DVD Addict PDF - DNA Publishing
Transcription
DVD Addict PDF - DNA Publishing
Release date: 12 March 2007 FITNESS DVDS Does my bum look big in this? If your new year’s resolution to get in shape is slipping, why not enlist the help of some celebrity pals and their keep-fit videos? W SPECIAL REPORT ould you like to drop a dress size in time for the summer? Silly question, of course you would, but it’s easier said than done. If the gym isn’t for you and you’ve tried every trendy fat-busting diet going, maybe it’s time you called in the big guns: the celebrity keep-fit video. Usually fronted by some z-list has-been, these DVDs clutter the shelves of every supermarket and video store in the country and sell in their millions. While some offer as much fat-burning potential as a slow walk to the shops, others will leave you feeling like you’ve run a marathon. Fortunately, for living room keep fit fanatics everywhere, there are a few that strike a happy medium and present a well-balanced exercise regime which will genuinely help you lose weight and change your body shape for the better. In a not-entirely-serious investigation, DVD ADDICT slipped on its favourite leotard and tried out some of the leading titles... VCI £17.99 2 Entertain £17.99 Davina Jade’s Er, who? Davina McCall, Big Brother presenter who repeatedly seeks approval from her mum every time she washes her hair in the Garnier Nutrisse advert. Porkiest moment: Presenting Big Brother 2, 4 and 7. But she was pregnant. Davina says: “Working out can be more fun than you think!” Good for: Toning. Workouts: Legs and bums, upper body, abdominals. Let’s have a go then: Davina’s hour-long session of bending, stretching, kicking and – eek - sit-ups come in both “simple” and “advanced” versions. She smiles throughout, most likely in the knowledge of how much it’s going to hurt in the morning. DVD extras: Davina on clothes, food and shopping. Worked for Davina, work for you? Follow Davina’s workout and you’ll soon be releasing a fitness DVD of your own. Most amusing bit: Davina’s revelation that she lost her flab by exercising regularly and watching what she ate. Er, is there any other way? Recommended for: Anyone who wants to wake-up and shape-up. Er, who? Jade Goody, the most financially successful Big Brother contestant turned most controversial Celebrity Big Brother contestant. Dull boyfriend, mad mum. Jade says: “The workout that lost me two stone.” Porkiest moment: When we met her on Big Brother 3 and she was branded “Miss Piggy” by The Sun. Good for: Burning flab. Workouts: Two circuit workouts, core training and resistance workout. Let’s have a go then: Well, it’s certainly knackering. Lots of running, jumping and squatting. There’s not a lot of difference between the two main circuit workouts, but Jade’s emphasis on time saving (what does she do all day anyway?) means a session only has to last 15 minutes. Who the hell is that? Jade’s nameless fitness instructor (a large man in tight shorts) spurring Jade on more than she’s motivating you. DVD extras: Just that horrific picture of the “before” Jade bursting on the back of the box. Worked for Jade, work for you? No diet in the world is going to keep that gob shut, but yes, she’s Power of 3 Shape Challenge now figure-hugging, not figurerevolting. There’s hope for us all. Most amusing bit: Jade’s cutaway grins to camera before each workout. You just know she’s thinking about her dinner. Recommended for: The unassuming beginner who is likely to count bending down to load up the DVD as halfway to finishing the workout. EMI £19.99 Liberation Entertainment £17.99 Kym Ryder’s Jennifer Ellison’s Burn & Firm Workout West End Workout Er, who? Ex-Brookside actress turned lad magfriendly glamour model turned actress again. Starred in Chicago in the West End and due to join the new series of BBC1’s Hotel Babylon. Porkiest moment: A little chubbier in her Brookside days. Jen says: “If the gym isn’t for you, this workout is”. Good for: Fitness. Workouts: Upper body, bums and tums, lower body. Let’s have a go then: Jen glides through her gut-wrenching selection of crunches, squats and jumps without hardly breaking a sweat. Successfully synchronising yourself with her dance routines is unlikely unless you’re a trained dancer. But it’s fun trying. DVD extras: Bonus dance routine. Worked for Jen, work for you? She’s the current 31st sexiest woman in the world according to FHM magazine. Follow Jen’s workout and you’ll get the curves if not the bank account. Most amusing bit: Jen having obvious trouble audibly counting to anything above eight. Who said she was just a pretty face, eh? Recommended for: The adventurous exerciser with a penchant for the art of dance. Channel 4 £24.99 Max and Paddy’s The Power