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 | | 16. Get Smart (Widescreen) | | | Starring: Alan Arkin Anne Hathaway Director: Peter Segal | | Format: DVD Release Date: 4/28/2009 | | Video Reviews Available: 1 |  | Get Smart - DVD Review By: Marc Eastman - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 11/17/2008 10:43 PM | | It's still a bumbling slapstick driving most of the comedy, but this Max isn't quite so far toward complete idiot. He's just unfortunately uncoordinated, and Carell manages to infuse a bit of depth and a lot more heart into the character than was ever the point of the original. Get Smart makes a great decision in trying to shift the focus away from Max's gags as much as possible. read the full review | |
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 | | 21. Peter Pan (2 Disc Platinum Edition) | | | Director: Clyde Geronimi Wilfred Jackson | | Format: DVD Release Date: 12/16/2008 | User Rating: 5 |  | Peter Pan (1953) - DVD By: Christopher Null - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 2/23/2007 6:47 PM | |
Peter Pan may be a boy who refuses to grow up, but his movie is really one of Disney's most adult "kids'" films.
Like Pinocchio, there are a lot of mature themes in Peter Pan. The elfin Peter is full of duplicity -- he'll lie to no end to get his way. Peter and the children he has brought with him to Never Land (they don't want to grow up either) visit a local Indian tribe, and with appropriate 1950s un-PC-ness, the smoke'm peace pipe and blow smoke triangles (cue song: "What Made the Red Man Red?"). Wendy and the kids are kidnapped by an extremely effeminate sailor (the immortal Captain Hook, Pan's nemesis). read the full review | |
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 | | 35. Babylon 5-Lost Tales | | | Starring: Tracy Scoggins Bruce Boxleitner | | Format: DVD Release Date: 7/31/2007 | User Rating: 5 |  | Babylon 5: The Lost Tales - DVD Review By: Rafe Telsch - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 7/28/2007 10:01 PM | | Babylon 5: The Lost Tales is a welcome window back into the lives of the characters we followed for five years, with the feeling of just another episode of the old show, rather than the grandeur or disappointment of a movie length story. It's a chance to revisit with old friends, catch up on where they've gone in ten years, and then the window closes as the credits role. Like all visits with old friends, it's far too short and leaves a strong desire for more time. read the full review | |
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