Saturday, May 28, 2011


Hi, I’m Max. best friend of Walt Oleksy (waltmax@comcast.net), and I review new DVD and Blu-ray releases each month. Here we go again…

Max’s Picks June 2011

My master and I have found some films to recommend this month that you may not know about because most of them got little attention when released or come via British television. They’re worth a lot more than a sniff at a passing fire hydrant. Two of them, the first two reviewed here, are especially recommended.

THE PLOT AGAINST HARRY

They say ever dog has its day. For some dogs, and people, the day takes a while to come. That’s true with this off-beat crime comedy. When it was first shown to audiences in 1970, they didn’t laugh. The writer-director, Michael Roemer, could not find a distributor, so it was shelved. Twenty years later he had it transferred to video to show his children. The video technician thought it was funny, so Roemer submitted it to several film festivals where audiences saw its humor and laughed. He finally got his movie into commercial distribution and it is now available on DVD from New Video. You may not get the humor right way, but then it really starts to get to you. It’s about Harry Plotnick, a small-time Jewish crook and his adventures after being released from a spell in the slammer. Martin Priest plays Harry straight-faced, adding to the humor. He’s a banker for a numbers racket in a New York neighborhood that once was Jewish but when he gets out of prison is now mainly Hispanic and black. He wonders if his numbers enterprise is dissolving because of a plot against him. I won’t say more except that he doesn’t understand why his life has gone haywire as crime marches on almost without him. Maybe the film was ahead of its time, but it’s really fun to watch now. I hope you see it.

It’s in black and white, but don’t let that stop you. You can buy the DVD or rent it from Netflix.

THE ILLUSIONIST

Another off-beat gem. Not to be confused with the 2006 drama of that name with Edward Norton, excellent though that was, this is an equally excellent animated film that almost won an Oscar last spring. It isn’t really a children’s film because its themes are more for grown-ups. Originally an unproduced 1956 screenplay by the French comic genius of pantomime, Jacques Tati (Mr. Hulot’s Holiday and Mon Oncle), it was adapted by Sylvain Chomet, director of the incredibly wonderful 2003 animated movie, The Triplets of Belleville. It tells the adventures of a dying breed of entertainer, the music hall magician, who in 1959 is up against the public’s new loves – television and rock and roll stars. With his magic tricks and performing rabbit he winds up in Edinburgh, Scotland. There a deep friendship grows with a poor orphan girl who believes his magic is real. From there the story takes us into realms of comedy and drama Tati was noted for. In fact, the story is based on his own life experiences. I won’t give away any more of the plot because you should see this unusual film, created not by computers but in beautiful hand-drawn animation which, as one critic said, adds to the film’s charm and its theme of old giving way to new. The DVD is from Sony Pictures and although made in Belgium, it is in English with no subtitles.

Also recommended this month:

CHRISTOPHER AND HIS KIND

British author Christopher Isherwood’s memoirs of coming of age in decadent 1930s Berlin at the time of cabarets and rise of Nazi Germany becomes a very watchable movie, especially for those who enjoyed the movie, CABARET, or his novel and TV miniseries of BRIDESHEAD REVISITED. Matt Smith plays Chris and Lindsay Duncan again proves she is one of the Brits’ best young actresses. On DVD from BFS Entertainment.

FALLING FOR A DANCER

It’s 1937 Ireland and a young woman has a fling with a young man and is with child. Shamed, her parents exile her to remote Beara Peninsula to marry an older widower with four children of his own. The girl meets a handsome young man at a dance, and it ignites a chain of tragic events.

Not a bunch of laughs but good drama worth seeing. It was a British-Irish television movie in 1998, now on DVD from Minotaur and BFS Entertainment. The only actor you’d probably recognize is a young Colin Farrell as the boy at the dance, but the entire cast is excellent.

BORDERTOWN

Immigrants from England and Europe resettle in a migrant camp in an isolated region of Australia after World War II. We learn about them before they arrived and their struggle to make new lives in this engrossing television miniseries from 1995. One of the stars is Cate Blanchette. It’s sometimes slow-moving, dramatic, and also funny, nearly 10 hours long in a 3-DVD boxed set from BFS Entertainment.

SERGEANT CRIBB

In foggy Victorian London, wearing a bowler hat, deep black sideburns, squeaky boots, and a sly wit, Police Sergeant Daniel Cribb of Scotland Yard’s newly-formed Criminal Investigation Department looks for perpetrators of dastardly deeds from the brothels to the luxury apartments near Windsor Castle during the time of the Jack the Ripper murders in 1888. Without much help from his superiors, he relies on a lot of patience and painstaking investigation of a wide range of crimes. Episodes are often based on real historical events of the era ranging from the sale of the London Zoo’s famous elephant, Jumbo, to spiritualism and Irish terrorism. Adapted from the novels by Peter Lovesey, the series stars Alan Dobie as Cribb, the very popular British television series ran from 1980 to 1981.

