Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2014

‘Frozen’ Reclaims Top Spot in Home Video Charts

A surge of Easter shopping elevated several family titles in the home video sales arena for the week ending April 20, with Disney’s megahit “Frozen” returning to the top spot for the fourth time in five weeks. The animated film topped Nielsen VideoScan’s First Alert sales chart, which tracks overall DVD and Blu-ray Disc combined sales, and Nielsen’s dedicated Blu-ray Disc sales chart for three consecutive weeks upon its debut a month ago before being displaced by Warner’s “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” for a week.


The top new release, Universal’s “Ride Along,” debuted at No. 2 on First Alert and No. 3 on the Blu-ray chart, where “Smaug” dropped a slot to No. 2.

Another new release from Universal, the animated “The Nut Job,” bowed at No. 4 on both charts, while 20th Century Fox’s Ben Stiller comedy “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” came in at No. 6 on both charts.

Disney’s animated “The Pirate Fairy” took the No. 5 slot on both charts in its third week in stores.

Home Media Magazine’s rental chart for the week was topped by Warner’s “Grudge Match,” which was available early at Redbox kiosks rather than the usual 28-day delay for Warner titles. “Ride Along,” “Nut Job” and “Mitty” did not appear on the rental chart as they also are from studios that delay titles to kiosks for a month.
The only other new release on the rental chart was Anchor Bay’s “Philomena,” at No. 14. “Philomena” was No. 12 on the First Alert sales chart.

John Latchem is managing editor of Home Media Magazine.

Top 20 Nielsen VideoScan First Alert chart for week of 4/20/2014:

1. Frozen
2. Ride Along (New)
3. The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
4. The Nut Job (New)
5. The Pirate Fairy
6. The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (New)
7. Despicable Me 2
8. The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
9. Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
10. The Wolf of Wall Street
11. Walking With Dinosaurs: The Movie
12. Philomena (New)
13. Saving Mr. Banks
14. Gravity
15. August: Osage County
16. Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2
17. The Jungle Book: Diamond Edition
18. Rio
19. Hop
20. Despicable Me

Top 10 Home Media Magazine rental chart for week of 4/20/2014:

1. Grudge Match (New to Rental)
2. Homefront
3. The Wolf of Wall Street
4. Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
5. Frozen
6. 12 Years a Slave
7. Gravity
8. August: Osage County
9. Out of the Furnace
10. Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones

From: http://variety.com/2014/digital/news/frozen-reclaims-top-spot-in-home-video-charts-1201163489/

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Casting Net: Jessica Chastian rumored to star as Marilyn Monroe in 'Blonde'; Plus, Rachel Weisz, Toni Collette, more

Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain (Zero Dark Thirty) is nearing a deal to play Marilyn Monroe in the upcoming film Blonde. Helmed by Killing Them Softly directorAndrew Dominik and produced by Brad Pitt‘s Plan B, Blonde is based on the novel by Joyce Carol Oates which reimagines the life of Norma Jeane Baker, the woman who would later go on to become Marilyn Monroe. When EW reached out for comment, Chastian’s agent would not confirm her involvement in the upcoming film. [The Wrap]


• Rachel Weisz (The Lobster) and Toni Collette (Tammy) are set to star in Thirteen director Catherine Hardwicke‘s upcoming romantic dramedy Miss You Already. The upcoming film follows two friends living in London whose relationship takes a toll when one becomes pregnant and the other falls ill. [Variety]

The Walking Dead‘s Steven Yeun and The Guild‘s Felicia Day will lend their voices to Chew, an upcoming animated feature adapted from the popular comic by Image Comics. Jeff Krelitz (Torchwood: Web of Lies) will spearhead the upcoming animated feature with Chew co-creator John Layman slated to pen the script. The upcoming film tells the story of a detective (Yeun) who has the ability to get psychic impressions from whatever he eats. Day will lend her voice to the character of Amelia Mintz, a food critic with the ability to write about food in a way that makes the reader feel like they can taste it. [The Hollywood Reporter]

Orange Is the New Black‘s Matt McGorry has signed on to star opposite Amy Hargreaves (Homeland) in the upcoming indie drama How He Fell in Love. Written and directed by Marc Meyers (Harvest), the upcoming film tells the story of a struggling musician (McGorry) who embarks on a relationship with a married woman (Hargreaves) that, in turn, has a lasting effect on them both. [The Hollywood Reporter]

From: http://insidemovies.ew.com/2014/04/22/casting-net-chastian-weisz-collette/#more-129878

Singing the Song "Let It Go" - It'll Make Your Day!