of Two Er, who? Phoenix Nights’ doormen last seen on their personal Road To Nowhere featuring Peter Kaye and Patrick McGuinness, who have been mates since school. Porkiest moment: They say all great comedy double-acts come with a big and small one. This is no exception. Max and Paddy say: “Getting fit has never been so fun.” Nor so funny! Good for: Fighting the flab whilst having a laugh. Work outs: Lots of getting bent into funny shapes by your mate who seems a lot better at this than you. Universal £17.99 Coleen McLoughlin’s Brand New Body Workout Er, who? Surprisingly attractive WAG who’s clearly dropped down a few leagues to date England player, Wayne Rooney. Rooney took her to see Austin Powers 2 for their first date and proposed to her on a BP garage forecourt. See what we mean? Porkiest moment: That probably belongs to Wayne. Coleen says: “I dropped a jean size!” Good for: Overall fitness. Workouts: High intensity cardio, boxing, abdominals and core conditioning. Let’s have a go then: A demanding bout of bounding, punching and crunching. Her pleased-to-meetyou grin quickly gives way to a “phew I’m knackered” grimace. DVD extras: “Building the body” section, ie more exercise. Bugger. Worked for Coleen, work for you? Well, it’s no frills, no gimmicks and tough work. Very professional. Most amusing bit: Probably the thought of Wayne getting down on one knee at that BP garage. Recommended for: Those who’d prefer a “real” girl to show them how to lose a few pounds. Let’s have a go then: Alright – but you’re going to have to stop laughing first and resist the temptation to watch the Road To Nowhere DVD instead (which is also included). Who the hell is that? An entire party of Max and Paddy fans, thin and fat! DVD extras: Brian Potter workout live from the Phoenix Club. Recommended for: Billed as “An extraordinary workout for extraordinary people”, Max And Paddy’s The Power of Two doesn’t disappoint. Will have you laughing your jean sizes away. Er, who? Kym Marsh, ex-member of boy/girl band Hear’Say who won ITV’s Popstars in 2001. Now Michelle Connor in Coronation Street, and married to Jack Ryder off Eastenders. Porkiest moment: Never really had anything to worry about, but that didn’t stop Popstars judge “Nasty” Nigel Lythgoe reducing her to tears on air by suggesting she should lose some weight. Kym says: “I lost 12 pounds in four weeks and so can you!” Good for: Body sculpting. Workouts: Fat busting, sofatone, box and burn, pillow boxing, aero dance, abs. Let’s have a go then: A perfect example that the grass is never greener. Each routine is as tiring as the last. Don’t fall for the one that you do sat down on your sofa. Who the hell is that? Her bald, Australian personal coach, Paul, whose eyes look like they’re about to burst out of his head at any moment. DVD extras: Kym’s food tips and “exclusive” interview. Worked for Kym, work for you? Makes good use of your household items. It’s a surprise she hasn’t got you doing weights with your fridge. Most amusing bit: Kym’s horrendous taste in wallpaper. Did someone call Changing Rooms!? Recommended for: The hardworking but attention-deficit fitness fan who is going to try to keep at it. Release date: 12 March 2007 THE ULTIMATE weekly GUIDE TO DVD Primeval Charlie and Lola £19.99 | PG | 19 MARCH £12.99 | U | 19 MARCH A TIME portal has opened in the Forest of Dean and prehistoric creatures are strolling through, much to the joy of evolutionary scientist Nick Cutter (Douglas Henshall) and his Scooby-Doo gang of dino hunters. This basic premise provides all the excuse you need for some occasionally dire dialogue (“we have proof that the past exists” and “the anomalies are time’s equivalent of earthquakes”) and a multitude of primeval encounters that knows its audience perfectly. It’s a Saturday night family-orientated adventure show that gives even the BBC’s reinvigorated Doctor Who a run for its money. And what better excuse is there for S Club 7’s Hannah Spearritt to wear skimpy underwear and wiggle her nose? The Making Of Primeval documentary offers no surprises, however. They used computers to animate the dinosaurs. Really? HHHHH TV SHOWS for the under fives can be so nauseatingly sweet and giddy that any adults given even short exposure are in danger of developing Type 2 diabetes. Charlie and Lola is different and this collection of stories from series two will provide infinite viewing for restless toddlers while adults can sit back with a cup of tea and enjoy Charlie and Lola’s young and adjective-packed descriptions of their everywhere world. The stories could come from any young child’s average day, but it’s the loving approach that makes the series a winner with every word spouted reminding the old of how they used to be and