The complete series of 14 episodes, two of them previously unreleased, is available in a 7-disc set from ITV Home Entertainment and BFS Entertainment. Extras include a history of Scotland Yard.

DR. BELL AND MR. DOYLE

Or, THE DARK BEGINNINGS OF SHERLOCK HOLMES, this is a “clever and Gothic and sinister” (New York Times) mystery about the origin of the great detective. Ian Richardson plays the brilliant doctor Bell who puts medicine aside to enter the new (in Victorian England) world of crime investigation. Teaming with young Mr. Doyle, played by Robin Laing, they assist local police in solving their most gruesome murder cases. Charles Dance is also in the mystery which is fun to follow. First seen on British television in 2000, the DVD is from BBC television and BFS Distribution.

Documentaries

NOVA: JAPAN’S KILLER QUAKE

A terrific documentary about the March 11, 2011 earthquake that hit Japan, the world’s fourth largest quake since keeping began in 1900 and the worst ever to shake the island, followed by the tsunami with ocean waves 30 feet high that was equally as devastating and destructive. Tens of thousands of people died and homes and businesses were destroyed by the seismic shock wave that released more than 4,000 times the energy of the largest nuclear test ever conducted. The documentary combines on-the-spot reporting, personal stories from survivors, eyewitness videos, and the science behind the catastrophe. The hour-long documentary is on DVD from PBS Television and BFS Entertainment.

BLACK IN LATIN AMERICA

Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Harvard University professor of black history, uncovers Latin America’s African roots in this four-hour documentary seen on PBS Television.

Descendants of more than ten million men and women who were taken from Africa to six Latin American countries – Brazil, Cubs, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Mexico, and Peru – are interviewed on subjects about their roots ranging from colonialism to slavery. The study is a discovery of how Africa and Europe combined to create the vibrant and diverse cultures of Latin America. The two-disc set is available on DVD and Blu-ray from PBS Home Video.

THE KING SPEAKS

The true story behind the movie, THE KING’S SPEECH, reveals more about British King George VI’s stuttering. The 50-minute documentary follows his lengthy efforts to overcome his disability with the help of unorthodox Australian speech therapist, Lionel Logue. Included is archival film of the king’s public speeches and, for the first time, interviews with Logue’s former patients that demonstrate how the king courageously found his voice and rallied his country through World War II. The DVD is from BBC Television and BFS Entertainment.

WILLIAM & KATE: PLANNING A ROYAL WEDDING

If you were among the 3 billion people worldwide who watched the royal wedding of British Prince William and Kate Middleton on television last April 29, you can see how it was all planned by watching this new documentary. We go inside the social event of the new millennium to meet the royal couple’s friends, schoolmates, and designers, chefs, and stylists who tell about how the big event came to be.

The 45-minute documentary is from Simply Media and PBS Distribution.

GEORGE WASHINGTON: THE MAN WHO WOULDN’T BE KING

The father of our country comes to life in this hour-long documentary that reveals him as more than a general who won America’s independence or wore wooden false teeth (or did he?) The real man is seen in this study that makes use of impressionist photography, rare paintings, etchings, and prints from museums, libraries, and private collections.

The revealing documentary is from WGBH Boston and PBS Distribution.

NATURE: BEARS OF THE LAST FRONTIER

Bears are almost as cuddly as dogs, don’t you think? My master and I saw some of this wildlife documentary on our PBS station recently and now we’ve seen the whole NATURE special on Blu-ray. It’s even more gorgeous and exciting in this startlingly sharp format, a three-hour series in which bear lover Chris Morgan studies three of the eight bear species in the world – brown bears, black bears, and polar bears in Alaska. For various reasons including climate change and human encroachment on their habitats, they are forced to demonstrate their survival and adaptability strengths. Morgan and his camera crew follows the bears in a 3,000 mile journey across Alaska, from the coastal areas to the urban, mountain, tundra and ice pack. We see bears are complex social animals whose survival are endangered. The DVD-Blu ray combo pack is from PBS Distribution.

SALMON: RUNNING THE GAUNTLET

Few creatures have a harder time in life than the Pacific Northwest salmon. You’ve probably seen them leap over waterfalls on their hazardous journey to spawn and then die, hopefully before they’re eaten by hungry bears. But this new documentary tells us how scientists are working to save their environment. Millions of salmon once thrived in the Pacific Northwest, but in recent years their alarming absence on the Columbia River is a sign that many salmon species including the Idaho sockeye, are endangered, due not only to over fishing but to habitat loss and dams. The hour-long documentary on DVD and Blu-ray is from PBS Distribution.