We might have just heard the most amazing thing in the world! Everyone has been taking their turn covering 'Frozen's' "Let It Go", and we think we just found the winner. A man named Brian Hull covers the hit song, but he does so in the voices of multipleDisney characters. Our mind is blown!

Brian portrays Captain Jack Sparrow, Mike Wazowski,Sebastian, Timon and Pumbaa, Winnie The Pooh, Mickey Mouse and many more. All of our favorite Disney stars are jam packed into our favorite Disney song; you have to listen! Check out the video below, and be prepared to click the "refresh" button the rest of the day!


And here is super Cute Kids Singing Frozen's Let It Go; It'll Make Your Day!

 

Thursday, April 17, 2014

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Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Oscars 2014: The best 20 actors who've never been nominated

Here is the best 20 actors who've never been nominated on Oscars 2014.
 
20. Richard Gere (1949– )


An old-school movie star and, to say the least, not the world’s most consistent actor, Gere has still been unlucky not to enjoy even one Oscar moment (where the likes of George Clooney have had a fistful). He’s not been far off lately with The Hoax and Arbitrage – it’ll come, maybe, when he finds his Wall Street.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actor, 1990 – Top Gere is his shadiest performance, as the vicious cop in Mike Figgis’s Internal Affairs.

19. John Cusack (1966– )

Many of his films (The Grifters, Bullets over Broadway, Being John Malkovich) have been rather big hits with the Academy, but Cusack’s neurotic protagonists never quite charge to the front. You feel he’s still waiting for the signature, mid-career role that will bring him into the fold.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Supporting Actor, 1998 – There’s almost too much great ensemble work in The Thin Red Line for any one player to stand out, but Cusack’s Capt. Gaff is fatigued, watchful and invaluable.

18. Joseph Cotten (1905-94)

Is he or isn’t he trustworthy? There’s a subtle decency to most of Cotten’s work, though it can curdle into cynicism pretty fast, and his characters often get crushed by the looming failure of their dreams. Even when cast against type, as the murderous Uncle Charlie in Hitchcock’s Shadow of a Doubt, he’s a fascinating magnet for audience faith.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actor, 1949 – Holly Martins in The Third Man is the quintessential Cotten creation, and a man you betray at your peril.

17. Peter Lorre (1904-64)

In fairness, Lorre’s famous child murderer in Fritz Lang’s M (1931) was in Oscar’s early days, when foreign films weren’t embraced. Still, he made quite a mark in Hollywood soon after, with his unsettling cherub face, bulging eyes and ability to conjure auras of unseen depravity with just a few quick strokes.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Supporting Actor, 1941 – The cane-sporting, clearly homosexual Joel Cairo in The Maltese Falcon was an early classic among Lorre’s featured parts for Warner Bros.

16. Jim Carrey (1962– )

We needn’t pretend all of Carrey’s comic roles are nomination-worthy – The Grinch, anyone? – and he’s made a lot of dross amid the jewels. When he really digs deep, though, it’s surprising what emotional resources he finds to depict Everymen in sorry crisis, discovering the limits of what they’ve been handed.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actor, 2004 – There were other near-misses, but Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind is Carrey’s most intimate and profound leading role.


15. Steve Buscemi (1957– )

For years best-known as that weaselly guy in the films with all those other guys, Buscemi is legitimately the great American character actor of the 1990s, more or less the Elisha Cook, Jr of that era. No nominations for either? Some faces find it hard to get respect.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Supporting Actor, 1996 – William H Macy was nominated, but Buscemi’s unforgettably scuzzy Carl Showalter in Fargo should have shared the honour.

14. Jeff Daniels (1955– )

Daniels was about the only person not recognised for James L. Brooks’s Terms of Endearment (1983), and he’s managed to cruise his way though a durable Hollywood career, clowning it up here and there, supplying a bitter gravitas elsewhere, without bagging one.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actor, 2005 – He surely came closest for Noah Baumbach’s The Squid and the Whale (it's what his character, a pompous lecturer in mid-divorce, would call “the filet” of Daniels).

13. Jennifer Jason Leigh (1962– )


You go to Leigh if you want unhinged, testy, emotionally volatile. If you want Oscar nominations for your film, she’s less reliable. Maybe it’s because she’s so often abrasive and bitchy, courting our dislike? In any case, her range of tones is ridiculously dynamic, and she can be truly fearless in the right vehicle.

