellatrix's. There's a scene that gives a better explanation about the mirror Harry has been carrying around all this time. Another extended scene with Aberforth that shows his deeper disdain he had for his brother. And a comical scene where the Syltherin students are locked in the Hogwarts dungeon.
 

Disc 1
  • Maximum Movie Mode (HD, 2 hr. 47 min.) – As always Warner has outdone itself with its picture-in-picture commentary on the movie. This is an extensive, exhaustive look inside the making of the film.
Disc 2
  • A Conversation with J.K. Rowling and Daniel Radcliffe (HD, 53 min.) – This is one of the best special features in this set. Rowling and Radcliffe sit down with each other and candidly talk about their experiences with the story. Radcliffe asks her questions like what bits of the movies is she mad that they took stuff out of the books, and what stuff she was annoyed they added in. Radcliffe discusses his time working on the movies and how he was allergic to the Potter glasses at first.
  • The Goblins of Gringotts (HD, 10 min.) – This is more, or less, a look at how the goblins for the film were designed and how they evolved from the very first movie up until now.

  • The Women of 'Harry Potter' (HD, 22 min.) – Rowling takes point here and talks about the pride she has in her strong female characters which she created for her books.
  • Lego 'Harry Potter' Game Demo (HD)
  • BD-Live (HD)

The Change-Up Blu-ray Combo Pack (Blu-ray+DVD+Digital Copy)

Universal / 2011 / 113 Minutes / Rated R
Street Date: November 08, 2011






Genres: Comedy, drama, romance
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Jason Bateman, Leslie Mann, Olivia Wilde, Craig Bierko, Alan Arkin
Director: David Dobkin
 
Plot Synopsis: Ryan Reynolds and Jason Bateman star in the outrageous comedy from the director of Wedding Crashers and the writers of The Hangover. One drunken night, two friends admit that they wish they had the other's life. Mitch (Reynolds) thinks Dave has it all: a beautiful, loving family and a high-paying job at a prestigious law firm. But Dave (Bateman) thinks Mitch's stress-free life without obligation or consequence is the real dream come true. The next morning they wake up, hungover, in each other's bodies, and proceed to freak out! With time not on their side, Mitch and Dave comically struggle to avoid completely destroying each other's lives before they can find a way to get their old ones back.

Disc Features:

  • Fist Fight Deleted Scene (HD, 7 min.)
  • Gag Reel (HD, 5 min.)
  • Time for a Change (HD, 7 min.)
  • Family Matters (HD, 5 min.) – This featurette is dedicated to showing the state-of-the-art effects that went into making the babies shoot poop into Bateman's mouth.
  • Feature Commentary with Director David Dobkin


  • My Scenes
  • D-Box MOTION CODE
  • pocket BLU app





 Other releases/ Back catalog releases:











Sunday, November 13, 2011

Puss In Boots 2nd Week Box Office Domination Nov.4 - Nov.6




(Reuters) - "Puss in Boots" snatched the domestic box office title from a band of working-class thieves in the new Eddie Murphy action-comedy "Tower Heist," studio estimates released on Sunday showed.
          "Puss in Boots," an animated spinoff from the blockbuster "Shrek" movies, nabbed an estimated $48 million in global ticket sales during its second weekend in theaters.
That included an unexpectedly strong $33 million from U.S. and Canadian theaters, putting the 3D family film in first place domestically for the second week in a row.
           This week's win came as a surprise as industry watchers had forecast "Tower Heist" would steal the show. Domestic sales for "Puss" dropped just 3 percent from last week, far less than the typical decline of at least 40 percent after a debut weekend.
         "This is unexpectedly great news. I really think it's driven by strong word of mouth and critic and fan momentum," said Anne Globe, chief marketing officer for DreamWorks Animation, which produced the film.
The studio made a big push to bring in families this weekend after competing a week ago with Halloween, baseball's World Series and a snowstorm in the U.S. Northeast. Investors were disappointed with the $34 million domestic take for "Puss" last weekend, sending DreamWorks Animation shares down nearly 8 percent on Monday.
         Over the first two weekends, "Puss" has $114.5 million in total worldwide sales.
"Tower Heist" was in second place for the weekend with $25.1 million in North American sales, at the low end of studio projections.
         Nikki Rocco, president of distribution for Universal Pictures, noted a "general malaise" at the box office with slow overall sales for several weekends. But she said "Heist" had strong reviews in studio exit polls and drew an older crowd with 62 percent of the audience over 30.
        "Twenty-five million for a movie that appeals to an older audience is a good result," Rocco said.
The film tells the story of Manhattan high-rise employees, led by comic heavyweights Murphy and Ben Stiller, who plan a robbery to regain their losses from a Wall Street swindler.
Financed with Relativity Media at a cost of about $85 million, the movie added $9.5 million from overseas markets for a combined weekend total of $34.6 million.
OVERALL BOX OFFICE SLUGGISH
        In third place, pot-smoking duo Harold & Kumar underachieved with their holiday misadventures. "A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas" took in $13.1 million domestically, short of studio expectations of at least $15 million for the third film in the low-budget series.
Still, the movie should easily turn a profit as production cost just $19 million and "Harold & Kumar" films typically perform well on home video, said Jeff Goldstein, executive vice president of domestic distribution for Warner Bros.
"We'll be in the black," Goldstein said.
          Overall, the weekend continued a slow streak for moviegoing this fall. Ticket sales for the top 12 films were 26 percent below the same weekend a year ago, according to Hollywood.com Box Office.
          In fourth place, low-budget horror sequel "Paranormal Activity 3" earned $8.5 million in domestic sales.
          Fifth spot for the weekend belonged to science fiction thriller "In Time" starring Justin Timberlake and Amanda Seyfried. It had $7.7 million in sales at domestic theaters during its second weekend of release.
Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp, released "Tower Heist." Time Warner unit Warner Bros. distributed "Harold & Kumar," which was produced by New Line Cinema. "Puss in Boots" was produced by DreamWorks Animation and distributed by Paramount Pictures, a unit of Viacom Inc.
Paramount also released "Paranormal Activity 3." "In Time" was released by 20th Century Fox, a unit of News Corp.[Source from: reuters.com]

# Title Nov 4 - 6


Weeks
Cumulative Distributor










1 Puss in Boots $ 33,054,644


2
$ 75,527,682 Paramount
2 Tower Heist 24,025,190


1
24,025,190 Universal
3 A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas 12,954,142


1
12,954,142 Warner Bros.
4 Paranormal Activity 3 8,333,691


3
95,116,745 Paramount
5 In Time 7,481,592


2
23,990,237 Fox
6 Footloose 4,470,135


4
44,719,755 Paramount
7 Real Steel 3,436,086


5
78,779,328 Disney
8 The Rum Diary 2,920,481


2
10,356,215 FilmDistrict
9 The Ides of March 1,938,197


5
36,738,482 Sony
10 Moneyball 1,786,441


7
70,213,831 Sony










11 The Three Musketeers 1,698,634


3
18,047,630 Summit
12 Courageous 1,539,563


6
29,951,296 Sony
13 Anonymous 1,233,006


2
2,683,332 Sony
14 Dolphin Tale 1,022,266


7
68,617,383 Warner Bros.
15 50/50 953,636


6
32,974,877 Summit
16 Margin Call 718,321


3
2,516,831 Roadside Attr.
17 Johnny English Reborn 676,245


3
7,725,155 Universal
18 Martha Marcy May Marlene 455,772


3
1,021,024 Fox Searchlight
19 R.A. One 384,362


2
2,229,372 Eros
20 The Help 333,158


13
167,427,819 Disney