SECRETS OF THE DEAD: LOST IN THE AMAZON

Eighty-six years ago, three adventurers set out to find “Z,” a supposed ancient lost city of gold in the uncharted jungles of Brazil. All three vanished without a trace. A new hour-long documentary follows explorer Niall McCann’s attempt to learn what became of explorer Col. Percy Fawcett, his son Jack, and the son’s lifelong friend, Raleigh Rimmell. McCabb’s expedition found two clues. Fawcett’s signet ring and a map with a secret code McCann’s wife deciphered. The expedition causes speculation that a pristine Amazon rainforest with towns and cities existed before the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the New World. Part adventure and detective story, the fascinating documentary seen on Public Broadcast Television is from PBS Distribution.

SECRETS OF THE DEAD: CHINA’S TERRACOTTA WARRIORS

This documentary tells of the clay army of 8,000 life-sized terracotta warriors of China that were discovered a few years ago by farmers digging a well near the city of Xian that date back more than two thousand years. They are believed to have been ordered built and placed there by a conqueror named Qin Shihuangdi, the first emperor of China. After unifying seven warring kingdoms, it was his command that in death, he would be protected by a monumental army. The documentary suggests how and why the colorfully uniformed and fully armed statues were built. Also amazing is, not one of the warriors’ faces are alike. On DVD from PBS Distribution.

BRAIN FITNESS

PBS Explorer television delves into our minds in this documentary on how to train your brain to increase your smarts and memory. The four-disc DVD set runs four hours in telling how the brain works and how to make it work better for you. Older viewers will get tips on how to get the most of their vision and hearing as they age. From BFS Distribution.

SECRETS OF THE DIVINE: THE ALTARPIECE OF CIUDAD RODRIGO

Art, history, and religion come into play in this beautiful documentary about paintings of the 15th century that adorned an altar at a cathedral in west central Spain. A discovery project on the altar artwork that spanned five years resulted in a stunning documentary that has equal parts historical art, mystery, and scientific exploration. The hour-long special is on DVD from PBS Television, the University of Arizona, Arizona Public Media, and PBS Distribution.

NOVA: VENOM: NATURE’S KILLER

Just hope you’re never bitten by a poisonous snake. This hour-long documentary tells a good side of it, reporting that chemicals in snakes that can kill you could also contain the keys to a new generation of advanced drugs that could treat heart attack, stroke, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, and cancer. NOVA followed scientists as they tracked down, captured, and samples the systems of the world’s most venomous animals to learn how they kill us, but also how they can save us, too. The DVD is from WGBH Boston, PBS Television, and PBS Distribution.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Max's Best DVD and Blu-ray Picks May 2011

Hi, I’m Max, best friend of Walt Oleksy (waltmax@comcast.net), and I review new DVD and Blu-Ray releases each month at this web site. Here we go again…

Max’s Best DVD Picks – May, 2011

Before naming my best picks of the month I want to urge you to see the Blu-ray editions of two of the greatest movies ever made… GONE WITH THE WIND and THE WIZARD OF OZ.

Both released the same year, 1939, and both directed by Victor Fleming. The restored clarity of the films is simply astonishing both visually and in sound, and the extras are wonderful in understanding the difficulties of making both films and their ultimate triumph. Although David O. Selznick and MGM gave us both films, the Blu-ray and DVD releases are from Warner Bros. If you consider yourself a movie lover, see both of these in Blu-Ray and be sure to watch all of the extras. Thank you. Woo woo!

Two of my best picks of the month are both foreign films, one from England that you’ve heard and read a lot about, and one from Finland that you probably have never heard of.

The top film critics rarely review movies like the one from Finland because they don’t even appear on the pop charts, they just quietly win audiences when they’re given a chance to see them. That’s the kind of movie I like to tell you about.

THE KING’S SPEECH

King George VI of England can hardly speak because of stuttering, so he gets help from a self-styled speech therapist and is able to talk by radio to the people of his realm about being brave as World War Two begins between the United Kingdom and Germany. It’s grand story-telling and film-making, both dramatic and at times humorous, and deserved the Best Picture Oscar and a Best Actor award for Colin Firth as the king. He and Geoffrey Rush give wonderful performances as they first clash and gradually become good friends as the king slowly gains mastery of his public speaking. My master and I also enjoyed seeing the stellar supporting cast. Jennifer Ehle (who played Jane Austen's heroine to Firth's Mr. Darcy in the classic BBC Pride and Prejudice, plays Rush's wife in this film, while Anthony Andrews of Brideshead Revisited plays a prime minister. Also in the cast are Helena Bonham Carter, Derek Jacobi, Claire Bloom, Michael Gambon, and Guy Pearce. Each one a star in their own right, playing supporting roles. I highly recommend it. The Blu-ray and DVD from Anchor Bay both have extras on historical background on the events and the film.