MOST ROBBED FOR: Actress, 1995 – In the underseen country-and-western drama Georgia, Mare Winningham deserved her nod as the “nice” sister, but Leigh was sensational as the disintegrating star.

12. Ann Miller (1923-2004)


Song-and-dance legend Miller had the darnedest voice, and was almost always the best thing in her films. She could tap-dance fast enough to leave you dizzy, and really act, too. She retired in 1976, more or less, though David Lynch gave her a wonderful comeback cameo as Coco the landlady in Mulholland Drive.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Supporting Actress, 1949 – No way she’d have beaten Mercedes McCambridge in All the King’s Men, but Miller’s good-time gal in On the Town was easily worth a nomination.

11. Myrna Loy (1905-1993)



The Academy felt so guilty about never nominating the exotic and versatile Loy that a lobbying campaign sprang up to set things right, and they gave her an honorary Oscar in 1991. She accepted via camera at home, saying simply, “You’ve made me very happy. Thank you very much.”
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actress, 1934 – William Powell and director W.S. Van Dyke got in, so it seems particularly cruel that Loy’s half of the Thin Man sleuthing duo went unrewarded.

10. Raúl Juliá (1940-94)
 
 
The Puerto Rican actor’s career was cut short right in its prime, just when Gomez Addams propelled him to stardom. His Shakespeare playing was legendary, and he’d earned respect as the (superior) straight man to William Hurt’s Oscar-winning gay martyr routine in Kiss of the Spider Woman (1985). But the biggest film accolade eluded him.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Supporting Actor, 1990 – Deeply brilliant as Harrison Ford’s wily defence lawyer Sandy Stern in Presumed Innocent, Julia should have walked this.

9. Hugh Grant (1960– )
 
 
Hugh Grant is amazing at what he does, and basically terrible, as he’d be the first to admit, at being asked to do anything else. His whole career hinges on seeming to make a pig’s ear of being a romantic lead, and making that hilarious, which he does with a natural skill and timing we admit without appreciating quite enough.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actor, 1994 – A word for his wonderfully snobbish support in Small Time Crooks (2000), but Four Weddings and a Funeral is clearly the movie Grant was born to own.

8. Isabella Rossellini (1952– )


Her mother Ingrid Bergman won three of the damn things, and while few would argue that Rossellini is anything like such a major star, she’s given several mesmerising performances. She’s into her sixties now: let’s hope for a juicy supporting turn in something mysterious and wonderful to get her in the club.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actress, 1986 – Out of this world as bewitching masochist Dorothy Vallens in David Lynch’s Blue Velvet, Rossellini probably just scared everyone too much to vote for her.

7. Alan Rickman (1946– )
 

It’s hard to think of anyone who plays villains more lovably than Rickman – they’re often secretly the hero, even if the actual hero hasn’t been told. He’s also a marvellously grumpy romantic lead when required (not often enough) and the sort of British pro whom Oscar voters usually get on their hands and knees to reward. What gives?
MOST ROBBED FOR: Supporting Actor, 1988 – They say an action film’s only as good as its baddie. Thanks to the wickedly sardonic Hans Gruber, this means Die Hard is way up there among the best of all time.

6. John Barrymore (1882–1942)
 
 
Not just the head of a legendary Hollywood dynasty (he’s Drew’s grandfather) and one of the most important theatre actors of his day, but a major film star throughout the sound era and for the first decade of talkies, Barrymore drank too much and died too young. His brother Lionel won one (for 1931’s A Free Soul), but John’s was the greater talent.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actor, 1934 – His fits of magnificent diva outrage as fulminating Broadway impresario Oscar Jaffe in Howard Hawks’s Twentieth Century.

5. Meg Ryan (1961– )

Ryan’s in the Carrey/Grant category of someone whose ticks can grate in her lesser vehicles, but when she’s on, she’s really on – star wattage, comic timing, and nutso charm like no one else’s. Her CV’s missing one hand-slap-to-forehead non-nomination that would make up for everything.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actress, 1989 – Really, if they weren’t going to nominate her for When Harry Met Sally..., it was never going to happen.

4. Mia Farrow (1945– )

In every way, it feels like Mia got the rough end of marriage to Woody Allen – she’s his muse for a decade, and not one Oscar nomination, while supporting players reap them constantly? Even before they teamed up, her ethereal, freckly beauty was a Hollywood treasure, and one the Academy should have noticed.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actress, 1968 – It’s impossible to imagine Rosemary’s Baby without her pale, panicked fragility as Satan’s mum.