the young exactly how they are. The animation style – a collage of 2D animation, paper cutouts, fabrics and photo-montage – simply adds to the show’s charm. The woefully short blooper reel is hilarious and will leave even the greatest cynic begging for more. HHHHH Hollywoodland Hotel Babylon £19.99 | 15 | 19 MARCH £29.99 | 15 | 19 MARCH When 1950s Superman actor George Reeves (Ben Affleck) dies in an apparent suicide after his career takes a nosedive, his mother hires a private detective (Adrien Brody) to find out who really put the bullet through her son’s brain. This fictional investigation into one of Hollywood’s most famous unsolved deaths is filled with intrigue, deceit and double dealing. Affleck is outstanding in the flashback sequences that pepper the film and detail how a man who wanted to be the next Errol Flynn becomes broken by the very studio that built him. There is a genuine air of tragedy and pathos in his portrayal of Reeves and there are obvious parallels to Affleck’s own stalled career. Brody’s gumshoe detective is less effective, however, and his overlong framing sequences simply detract from an otherwise heart-rending tale of a limited actor choosing to take his own life. HHHHH Lacking the sharp humour of Imogen Edwards-Jones’s original book, the BBC’s TV adaptation of Hotel Babylon offers a frothy but ultimately superficial look at the seedy underbelly of an anonymous five star London hotel. The result is a collection of individual stories that use the hotel’s swinging doors to introduce a constant stream of appalling characters and ridiculous situations. While the book worked hard to expose the moral deficiency of its hotel guests, the TV show simply revels in their debauchery and stupidity. That said, it’s still great fun, mainly because of an excellent cast including Tamzin Outhwaite as a slightly aloof hotel boss and Max Beesley as Charlie, the head receptionist who is involved in most of the storylines. Best of all, though, is Dexter Fletcher who plays the savvy concierge and is able to procure or organise almost anything imaginable – for a price. HHHHH Casino Royale £22.99 (2 discs) | 12 | 19 MARCH Starting with a pre-credit action sequence in which Bond earns his licence to kill, the differences between this reboot of the 007 franchise and what has gone before could not be more pronounced. This is Bond at the start of his career: cocky, self-assured and arrogant but also fallible. Daniel Craig plays him with all the brass-knuckled charm of an early Sean Connery and his performance is a million miles from the indestructible arched eyebrows of Roger Moore or gigolo good looks of Pierce Brosnan. The support cast, too, is excellent with Mads Mikkelsen turning in a polished performance as 007’s main adversary, Le Chiffre – a villain who literally cries bloody tears. Eva Green’s Vesper Lynd is another excellently realised character and has considerably more depth to her than the usual Bond girl. Her verbal sparring with Bond is particularly pithy and revealing. No other Bond film has followed the plot of the source book so closely, so there are no metal-mouthed henchmen, no super villains in mountain fortresses and the most utilised gadget is a simple mobile phone. What you get instead is a Batman Begins makeover and a 007 agent who looks like he could genuinely kill a man with his bare hands if the mood took him. While action packed there’s a strong thread of believability that rings true to Ian Fleming’s vision while the script is full of clues to Bond’s future that make repeated viewing essential. All the Bond books should be reapproached this way since Casino Royale is the only film in 30 years to do them justice. HHHHH DVD EXTRAS n Becoming Bond is a revealing look at the challenges Daniel Craig faced when taking on the role while James Bond: For Real demonstrates the movies delicious reliance on proper stunt work. The music video and TV special on Bond girls are welcome, but where’s the detailed look at the book? Release date: 19 March 2007 THE ULTIMATE weekly GUIDE TO DVD Happy Feet The Holiday Waterloo Road £19.99 | 12 | 26 MARCH £29.99 | 12 | 26 MARCH this by-the-numbers romantic comedy suffers from a messy script and a telegraphed storyline. Thankfully, it’s also stuffed to bursting with Hollywood A-listers who just about manage to salvage something from the film’s cloying sentimentality. Cameron Diaz and Kate Winslet are on top form playing two successful single women who swop homes (and countries) for the Christmas holidays and find love in the process. Winslet lands a swanky pad in LA while Diaz settles into a picture-postcard cottage in the English countryside. Winslet then meets Jack Black and Diaz hooks up with Jude Law and – bingo – everyone