Max’s rating: The highest. Paws up, tail wags.

SECRETARIAT

A housewife and mother, the daughter of racing horse farm owners, assumes responsibility for the farm and its horses after her mother’s death and father’s debilitating illness.

She believes in the future greatness of an unlikely foal and together they prove they are the stuff of champions.

Based on true events, this is great filmmaking and very moving entertainment, one of the best sports dramas in many years. The horse owner is Penny Chenery Tweedy and the horse is Secretariat who won the Triple Crown of horse racing in 1973 and remains the greatest racing horse of all time. Diane Lane is marvelous as Mrs. Chenery-Tweedy and

John Malcovich is almost likeable (a rarity for him in films) as the veteran horse trainer she hires. You’ll cheer for owner and horse in this wonderful film from Walt Disney Pictures.

Max’s rating: Two paws up and lots of “Woo woos!”

AMBUSH

This 1999 war drama from Finland is one of the best war movies my master and I have seen in years. Finland chose to side with Germany early in World War II, and during the summer of 1941 the Finnish army has been mobilized along the border with Russia. A young lieutenant is the leader of a platoon of soldiers waiting for orders to go on the offensive. He receives orders for a reconnaissance mission through the wilderness around a large lake to search for possible Russian defensive positions. While resting temporarily in a village taken from the Soviets, the lieutenant and his fiancĂ© are reunited briefly while she is serving in the Finnish Women's Auxiliary Corps. When the platoon continues with its mission, the unit the young woman is in is attacked and we’re not sure if she escaped. Later the lieutenant receives a report that she was among those killed. How this affects the lieutenant personally and as leader of his platoon I’ll leave for you to learn when you see this exceptional film. It stars a very charismatic Peter Franzen, a handsome young new light of Finnish and European films who could quickly become a new international superstar. So too could his real-life wife, Irina Bjorklund, who plays his fiance in the film and is both beautiful and gives a very moving performance. They’ve co-starred in several other Finnish films and moved to Los Angeles after AMBUSH was filmed. It is in Finnish with English subtitles, but don’t let that keep you away. It’s beautifully written, directed, filmed, acted, and scored. Don’t miss this one. From Vanguard Cinema.

Max’s rating: Two paws up and lots of tail wags.

Also recommended this month:

A TALE OF TWO CITIES

Charles Dickens’ classic novel of love and self-sacrifice has been adapted for the screen many times, and my master and I still rank the Ronald Colman 1935 version as our favorite. But the 1989 Masterpiece Theatre television mini-series comes close, not only because a longer visit to the story can tell more of it, but the performances and production values are also so excellent. James Wilby plays British Sydney Carton who loves beautiful Lucie Mannette and willingly takes the place of her lover on the guillotine during the French Revolution. Serena Gordon plays Lucie and the cast also includes John Mills and Jean-Pierre Aumont. The mini-series is available in a two-disc set from BBC Television and BFS Distribution. I agree with The Boston Globe reviewer who said “If you’re looking for an intelligent adaptation of A Tale of Two Cities, this one is for you.”

MOLL FLANDERS

Daniel Defoe’s lusty story of an 18th Century British girl who is a lover, a criminal, and a master of disguise follows her from birth in a prison to (perhaps) death on the gallows. Along the way, she romps with royalty and others but always remains steadfastly in love with one man, played by Daniel Craig in a ludicrous wig and several years before he became James Bond. Moll is played by Alex Kingston who was Dr. Elizabeth Corday on television’s ER. It’s grand-scale drama and fun on DVD, originally shown on Masterpiece Theater in 1996 and now on DVD from PBS Distribution. It’s not the greatest Masterpiece Theater outing, but very entertaining.

THE TRENCH

A group of British soldiers, most of them in their late teens, face the Germans at the Battle of the Somme in France in the summer of 1916 during World War I. Daniel Craig is a sergeant who must lead them out of trench warfare to their tragic death in what became the worst defeat in British military history. Heavy war drama made in 1999, it is on DVD from PBS Distribution. Lest we forget.

PARTY ANIMALS

Four young researchers and advisers try to navigate though the world of British politics in this dramatic series seen on BBC Television. Their adventures involve power plays and sexual intrigue, always staples of politics everywhere.

This is entertaining while offering glimpses into what goes on in Brit politics. A 3-DVD set from BFS Entertainment.

Documentaries and Specials

ERNIE KOVACS COLLECTION

An unique and hilariously funny comedian, Kovacs set a standard for comedy that has rarely even been approached.