3. Donald Sutherland (1935– )

Some blame the Canadian curse (see also Jim Carrey), for what other reason could there be? He has that instantly recognisable baritone, maybe the most treasurable voice in the movies this side of James Mason, and such a rich gallery of parts from the eccentrically endearing to the downright terrifying.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Supporting Actor, 1991 – Sutherland’s incredible off-the-record monologue in Oliver Stone’s JFK, which cracks the whole movie wide open.

2. Marilyn Monroe (1926-62)



Maybe it was considered enough that she was the pin-up to end all pin-ups, and a wildly successful star for ten years. Perhaps she made too many comedies – never the surest path to Academy favour. But any one of a half-dozen performances should have earned Monroe’s inclusion, if only as a polite nod of appreciation.
MOST ROBBED FOR: Actress, 1959 – Only Jack Lemmon in Some Like it Hot’s lead trio got mentioned, but Monroe is fifty times funnier in it than nominee Doris Day in Pillow Talk.

1. Edward G. Robinson (1893-1973)


A damn handy character actor well into his late Seventies, Robinson was a huge if unlikely star throughout the 1930s and 40s. He must have narrowly missed a nod as the hood in Little Caesar (1931), and sadly died two months before an honorary Oscar was presented to him in 1973.

MOST ROBBED FOR: Supporting Actor, 1944 – He had flashier parts, but few as perfectly-tailored to him as sympathetic adjuster Barton Keyes in Double Indemnity.

From: http://mall.myvirtuallife.info/culture/film/oscars/9880397/Oscars-2014-the-best-20-actors-whove-never-been-nominated.html?frame=2486139

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

DVD releases for the week of April 15, 2014

Pick of the Week:




Philomena. When she fell pregnant as a teenager in Ireland in 1952, Philomena Lee (Judi Dench) was sent to the convent to be looked after as a fallen woman. She cared for her baby for three years until the Church took him from her and sold him, like countless others, to America for adoption. Coerced into signing a document promising never to attempt to see her child again, she nonetheless spent the next fifty years secretly searching for him, unaware that he was searching for her from across the Atlantic.

Other Notable Releases:



The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. Ben Stiller directs and stars in this classic story of a daydreamer who escapes his anonymous life by disappearing into a fantasy world filled with heroism, romance and adventure. When his job, along with that of a co-worker (Kristen Wiig), is threatened, Walter takes action in the real world, embarking on a journey more extraordinary than anything he could have imagined.

 


Ride Along. For the past two years, high school security guard Ben (Kevin Hart) has been trying to show decorated detective James (Ice Cube) that he’s more than just a video game junkie who’s unworthy of James’ sister. When Ben finally gets accepted into the police academy, James invites him on a ride-along designed to scare the hell out of him and ultimately demonstrate if Ben has what it takes to take care of his sister. But when the wild night leads them to the most notorious criminal in the city, James will find that his new partner’s rapid-fire mouth is just as dangerous as the bullets speeding at it. Also starring John Leguizamo and Laurence Fishburne, Ride Along is an action-packed comedy with big thrills and even bigger laughs.




Flowers in the Attic. Based on the bestselling book by V. C. Andrews, the Lifetimer Original Movie, FLOWERS IN THE ATTICE, is a gothic story of four siblings who, after the death of their father, are torn from a peaceful life and subjected to abuse resulting from a dark, family secret. Abandoned by their mother and forced to endure unimaginable treatment living in the attic of their grandparents’ mansion, the children form their own family unit. But as the oldest boy and girl come of age both emotionally and physically while caring for their younger siblings, they are entrapped by their family’s sordid past as they try to survive and escape the harsh living conditions. Heather Graham stars as the mother and Ellen Burstyn as the cruel grandmother.




The Nut Job. It’s time to go nuts for this action-packed comedy featuring the all-star talents of Will Arnett, Brendan Fraser, Gabriel Iglesias, Jeff Dunham, Liam Neeson, Maya Rudolph and Katherine Heigl. Surly (Arnett) is a mischievous squirrel with a mission: to find the tastiest nuts for winter. When he discovers a whole store filled with his favorite food, he plans a heist of nutrageous proportions. But the place turns out to be owned by ruthless bank robbers, so it’s up to Surly and his furry friends to stop the nearby bank heist and save the town. The fur is sure to fly in this hilarious adventure that critics are calling “Funny and witty! For kids of all ages!” (Jeffrey Lyons, Lyons Den Radio, WCBS). Read our review here.




