Monday May 21
DVDDVD & Blu-ray Reviews: May 23, 2011
22/05/2011 | Nikki Baughan

Our reviews of the best home entertainment releases for the week of May 23, 2011 Read Barney's Version Review


DVDBarney's Version (DVD)
22/05/2011 | Nikki Baughan

Memories are made of this... At the heart of Barney’s Version is a powerful performance from Paul Giamatti, as an ageing curmudgeon looking back over his past. He blunders his way through two marriages—to a tortured artist (Rachelle Lefevre) and a Jewish socialite (Minnie Dr [ ... ]


More DVD Reviews

We Live in Public (DVD)

DVD

Big Brother

Documentaries have become a dime a dozen over the last few years; the increased availability of technology, a growing acceptance of low production values and the myriad subjects that are out there to be investigates making it the genre of choice for many filmmakers. It's only the very best of them, however, that either introduce their audiences to something new or revisit something familiar in an original, interesting and entertaining way. And Ondi Timoner's fascinating film We Live in Public can certainly be counted amongst these.

Even though the Internet has become part of the fabric of daily life for many of us, it's still might come as something of a surprise to learn that it has been around for 40 years. And one of the first people to realise the enormous possibilities this new technology presented in a cultural sense was Josh Harris. Despite the fact that Harris is one of the Internet's greatest pioneers, you'd be forgiven for never having heard of him – and that's part of what makes Timoner's film so fascinating. Shot over the course of Timoner's 15-year friendship with Harris, it sees him become a dotcom millionaire in the early 1990s, launch the first Internet TV network and use the net as social network tool that was way ahead of his time. When he launched his Quiet project in 1999, in which 100 people lived in an underground bunker, their every movement captured on camera, it was an Orwellian vision of the fame and the future that has turned out to be chillingly accurate. But this experiment, along with others, had a huge psychological effect on Harris that has changed his life forever.

Whittled down from thousands of hours of footage, Timoner presents a gripping portrait of a man who is, as so often the case, part genius and part crackpot. Made up of interviews with Harris's family, friends, colleagues and contemporaries, along with archive footage of the man and his projects, it is a jigsaw of success and failure, giddy highs and depressing lows that is as compelling as it is cautionary. As social networking sites grow in international popularity, and Internet profiles become intrinsic parts of the identities of millions, Harris's vision of a world living out it's life in public seems to be becoming something of a reality. That Harris is now a forgotten figure in the online community – a meeting with MySpace executives falls flat, partly because they don't know who he is – doesn't diminish his story. Indeed, it makes it even more fascinating. 4 stars

ROLL CREDITS...
Director Ondi Timoner
Format DVD
Distributor Dogwoof Pictures
Released April 12