This is a six-DVD set of the best of his television shows as well as a “life and career of” features collection,

From his appearances on local television in 1951 to network stardom and his untimely death in an automobile accident in 1962. Included are essays from friends and others who knew and worked with him and many vintage videos. We owe a special thanks to his widow, actress-singer Edie Adams who

was largely responsible for putting this tribute together before her own death, and to their son Joshua Mills. Here again for those like my master who saw Kovacs on television and for those who never heard of him, are his signature creations… The Nairobi Trio of almost musical chimps, Percy Dovetonsils the martini-drinking poet, Leena, Queen of the Jungle, and the many nonsensical but side-splitting routines for which he was one-of-a-kind. Don’t miss this great set that brings back one of the truly great comedians.

FRONTLINE: Post Mortem

Coroners’ and forensic pathologists sometimes make errors that cause guilty suspects to go free and also the innocent to be accused of crimes they didn’t commit. If you’re fans of television crime investigation shows such as CSI: Miami and Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, you will see the reality side of death investigators whose work sometimes lets murderers go free and the innocent are sent to jail. This Frontline television documentary reveals a dysfunctional system with few standards and little oversight that can lead to mistakes which also can be literally buried, and deeper than I put the bones in my master’s back yard. The hour-long documentary is from PBS Distribution.

THOROGHBRED: Born to Run

A timely documentary to watch before or after you watch SECRETARIAT. The beauty and courage of the thoroughbred race horse and “the sport of kings” is explored in this documentary directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Paul Wagner (The Stone Carvers). He travels from Kentucky to Dubai and the Arabian desert to trace the breed’s fascinating history and meet the people who breed, sell, race, and love them. The documentary runs 105 minutes and has more than an hour of extras including segments about the breed’s unique bond with humans. From PBS Distribution.

FRONTLINE: REVOLUTION IN CAIRO

This excellent hour-long documentary is about the youth movement that ignited the April 6 uprising in Egypt to depose dictator-president Honi Mubarak, and of the Muslim Brotherhood, the most organized and powerful of the country’s opposition groups. The uprising was only the beginning, as a new fight for power in Egypt unfolds.

The DVD is from PBS Distribution.

FREEDOM RIDERS

The historic civil rights bus rides of 1961 are retraced in this hour-long documentary from American Experience. From May until November that year, more than 400 black and white Americans risked their lives, some were savagely beaten and put in prison for traveling together in the deep South in what became known as the Freedom Rides that ignited the civil rights movement. A two-hour documentary in both Blu-ray and DVD from PBS Distribution.

WIILLIAM AND KATE: Planning a Royal Wedding

If you were among the more than a billion people last month who watched the royal wedding of Britain’s Prince William and his bride Kate Middleton in Westminster Abbey In London, this 45-minute DVD will tell you how it all was planned. It covers everything from what was served at the wedding feast at Buckingham Place to where they newlyweds went on honeymoon. Friends, schoolmates, and former staff as well as fashion designers, chefs, and hair stylists are interviewed, as well as several journalists who watched the prince grow into the man he is today. The DVD is from PBS Distribution.

THE GREELY EXPEDITION

A harrowing American Experience adventure more exciting than most movies, this tells the true story of a scientific expedition from Newfoundland into the high Arctic Ocean in 1881. Led by Lt. Adolphus Greely, twenty-five men set off to collect scientific data from a vast area that a British admiral had described as “sheer blank.” Three years later, only six survivors returned, telling of shipwreck, starvation, mutiny and cannibalism. The hour-long documentary from producer Rob Rapley (Wyatt Earp)draws upon scientific accounts, diaries, photographs, and letters to tell the story of the expedition which shows how poor planning, personality clashes, questionable decision, and bad luck created a tragedy. Not fun, but very watchable, from PBS Distribution.

Kids and Puppies

No movie to recommend this month for kids, but something to share with you. A 9-year-old boy in Mesa, Arizona, has become a hero for helping save the life of his 2-year-old sister who wandered off and fell into the family’s backyard swimming pool. He alerted his mother who pulled the girl out of the pool, then told his grandmother to call 9-11, and while waiting for paramedics to arrive, he applied cardiopulmonary resuscitation to his sister which started her breathing. Paramedics got her breathing back to normal and asked the boy how he learned to give CPR. He said, “From watching the movie, Black Hawk Down.” Thanks, Ridley Scott, for making that excellent 2001 film about the U.S. in Somalia in 1993. It wasn’t a kids movie, but it was lucky that boy saw it.

Bones to Pick

I suggest, as hard up as many of us may be financially, like my master, that we all send money immediately to Jake Gyllenhaal and Anne Hathaway and the producers of LOVE AND OTHER DRUGS. The two superstars who earned millions for appearing in the film are stark naked in about half of the movie. In their contracts, they both agreed as to how far their nudity would go. I’m not prude, but the movie is about as close to a porn film as a major production can get. It’s a modern romance with a subplot of how the trillion-dollars-a-year pharmaceutical industry influences doctors and others in the medical profession to buy their drugs. This came home to me first-hand when a few weeks ago a neighbor said her doctor couldn’t figure out the source of her back pain so she gave her a big paper grocery bag full of samples that drug salesmen had given her. How the pharmaceutical companies operate is a worthy subject for a film, but the producers must have decided it would appeal to audiences more if it was heavily laced with nudity. Jake plays a pharmaceutical salesman who, among other things, learns the hard way, pardon the pun, that a sex-desire-enhancing drug can hurt.