Ripper Street: Season 2. The job of preventing Whitechapel from descending into hell has never been harder for Inspector Reid and his loyal deputies. As the century enters its final decade, society teeters on the brink of moral collapse and nowhere are the bloated British Empire’s problems felt more keenly than in its dark heart: the East End of London. The memory of Jack the ripper may have faded but the Whitechapel streets he walked are more dangerous than ever.




Black Nativity. Struggling to pay the bills, single mom Naima (Jennifer Hudson) sends her teenage son Langston (Jacob Latimore) to live with his estranged grandparents, Reverend Cornell and Aretha Cobbs (Forest Whitaker and Angela Bassett) in New York City. At first Langston resents their strict household, but with the help of new friends – and a little divine intervention – he embarks on an inspirational journey of self-discovery that brings the whole family together.

From: http://teamfogreviews.com/2014/04/15/dvd-releases-week-of-41514/

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Stallone vs. Schwarzenegger: Who wins the Escape Plan tale of the tape?

Images (C) Getty/Original GWR illustration

If you told anyone in the late-80s that Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone would one day start teaming up to make movies, they probably would've reacted the same way as when they found out The Mega Powers were forming.



But here we are, some 20 years later, and two of the biggest action stars of all-time are following up their work in "The Expendables" and its sequel with co-top billing in "Escape Plan," releasing this weekend.



But enough about these massive humans working together - what would happen if we threw these long-in-the-tooth He-Men into a hypothetical world record brawl? On the eve of their new film, let's find out who would escape in one piece!

(See what we did there?)


THE CASE FOR SCHWARZENEGGER

World-class bodybuilder. Top-flight action star. United States governor.

The Schwarzenegger résumé is certainly varied and distinguished. And it's reflected in some of the world records he's been recognized for, which show off one of the truest examples of "The American Dream" we'll ever see.

Winner of six straight Mr. Olympia titles from 1970-75 and another in 1980, Schwarzenegger held the records for both most consecutive and overall wins of the event until later being surpassed by Lee Haney (1984-91) and Ronnie Coleman (1998-05). Still, that five-year gap between his sixth and seventh titles still remains as the record for longest time between Mr. Olympia titles.

Arnie's influence in the bodybuilding world was so great, he later went on to have the Arnold Sports Festival named after him. Having skyrocketed in popularity since its founding in 1989, it was recognized in 2007 as the bodybuilding event with the largest attendance.

And that's not even getting into his movie records. And no, we don't mean the record for most awesome movie line ever:



We mean the fact he holds the record for most films made by a bodybuilder. To go from winning 13 world titles (seven Mr. Olympia, five Mr. Universe, one Mr. World) to starring in 36 feature films is incredible. In fact, he grew into such an in-demand star that his epic "True Lies" in 1994 became the first-ever movie with a $100 million budget.

THE CASE FOR STALLONE

Impressive on Arnold's behalf, for sure. But if you're already counting out Stallone, you've obviously never seen a "Rocky" movie.

And there's no better place to start when debating the merits of the de facto Italian Stallion. The "Rocky" franchise, running from the original in 1976 to "Rocky Balboa" 30 years later, is the most successful sports movie franchise ever, grossing $1,251,372,491 throughout its six installments. And the way Stallone keeps going, it wouldn't shock us to see a "Rocky 7" add to this total soon.



Stallone is also responsible for one of the most audacious stunts pulled off in movie history. For his 1993 vehicle "Cliffhanger," Stallone had stuntman Simon Crane perform the most expensive film stunt in air: performed just once, Crane's trick of moving between two jets at an altitude of 15,000 ft (4,572 m) cost $1 million. Ever the nice guy, Stallone offered to to reduce his salary on the film by the same cost in order to make sure the stunt went off.

Stallone even bled into the gaming world, as his Rambo character begat the first movie-licensed run-and-gun game, "Rambo: First Blood Part II" on the SEGA Master System in 1986. And while it's not a record, Stallone (for "Rocky") is also one of only two men (Charlie Chaplin and Orson Welles) to be nominated for Oscars in best original screenplay and best actor for the same film - good company!

THE VERDICT

Unfortunately, Stallone also holds a dubious distinction on the other end of the movie awards spectrum. He's the most-nominated Razzie recipient of all-time, garnering 30 noms en route to 8 career "wins" in the Golden Raspberry Awards for the worst in film.

And while it absolutely crushes me to go against the man who graced my life with this...



...there's just no way I can overlook the impact Schwarzenegger had on both movies and sport (without even accounting for his completely incongruous two-term run as governor of California).