DVD Reviews Archive

The Shield: Season 7 (DVD)
Seven Pounds (DVD)
Lesbian Vampire Killers (DVD)
Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist (DVD)
Sounds Like Teen Spirit (DVD)
Valkyrie (DVD)
The Big I Am (DVD)
Che: Parts One and Two (DVD)
Surviving Summer (DVD)
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (DVD)
Changeling (DVD)
Slumdog Millionaire (DVD)
The International (DVD)
Frost/Nixon (DVD)
Bride Wars (DVD)
Knowing (DVD)
Stardust (Blu-ray)
The Reader (DVD)
Bedtime Stories (DVD)
The Vanishing of the Bees (DVD)
Friday the 13th (DVD)
Zack and Miri Make a Porno (DVD)
Paranormal Activity (DVD)
Zombie Virus on Mulberry Street (DVD)
Doubt (DVD)
The Spirit (DVD)
Let the Right One In (DVD)
Hush (DVD)
Rachel Getting Married (DVD)
Passengers (DVD)
Angels and Demons (DVD)
Big River Man (DVD)
The Tattooist (DVD)
Night at the Museum 2 (DVD)
Whiteout (DVD)
Max Payne (DVD)
Milk (DVD)
Fireflies in the Garden (DVD)
Daybreakers (2009)
The Children (DVD)
Quantum of Solace (DVD)
Gonzo: The Life and Work of Hunter S Thompson (DVD)
Linha de Passe (DVD)
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17 Again (DVD)
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Cadillac Records (DVD)
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Law Abiding Citizen (DVD)
Transporter 3 (DVD)
Sherlock Holmes (DVD)
Infestation (DVD)
Eagle Eye (DVD)
All Tomorrow's Parties (DVD)
The Haunting in Connecticut (DVD)
Red Mist (DVD)
The Wrestler (DVD)
The Rocker (DVD)
Vicky Cristina Barcelona (2008)
The Walking Dead (DVD)
Zombieland (DVD)
Inkheart (DVD)
Blessed (DVD)
The Good, The Bad, The Weird (DVD)
The Boat That Rocked (DVD)
Lakeview Terrace (DVD)
Anything For Her (DVD)
Starsuckers (DVD)
The Book of Eli (2010)
Micmacs (DVD)
Love Happens (DVD)
In the Loop (DVD)
He's Just Not That Into You (DVD)
Sin Nombre (DVD)
Bottle Shock (DVD)
Valhalla Rising (DVD)
Delta (DVD)
Cherrybomb (DVD)
Traitor (DVD)
It's Alive (DVD)
Glorious 39 (DVD)
Survival of the Dead (DVD)
Harper's Island (DVD)
Paul Blart: Mall Cop (DVD)
Lebanon (DVD)
Cracks (DVD)
Avatar (DVD & Blu-ray)
Summer Scars (DVD)
Dorian Gray (DVD)
The Scouting Book For Boys (DVD)
Just Another Love Story (DVD)
Paper Heart (DVD)
Barney's Version (DVD)
Edge of Darkness (DVD)
Dead Snow (DVD)
Bright Star (DVD)
The King's Speech (DVD)
In the Electric Mist (DVD)
Long Weekend (DVD)
Repo! The Genetic Opera (DVD)
Aliens in the Attic (DVD)
Serious Moonlight (DVD)
Adam (DVD)
The Merry Gentleman (DVD)
Marley & Me (DVD)
The Taking of Pelham 123 (DVD)
The Wolfman (DVD & Blu-ray)
Halloween II (DVD)
We Live in Public (DVD)
The Last Station (DVD)
The Road (DVD)
The White Ribbon (DVD)
The Descent: Part 2 (DVD)
Open Graves (DVD)
Bunny and the Bull (DVD)
The Men Who Stare At Goats (DVD)
It's A Wonderful Afterlife (DVD)
An Education (DVD)
Blue Valentine (DVD)
DVD & Blu-ray Reviews: May 16, 2011
A Serious Man (DVD)
DVD & Blu-ray Reviews: April 4, 2011
The Boys Are Back (DVD)
DVD & Blu-ray Reviews: May 9, 2011
DVD & Blu-ray Reviews: May 23, 2011
Jonah Hex (DVD)
The Twilight Saga: Eclipse (DVD)
Easy A (DVD)
Somewhere (DVD)

Highlights

Airborne

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British actress Kimberly Jaraj shares her diary from the set of upcoming airplane thriller Airborne...

READ MORE: Airborne


Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides

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Director Rob Marshall, producer Jerry Bruckheimer and stars Johnny Depp, Penelope Cruz, Ian McShane and Geoffrey Rush talk Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides...

READ MORE: PotC4


Shadow

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As his visceral horror Shadow comes to DVD, we sit down for an exclusive chat with Italian director Federico Zampaglione

READ MORE: Shadow

Movie Highlight

The Woman in Black

Having relaunched in 2010 with the promise of delivering solid horror films for a modern audience, the output from the rebooted Hammer Films has been something of a mixed bag. While its inaugural release, remake Let Me In, was received with great fanfare, subsequent films The Resident and Wake Wood have been less successful. So with its first big release, The Woman in Black, Hammer has much to prove – and has piled on the pressure by choosing to adapt a story that’s not only a bestselling novel but also a long running West End play.

An additional challenge is that tale is so effective because of its simplicity; there are no big set pieces for a filmmaker to hide behind. So it’s reassuring to see that, while some elements of Susan Hill’s story have been tweaked to give it more of a cinematic scope, the narrative runs fairly true. At its heart is young lawyer Arthur Kipps (Daniel Radcliffe) who, still reeling from the death of his wife in childbirth four years previously, is sent to a remote village in order to organise the paperwork at the isolated Eel Marsh House. On his arrival he finds the locals most unwelcoming, believing that anyone disturbing the peace at the house brings tragedy to the village. Although initially sceptical, Kipps soon discovers that the mansion holds horrifying secrets, and that one of its former occupants is determined to exact terrifying revenge…

READ FULL REVIEW:  The Woman in Black

DVD Highlight

The Walking Dead

The living dead have been a mainstay of horror cinema for decades. Now they maraud onto the small screen in Frank Darabont’s adaptation of the graphic novel by Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore and Charlie Adlard.

Brit favourite Andrew Lincoln (This LifeTeachers) adopts a convincing drawl to take on the role of sheriff Rick Grimes, who wakes from a coma to find the local residents have become flesh-eating ghouls. While the initial set-up is reminiscent of 28 Days Later, these zombies are not Danny Boyle’s fast moving monsters, but the lumbering breed of tradition. That doesn’t dilute their impact; as Rick teams up with other survivors, the zombies are relentless in their pursuit and the tension builds to unbearable levels.

READ FULL REVIEW: The Walking Dead

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