Watching the film, I kept thinking that the trend toward nudity in movies is a far cry from the restraint of some of the most romantic movies ever made, from CASABLANCA to AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER and LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING. The lovers in those and many other classic romantic films made love with their clothes on, and rarely even kissed. It was more a matter of romance than of sexual desire.

Which reminds me of another new film, I LOVE YOU PHILLIP MORRIS, in which Jim Carrey and Ewan McGregor are gay lovers. Okay, no problem with that, except why does Carrey have to hump McGregor all the time? And those scenes are not fleeting, they’re long. It annoyed me almost as much as Carrey’s constant facial mannerisms which always turn me off. No, I am not a fan of his type of comedy, which I see as mainly an ego trip. I am a fan of McGregor, a fine actor who I thought was wasted in this movie.

Max's Best DVD and Blu-ray Picks May 2011

Hi, I’m Max, best friend of Walt Oleksy (waltmax@comcast.net), and I review new DVD and Blu-Ray releases each month at this web site. Here we go again…

Max’s Best DVD Picks – May, 2011

Before naming my best picks of the month I want to urge you to see the Blu-ray editions of two of the greatest movies ever made… GONE WITH THE WIND and THE WIZARD OF OZ.

Both released the same year, 1939, and both directed by Victor Fleming. The restored clarity of the films is simply astonishing both visually and in sound, and the extras are wonderful in understanding the difficulties of making both films and their ultimate triumph. Although David O. Selznick and MGM gave us both films, the Blu-ray and DVD releases are from Warner Bros. If you consider yourself a movie lover, see both of these in Blu-Ray and be sure to watch all of the extras. Thank you. Woo woo!

Two of my best picks of the month are both foreign films, one from England that you’ve heard and read a lot about, and one from Finland that you probably have never heard of.

The top film critics rarely review movies like the one from Finland because they don’t even appear on the pop charts, they just quietly win audiences when they’re given a chance to see them. That’s the kind of movie I like to tell you about.

THE KING’S SPEECH

King George VI of England can hardly speak because of stuttering, so he gets help from a self-styled speech therapist and is able to talk by radio to the people of his realm about being brave as World War Two begins between the United Kingdom and Germany. It’s grand story-telling and film-making, both dramatic and at times humorous, and deserved the Best Picture Oscar and a Best Actor award for Colin Firth as the king. He and Geoffrey Rush give wonderful performances as they first clash and gradually become good friends as the king slowly gains mastery of his public speaking. My master and I also enjoyed seeing the stellar supporting cast. Jennifer Ehle (who played Jane Austen's heroine to Firth's Mr. Darcy in the classic BBC Pride and Prejudice, plays Rush's wife in this film, while Anthony Andrews of Brideshead Revisited plays a prime minister. Also in the cast are Helena Bonham Carter, Derek Jacobi, Claire Bloom, Michael Gambon, and Guy Pearce. Each one a star in their own right, playing supporting roles. I highly recommend it. The Blu-ray and DVD from Anchor Bay both have extras on historical background on the events and the film.

Max’s rating: The highest. Paws up, tail wags.

SECRETARIAT

A housewife and mother, the daughter of racing horse farm owners, assumes responsibility for the farm and its horses after her mother’s death and father’s debilitating illness.

She believes in the future greatness of an unlikely foal and together they prove they are the stuff of champions.

Based on true events, this is great filmmaking and very moving entertainment, one of the best sports dramas in many years. The horse owner is Penny Chenery Tweedy and the horse is Secretariat who won the Triple Crown of horse racing in 1973 and remains the greatest racing horse of all time. Diane Lane is marvelous as Mrs. Chenery-Tweedy and

John Malcovich is almost likeable (a rarity for him in films) as the veteran horse trainer she hires. You’ll cheer for owner and horse in this wonderful film from Walt Disney Pictures.

Max’s rating: Two paws up and lots of “Woo woos!”