So two jacked geriatrics enter; only one wins. Hasta la vista, Sly.

Winner: Arnold Schwarzenegger

From: http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/news/2013/10/stallone-vs-schwarzenegger-who-wins-the-escape-plan-tale-of-the-tape-52220/

See more:


Rip/Copy Escape Plan DVD to Galaxy Tab 2 7.0
How to Backup/Copy Escape Plan Blu-ray movie on Windows 8.1/8
Transfer "Escape Plan" DVD to Surface 2 in multitracks MP4 format

Monday, April 7, 2014

2014 Oscar Winners On Blu-ray Disc

The 86th annual Academy Awards, honoring the best films released in 2013, is now history. The ceremony was held on March 2nd, 2014 at the Dolby Theater in Hollywood. Find out the winners that are now available, or coming soon to Blu-ray, and why they make great additions to your Blu-ray Disc collection.

Note: If you click on an in-line link and portions of the page do not appear - click on "Turn off this Top Frame" and you will be immediately directed to the correct webpage.



1. 12 Years A Slave

12 Years a Slave took top honors as Best Picture, as well as getting recognized for Lupita Nyong'o's excellent supporting performance and its adapted screenplay written my John Ridley. This film is based on the writings of Solomon Northup, which is a personal account of his time as a free black man living in the Pre-Civil War North who was suddenly, and unjustly, abducted and plunged into slavery in the South, and his 12 year struggle to regain his freedom.

This film doesn't feature special effects or CGI that will tax your home theater system, but is an example of what a film is all about at its core - Telling a compelling story that will move and inspire you.

For more details on the film, read the the following About.com articles:


2. Gravity


Although 12 Years a Slave took Best Picture honors, the film that gathered up the most awards at the 86th Annual Academy Awards, with a total of seven, was Gravity. Technically, the film is flawless. It is a great example of breakthrough film-making the technical arts.

The seven awards included: cinematography, film editing, sound editing, sound mixing, visual effects, original score, and to wrap it up, Alfonso Cuaron, took home theater Oscar for Best Director - resulting in one of the rare cases where a film has one best director without winning best picture.

Also, in my opinion, if they would give out awards for the best use of 3D, Gravity would have won hand's down. However, even if you don't view it in 3D, you will find it a visually compelling viewing experience.

If you are looking for a top-notch Home Theater Demo disc, Gravity definitely deserves that title.

Review of Theatrical Version (About.com Movies)
Gravity Review and Rip & Backup Gravity DVD Guide
Rip and Enjoy Gravity Blu-ray movies on iPad Mini 2

3. Dallas Buyers Club

It isn't always the big blockbusters that get honored at the Oscars. Dallas Buyers Club is an example of a compelling independent film that attempts to tackle social issues we normally don't want to think about, and ends up doing a excellent job of doing so. However, in order to reach audiences, the actors must deliver compelling performances. In the case of Dallas Buyer's Club, both the leading (Matthew McConaughey) and supporting (Jared Leto) actors were honored with Oscar statuettes. The film also won an Oscar for make-up and hairstyling.

This film is definitely not light-hearted entertainment, but offers up both an great history lesson and commentary on the problems the nation had dealing with early days of the AIDs epidemic. If you enjoy films that address important social issues, definitely consider addingDallas Buyer's Club to your collection.

4. Blue Jasmine
Even though Woody Allen personally rejects being honored at the Annual Academy Awards, his films still get a lot of recognition by members of the Motion Picture Academy, and despite what you might think of Mr Allen, he makes some great films. This year, his film Blue Jasmine was honored with the Best Actress Oscar for the excellent performance by Cate Blanchett. If you are Woody Allen Fan, definitely add this one to your collection.

Blue Jasmine Theatrical Review (About.com World/Independent Film)

5. Frozen

What can I say, it is almost impossible to outdo Disney or Disney/Pixar when it comes to award winning animated films (and hero princesses), and Frozen is the latest to be so honored by the members of the Motion Picture Academy.

This time around, Frozen took home an Oscar for both Best Animated Film and Best Song Let It Go - and, of course, it doesn't hurt that the film has also earned about $1 Billion in Worldwide box office during its theatrical run.

For more details on the film and why it might be a worthy addition to your Blu-ray Disc collection, read a Theatrical Review for Parents (About.com Kids TV/Movies).

The film is now available for pre-order on both Blu-ray and DVD - In addition, a 3D Blu-ray Edition is also forthcoming.

