New Blu-ray & DVD releases w/c March 28th 2011

DVDfever.co.uk – New Blu-ray & DVD releases – week commencing March 28th 2011

New Blu-ray & DVD releasesw/c March 28th 2011

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Once again, we look at a few titles in more detail which are due out next week. The prices listed are the currentprices on Amazon.

  • Being Human Series 3 (£17.93 Blu-ray, £15.93 DVD, BBC)
  • Bicycle Thieves [Dual Format DVD + Blu-Ray] (£14.99, Arrow)
  • City Island (£9.93 DVD, Anchor Bay)
  • Doctor Who Revisitations Box Set Volume 2 (£29.93 DVD, BBC)
  • Eric Clapton: Slowhand (Book + 4dvd) (£14.99 DVD, Abstract)
  • Fantasia – Platinum Edition (£15.93 Blu-ray, 12.99 DVD, Disney)
  • Fantasia 2000 – Platinum Edition (£12.99 Blu-ray, 12.99 DVD, Disney)
  • The Larry Sanders Show: Complete Series (£69.99 DVD, Mediumrare)
  • Lexx: The Complete Series (£48.93 DVD, Mediumrare)
  • Life As We Know It (£13.93 Blu-ray, £9.93 DVD, Warner)
  • Limelight [Dual Format DVD + Blu-Ray] (£12.93, Park)
  • Machete (£14.93 Blu-ray, £10.93 DVD, Sony)
  • Mad Men Season 4 (£28.93 Blu-ray, £17.93 DVD, Lions Gate)
  • Made In Dagenham (£12.93 DVD, Paramount)
  • The Only Way Is Essex Series 1 (£11.93 DVD, C4 DVD)
  • Secretariat (£15.93 Blu-ray, £8.99 DVD, Disney)
  • The Sins (£12.99 DVD, BBC)
  • Tamara Drewe (£12.93 Blu-ray, £10.93 DVD, Momentum)
  • Top Gear: Great Adventures 4 (£12.93 Blu-ray, £10.93 DVD, BBC)
  • Unstoppable (£16.93 Blu-ray, £11.93 DVD, Fox)
  • Ugly Betty Season 4 (£23.19 DVD, Buena Vista)
  • Toast (£9.99 DVD, Momentum)
  • Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea Season 1 (£26.93 DVD, Revelation)
  • Wake Wood (£8.97 DVD, Momentum)
  • The Warrior’s Way (£15.93 Blu-ray, £10.93 DVD, EIV)

Being Human Series 3

BEING HUMAN is a bizarre, supernatural sitcom from the BBC that revolves around the concept of two young men—Mitchell and George–sharing a flat. While this seems like a tried and tested formula for television the twist is that Mitchell (Aidan Turner – THE TUDORS) is a vampire and George (Russell Tovey – LITTLE DORRIT, THE HISTORY BOYS) is a werewolf.

Complicating matters further is pair’s newfound home is haunted by the ghost of Annie (Lenora Crichlow – SUGAR RUSH). Includes all the episodes from the show’s third series.

Being Human Series 3 is released on Blu-ray (£17.93),DVD (£15.93),Complete Blu-ray (£29.93) andComplete DVD (£25.99).

Mad Men Season 4

From the off, Mad Men was reaping plaudits and acclaim, as critics and audiences lined up to declare it one of the best new modern drama series that television has brought us. What’s perhaps even more impressive, though, is that it’s kept this going. That, four seasons in, it’s not just managed to keep up the elegant stylings that got many to sit up and take notice in the first place. But that it’s delivering some terrific television as it does so. Season four puts added emphasis onto Don Draper, expertly played by Jon Hamm, and this in turn throws the spotlight onto the people closest to him.

Furthermore, Mad Men, as always, finds room to explore the supporting characters, with several compelling threads to follow. Without giving too much away, the show also picks up from the events at the end of season three, and the characters concerned find the ride just a little bumpier than they might have been expecting. It’s a terrific show. Played by a cast of characters who inhabit their roles expertly, Mad Men is what happens when a group of people who are genuinely expert at their jobs come together at just the right time. In a decade that has seen a collection of excellent television series laying claim to our time and attention, Mad Men stands proud as one of the finest of the lot.

Special Features:

  • Audio Commentaries
  • ‘How To Succeed In Business Draper Style’: Documentary
  • ‘1964 Presidential Campaign’: Featurette
  • ‘Marketing The Mustang: An American Icon’: Featurette

Mad Men Season 4 is released on Blu-ray (£28.93),DVD (£17.93),Complete Blu-ray (£68.99) andComplete DVD (£49.93).

Made In Dagenham

From the makers of Calendar Girls, comes Made in Dagenham, a story of a group of female factory workers, featuring a stellar British cast including Sally Hawkins, Bob Hoskins, Miranda Richardson, Geraldine James, Rosamund Pike, Andrea Riseborough, Jaime Winstone and Daniel Mays. It’s 1968, the year of revolution and students are demonstrating the world over. Meanwhile in Dagenham in Essex as far from the swinging sixties as possible, the Ford motor company is about to face its biggest ever threat, and from the unlikeliest of places: the female sewing machinists.

The women down tools in 1968 when they are reclassified as “unskilled”. With humour, common sense and courage they take on their U.S. paymasters, an increasingly belligerent local community, and finally the government itself, to strike an everlasting blow for equal pay for women. The catalyst for the women’s struggle is fast-talking, no nonsense “Rita” played by Sally Hawkins, whose fiery temper and occasionally hilarious unpredictability proves to be a match for any of her male opponents.

Made In Dagenham is released on DVD (£13.97).

Unstoppable

Orson Welles once said that directing a movie was like playing with the greatest toy train set in the world, and Tony Scott seems to be taking him literally. With the caboose of Scott’s Taking of Pelham 123 barely in the distance, the filmmaker turned to Unstoppable, a train-chase picture loosely inspired by a true story (and perhaps just a smidgen by Runaway Train, the 1985 film based on an Akira Kurosawa script). At a Pennsylvania rail yard, some clueless workers let an unmanned train get loose, and the thing is soon hurtling across the countryside. Did we mention that it’s pulling a few cars’ worth of highly toxic material? Did you doubt it would be?

Meanwhile, old-time engineer Denzel Washington and new conductor Chris Pine are making a routine run nearby–of course, in the movies, a routine run almost always turns into something wild. This odd couple is the only hope for stopping the runaway, while upper management dithers and an operations-room dispatcher (Rosario Dawson) spends most of the movie talking into her headset. Scott is an unabashed manipulator, and he yanks all the strings at his disposal for this whipped-up pageant: song cues, hype-filled reaction shots, stunts aplenty. It’s all so aggressive, it makes you wish the exciting story could be allowed to tell itself. But the pulse does quicken, if you can turn your mind off for a while. And although it’s faint praise, the movie is undeniably better than Pelham 123.

Unstoppable is released on Blu-ray (£16.93) andDVD (£11.93).

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