AMBUSH

This 1999 war drama from Finland is one of the best war movies my master and I have seen in years. Finland chose to side with Germany early in World War II, and during the summer of 1941 the Finnish army has been mobilized along the border with Russia. A young lieutenant is the leader of a platoon of soldiers waiting for orders to go on the offensive. He receives orders for a reconnaissance mission through the wilderness around a large lake to search for possible Russian defensive positions. While resting temporarily in a village taken from the Soviets, the lieutenant and his fiancĂ© are reunited briefly while she is serving in the Finnish Women's Auxiliary Corps. When the platoon continues with its mission, the unit the young woman is in is attacked and we’re not sure if she escaped. Later the lieutenant receives a report that she was among those killed. How this affects the lieutenant personally and as leader of his platoon I’ll leave for you to learn when you see this exceptional film. It stars a very charismatic Peter Franzen, a handsome young new light of Finnish and European films who could quickly become a new international superstar. So too could his real-life wife, Irina Bjorklund, who plays his fiance in the film and is both beautiful and gives a very moving performance. They’ve co-starred in several other Finnish films and moved to Los Angeles after AMBUSH was filmed. It is in Finnish with English subtitles, but don’t let that keep you away. It’s beautifully written, directed, filmed, acted, and scored. Don’t miss this one. From Vanguard Cinema.

Max’s rating: Two paws up and lots of tail wags.

Also recommended this month:

A TALE OF TWO CITIES

Charles Dickens’ classic novel of love and self-sacrifice has been adapted for the screen many times, and my master and I still rank the Ronald Colman 1935 version as our favorite. But the 1989 Masterpiece Theatre television mini-series comes close, not only because a longer visit to the story can tell more of it, but the performances and production values are also so excellent. James Wilby plays British Sydney Carton who loves beautiful Lucie Mannette and willingly takes the place of her lover on the guillotine during the French Revolution. Serena Gordon plays Lucie and the cast also includes John Mills and Jean-Pierre Aumont. The mini-series is available in a two-disc set from BBC Television and BFS Distribution. I agree with The Boston Globe reviewer who said “If you’re looking for an intelligent adaptation of A Tale of Two Cities, this one is for you.”

MOLL FLANDERS

Daniel Defoe’s lusty story of an 18th Century British girl who is a lover, a criminal, and a master of disguise follows her from birth in a prison to (perhaps) death on the gallows. Along the way, she romps with royalty and others but always remains steadfastly in love with one man, played by Daniel Craig in a ludicrous wig and several years before he became James Bond. Moll is played by Alex Kingston who was Dr. Elizabeth Corday on television’s ER. It’s grand-scale drama and fun on DVD, originally shown on Masterpiece Theater in 1996 and now on DVD from PBS Distribution. It’s not the greatest Masterpiece Theater outing, but very entertaining.

THE TRENCH

A group of British soldiers, most of them in their late teens, face the Germans at the Battle of the Somme in France in the summer of 1916 during World War I. Daniel Craig is a sergeant who must lead them out of trench warfare to their tragic death in what became the worst defeat in British military history. Heavy war drama made in 1999, it is on DVD from PBS Distribution. Lest we forget.

PARTY ANIMALS

Four young researchers and advisers try to navigate though the world of British politics in this dramatic series seen on BBC Television. Their adventures involve power plays and sexual intrigue, always staples of politics everywhere.

This is entertaining while offering glimpses into what goes on in Brit politics. A 3-DVD set from BFS Entertainment.

Documentaries and Specials

ERNIE KOVACS COLLECTION

An unique and hilariously funny comedian, Kovacs set a standard for comedy that has rarely even been approached.

This is a six-DVD set of the best of his television shows as well as a “life and career of” features collection,

From his appearances on local television in 1951 to network stardom and his untimely death in an automobile accident in 1962. Included are essays from friends and others who knew and worked with him and many vintage videos. We owe a special thanks to his widow, actress-singer Edie Adams who

was largely responsible for putting this tribute together before her own death, and to their son Joshua Mills. Here again for those like my master who saw Kovacs on television and for those who never heard of him, are his signature creations… The Nairobi Trio of almost musical chimps, Percy Dovetonsils the martini-drinking poet, Leena, Queen of the Jungle, and the many nonsensical but side-splitting routines for which he was one-of-a-kind. Don’t miss this great set that brings back one of the truly great comedians.

FRONTLINE: Post Mortem

Coroners’ and forensic pathologists sometimes make errors that cause guilty suspects to go free and also the innocent to be accused of crimes they didn’t commit. If you’re fans of television crime investigation shows such as CSI: Miami and Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, you will see the reality side of death investigators whose work sometimes lets murderers go free and the innocent are sent to jail. This Frontline television documentary reveals a dysfunctional system with few standards and little oversight that can lead to mistakes which also can be literally buried, and deeper than I put the bones in my master’s back yard. The hour-long documentary is from PBS Distribution.