Blu-ray Disc Movie Playback Tips

With collecting these 2014 Oscar Winners On Blu-ray Disc, you may wanna enjoy them at home with your family. It is necessary to copy the Blu-ray to avoid being scratched or "wrecked" by your kids. Then what you need is reliable BD ripping software. Here we strongly recommended Pavtube Blu-ray Ripper (or Blu-ray Ripper for Mac) which does a great job in backup the main Blu-ray movie as well as make the clips of your favorite scenes from a movie.

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Movies Coming Out March 28, 2014

Below is the new movies hitting the theater at March 28, 2014. I'm pleased to share the new info about the latest Movies and films. If you have some issues or things you want to know, pls let me know! 

The Raid 2: Berandal


Starring Iko Uwais, Arifin Putra and Alex Abbad, directed by Gareth Evans. According to the story of Indonesian Action movie and sequel to The Raid: Redemption, Rama joins a new team to bring down the thugs of Jakarta and the corrupt cops in his own police force. He is forced by circumstances and the death of his brother to go undercover and bring down the Jakarta's crime leader Bangun. Rama enter's into the Bangun's crime empire with the help of Bangun's sun whom he befriends in the jail.

Movie is written by Gareth Evans and comes in action category. The Raid 2: Berandal is releasing on March 28, 2014 so we can estimate that movie will come out on DVD & Blu-ray in June-July, 2014.

Release date: March 28, 2014

DVD/Blu-ray release date: June-July, 2014.

Starring: Iko Uwais, Arifin Putra, Oka Antara, Tio Pakusadewo, Alex Abbad, Julie Estelle, Cecep Arif Rahman, Yayan Ruhian, Ryuhei Matsuda, Kenichi Endo and Kazuki Kitamura.




Noah

Starring Russell Crowe, Emma Watson and Jennifer Connelly, written and directed by Darren Aronofsky. According to story of movie, Noah is suffering from visions about upcoming apocalyptic flood and builds an ark to protect his family- Jennifer Connelly, Emma Watson and Logan Lerman.

Movie script is written by Darren Aronofsky and Ari Handel and comes in adventure, drama, fantasy category. Movie is releasing on March 28, 2014 in USA and on April 4, 2014 in UK, So we can estimate the DVD & Blu-ray discs release date in July-August, 2014.

Release date: March 28, 2014

Estimated DVD/Blu-ray release date: July-August, 2014

Starring: Russell Crowe, Jennifer Connelly, Ray Winstone, Emma Watson, Logan Lerman, Dakota Goyo, Ray Winstone and Anthony Hopkins.

Distributor(s): Paramount Pictures

Genre(s): Adventure, fantasy


A Haunted House 2

Starring Jaime Pressly, Ashley Rickards and Marlon Wayans, directed by Michael Tiddes. According to story of A Haunted House 2, After loosing his possessed girlfriend Malcolm falls for a mother of two and moves into a new house with her, but soon starts to realize paranormal activities surrounding the house.

Movie script is written by Marlon Wayans and Rick Alvarez and comes into horror,comedy genre. Movie is releasing on March 28, 2014, So we can estimate the DVD & Blu-ray discs release date in June-July, 2014.

Release date: March 28, 2014

Estimated DVD/Blu-ray release date: June-July, 2014

Starring: Marlon Wayans, Jaime Pressly, Essence Atkins, Gabriel Iglesias, Cedric the Entertainer, Gabriel Iglesias and Ashley Rickards.

Distributor(s): Open Road Films

Genre(s): Comedy, Horror

More New Movies Releasing this week in India in Hindi ,English, Telugu and Tamil.

Youngistan
Dishkiyaoon
O Teri
Sabotage
Legend ( Telugu)

See also:

New DVD Releases for March 25th, 2014
Blu-ray Release: Saving Mr. Banks
20th Century Fox Releases Deeper Trailer For 'X-Men: Days of Future Past'
Top New Bollywood Movie DVD Rip Backup Software

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Oscars 2014: '12 Years a Slave' wins Best Picture, 'Gravity' notches seven Academy Awards

McConaughey wins Best Actor; Blanchett notches Best Actress; Leto named Best Supporting Actor; '12 Years a Slave' star Nyong'o wins Best Supporting Actress; Slavery drama and 'Her' win Screenplay Oscars; 'Frozen' wins Best Animated Feature.