THOROGHBRED: Born to Run

A timely documentary to watch before or after you watch SECRETARIAT. The beauty and courage of the thoroughbred race horse and “the sport of kings” is explored in this documentary directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Paul Wagner (The Stone Carvers). He travels from Kentucky to Dubai and the Arabian desert to trace the breed’s fascinating history and meet the people who breed, sell, race, and love them. The documentary runs 105 minutes and has more than an hour of extras including segments about the breed’s unique bond with humans. From PBS Distribution.

FRONTLINE: REVOLUTION IN CAIRO

This excellent hour-long documentary is about the youth movement that ignited the April 6 uprising in Egypt to depose dictator-president Honi Mubarak, and of the Muslim Brotherhood, the most organized and powerful of the country’s opposition groups. The uprising was only the beginning, as a new fight for power in Egypt unfolds.

The DVD is from PBS Distribution.

FREEDOM RIDERS

The historic civil rights bus rides of 1961 are retraced in this hour-long documentary from American Experience. From May until November that year, more than 400 black and white Americans risked their lives, some were savagely beaten and put in prison for traveling together in the deep South in what became known as the Freedom Rides that ignited the civil rights movement. A two-hour documentary in both Blu-ray and DVD from PBS Distribution.

WIILLIAM AND KATE: Planning a Royal Wedding

If you were among the more than a billion people last month who watched the royal wedding of Britain’s Prince William and his bride Kate Middleton in Westminster Abbey In London, this 45-minute DVD will tell you how it all was planned. It covers everything from what was served at the wedding feast at Buckingham Place to where they newlyweds went on honeymoon. Friends, schoolmates, and former staff as well as fashion designers, chefs, and hair stylists are interviewed, as well as several journalists who watched the prince grow into the man he is today. The DVD is from PBS Distribution.

THE GREELY EXPEDITION

A harrowing American Experience adventure more exciting than most movies, this tells the true story of a scientific expedition from Newfoundland into the high Arctic Ocean in 1881. Led by Lt. Adolphus Greely, twenty-five men set off to collect scientific data from a vast area that a British admiral had described as “sheer blank.” Three years later, only six survivors returned, telling of shipwreck, starvation, mutiny and cannibalism. The hour-long documentary from producer Rob Rapley (Wyatt Earp)draws upon scientific accounts, diaries, photographs, and letters to tell the story of the expedition which shows how poor planning, personality clashes, questionable decision, and bad luck created a tragedy. Not fun, but very watchable, from PBS Distribution.

Kids and Puppies

No movie to recommend this month for kids, but something to share with you. A 9-year-old boy in Mesa, Arizona, has become a hero for helping save the life of his 2-year-old sister who wandered off and fell into the family’s backyard swimming pool. He alerted his mother who pulled the girl out of the pool, then told his grandmother to call 9-11, and while waiting for paramedics to arrive, he applied cardiopulmonary resuscitation to his sister which started her breathing. Paramedics got her breathing back to normal and asked the boy how he learned to give CPR. He said, “From watching the movie, Black Hawk Down.” Thanks, Ridley Scott, for making that excellent 2001 film about the U.S. in Somalia in 1993. It wasn’t a kids movie, but it was lucky that boy saw it.

Bones to Pick

I suggest, as hard up as many of us may be financially, like my master, that we all send money immediately to Jake Gyllenhaal and Anne Hathaway and the producers of LOVE AND OTHER DRUGS. The two superstars who earned millions for appearing in the film are stark naked in about half of the movie. In their contracts, they both agreed as to how far their nudity would go. I’m not prude, but the movie is about as close to a porn film as a major production can get. It’s a modern romance with a subplot of how the trillion-dollars-a-year pharmaceutical industry influences doctors and others in the medical profession to buy their drugs. This came home to me first-hand when a few weeks ago a neighbor said her doctor couldn’t figure out the source of her back pain so she gave her a big paper grocery bag full of samples that drug salesmen had given her. How the pharmaceutical companies operate is a worthy subject for a film, but the producers must have decided it would appeal to audiences more if it was heavily laced with nudity. Jake plays a pharmaceutical salesman who, among other things, learns the hard way, pardon the pun, that a sex-desire-enhancing drug can hurt.

Watching the film, I kept thinking that the trend toward nudity in movies is a far cry from the restraint of some of the most romantic movies ever made, from CASABLANCA to AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER and LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING. The lovers in those and many other classic romantic films made love with their clothes on, and rarely even kissed. It was more a matter of romance than of sexual desire.

Which reminds me of another new film, I LOVE YOU PHILLIP MORRIS, in which Jim Carrey and Ewan McGregor are gay lovers. Okay, no problem with that, except why does Carrey have to hump McGregor all the time? And those scenes are not fleeting, they’re long. It annoyed me almost as much as Carrey’s constant facial mannerisms which always turn me off. No, I am not a fan of his type of comedy, which I see as mainly an ego trip. I am a fan of McGregor, a fine actor who I thought was wasted in this movie.