 
Director Steve McQueen (l) and actor/producer Brad Pitt embrace after '12 Years a Slave' wins Best Picture.
The epic “12 years a Slave” won a hotly contested race for Best Picture, while one of its stars, newcomer Lupita Nyong’o, won Best Supporting Actress at Sunday’s 86th annual Academy Awards.
Nyong’o — born in Mexico, raised partly in Kenya and now a resident of Brooklyn — won a day after her 31st birthday.

“Every time I look down at this golden statue, may it remind me and every little child that no matter where you’re from, your dreams are valid,” Nyong’O said between tears.
Matthew McConaughey, in his first nomination ever, won Best Actor for playing an AIDS-afflicted rodeo cowboy in “Dallas Buyers Club.”


 

'All right, all right!': Matthew McConaughey wins his first career Oscar, topping the deepest Best Actor field in years.
It capped off a recent comeback from the Hollywood doldrums for the Texas-born actor. Before he let out a joyous “All right, all right, all right!,” McConaughey thanked his father, who he imagined was doing a celebratory dance in Heaven “with a big plate of gumbo.”

Cate Blanchett won Best Actress for “Blue Jasmine.”

“Films with women as the main characters are not niche, and in fact, they make money!” the Australian actress declared.
 

Cate Blanchett proved prognosticators correct, winning Best Actress at Sunday night's Oscars.
Jared Leto — known primarily for his role on TV’s “My So-Called Life” in the ’90s — won Best Supporting Actor for playing a transgendered AIDS sufferer in “Dallas Buyers Club.”
“To all the dreamers out there watching this tonight in places like the Ukraine, as you struggle to make your dreams happen and live the impossible, we’re thinking of you tonight,” said Leto.
He then dedicated his award to “The millions of people who have lost the battle to AIDS, and people who have lost a battle due to injustice due to who they are and who they love.”


 

Gravity's' Alfonso Cuarón accepts his award for Best Director - one of seven Oscars the movie received on the night.
Best Director, another one of the night’s tight races, went to Mexican-born Alfonso Cuarón for “Gravity,” the first Latino to win the award. He bested “12 Years a Slave” filmmaker Steve McQueen.

John Ridley won Best Adapted Screenplay for “12 years a Slave.”

“All the praise goes to Solomon Northrup,” Ridley said, acknowledging the man whose 1853 memoir was turned into the film. “Those were his words, that was his life.”

Lupita Nyong'o gives an emotional acceptance speech after winning Best Supporting Actress.
Spike Jonze won Best Original Screenplay for the man-meets-computer system love story “Her.”
Along with Best Director, “Gravity” garnered another six awards — Best Visual Effects, Cinematography, Editing, Sound Mixing, Sound Editing and Musical Score.
“Frozen,” as expected, was anointed the Best Animated Feature Film; “Mr. Hublot” busted some Oscar pool ballots as the Best Animated Short Film.

 
Jared Leto wins the first award of the evening, the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his turn in 'Dallas Buyers Club.'
The popular anthem “Let It Go,” from “Frozen,” won Best Song for the husband-and-wife team of Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, who also did Broadway’s “Avenue Q.”

“The Great Beauty,” from Italy, won Best Foreign Language Film, and “20 Feet From Stardom,” about backup singers, nabbed Best Documentary.

Best Costume Design went to “The Great Gatsby.” “Dallas Buyers Club” won Best Makeup and Hairstyling, making the best of a reported $250 budget.


 

Ellen DeGeneres kicks off the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre with a monologue for the ages.
Though Nyong’o was a favorite to win Best Supporting Actress, she was still in shock as she cradled her “golden man” backstage.

“I’m a little dazed, I can’t believe this is in my hands. I can’t believe this is real life,” she said.

“It hasn’t sunk in that I’m holding this thing, and it’s in my hands .... But I’m so happy to be holding this golden man.”

 
Lupita Nyong'o, left, and Meryl Streep dance with Pharrell Williams during his performance of 'Happy' at the Oscars.
She said her Oscar journey has been one of self-discovery.

“What I have learned from myself is that I don’t have to be anybody else, and that myself is good enough,” she said. “And that when I’m being true to that self, then I can avail myself to extraordinary things such as this.”

Jared Leto is already an international rock star, but almost lost it Sunday when he locked eyes with a tough guy while accepting his Oscar. 


The 86th Annual Academy Awards were supposed to be a three-horse race Sunday, but 'American Hustle' got shut out.
“At one point in my speech, I found myself talking right to (Robert) De Niro, as if the room wasn’t intimidating enough,” he said with a laugh. “I was like, ‘Bad choice! Let me go back over to my mom.’” ——With Nancy Dillon