lives happily ever after. Despite such contrived nonsense, the film’s two storylines are packed with some snappy one-liners and Kate Winslet’s sub-Bridget Jones dithering is a delight to watch. HHHHH it’s a new school term at troubled inner-city comprehensive, Waterloo Road, and Jack Rimmer (Jason Merrells) has taken over the headship after the last incumbent suffered a nervous breakdown. With the school at the bottom of almost every league table imaginable, Jack is determined to turn things round. Sadly, the show is as predictable as it sounds with its mix of warring and dysfunctional teachers and unruly, gobby pupils. It retreads old ground, adequately covered before in Channel 4’s excellent Teachers (starring Andrew ‘Egg from This Life’ Lincoln) and offers nothing new to the “edgy school drama” it aspires to be. The kids are so stupid you wouldn’t wish a single GCSE on the lot of them, and the teachers are so emotionally imbalanced and prone to petty infighting, it’s a wonder they haven’t all been sectioned. HHHHH Extras Series Two Jackass Number Two £21.99 | 15 | 26 MARCH £19.99 | 18 | 26 MARCH Extras is the second comedy mule from the stable of Stephen Merchant and Ricky Gervais and it definitively proves that the duo are no one-trick ponies. Where the “it’s so cringe-worthy, it’s funny” humour of The Office came from David Brent, this time it’s the guest celebrities who brilliantly lay themselves open to ridicule. Chris Martin wants to get home from yet another charity appeal because “Gwyneth’s doing drumsticks” for tea; David Bowie ad-libs an off-thecuff song about “the sad little fat man”, and Daniel ‘Harry Potter’ Radcliffe brags he’s “done it with a girl”. The show-within-a-show (Ricky’s character Andy Millman has now got his own sitcom, When The Whistle Blows, which he hates) is Extras 2’s weakest point. But a British Comedy Award-winning performance from Stephen Merchant as Andy’s hapless agent Darren Lamb makes Extras 2 a comedy must-see. HHHHH Whether you class a bunch of grown men (grown, with the exception of Johnny Knoxville, into a bunch of circus freaks) humiliating themselves in all manner of hideously painful ways as entertainment will determine whether you’re shocked, offended or just bored by the Jackass franchise. In this, their second feature film, they’ve certainly tried to kill themselves in more imaginative ways than ever before, strapping themselves to an exploding rocket, fishing for sharks with human bait and going oneon-one with a raging bull (while wearing a blindfold). It’s certainly one step beyond the whoops-Islipped-on-a-banana-skin innocence of You’ve Been Framed. At times, the Jackass team seem almost like human cartoons, living out some strange Roadrunner-type fantasy, but the injuries they suffer are only too real. HHHHH £18.99 | U | 26 MARCH memorably described by narrator Robin Williams as March of the Penguins meets Michael Flatley’s Riverdance, the Oscar-winning Happy Feet is an allsinging, all-dancing animated spectacular. It tells the tale of Mumble (voiced by Elijah Wood), a young tonedeaf emperor penguin who can’t carry a tune. Sadly for him, singing is how penguins attract a mate and his inability to belt out a ‘heartsong’ sets him apart from his peers. Sent for singing lessons by his concerned parents Memphis (Hugh Jackman) and Norma Jean (Nicole Kidman), Mumble’s voice coach sums up the gravity of the situation: “A penguin without a heartsong is hardly a penguin at all.” Despite this handicap, Mumble has a trick up his sleeve – he’s a bit of a mean tap-dancer – and breaks into a dance routine whenever the mood grabs him. This leads to some impressive Busby Berkeley-inspired song and dance numbers including an underwater ballet sequence and a rave using the southern lights as illumination. It’s all hugely entertaining, but doesn’t overshadow the film’s message that it’s okay to be yourself no matter what anyone else thinks. For good measure, there’s also a strong ecological theme running throughout, but this doesn’t undermine the story, it adds to it. HHHHH DVD EXTRAS n Happy Feet comes packed to the beak with extra features. There are two new animated shorts to enjoy, a behind-thescenes look at how the film was put together (including the stunning recreation of Antarctica) and a marvellous piece on Savion Glover, the reallife tap-dancing wizard whose dance routines were motion captured to make Mumble’s dancing really come to life. Release date: 27 November 2006 High School Musical Encore Edition £14.99 | PG | 4 DECEMBER THE ULTIMATE weekly GUIDE TO DVD He’s the handsome basketball player, she’s the gorgeous new girl who can solve complex equations by smiling, but dare they risk absolutely nothing by auditioning for the school musical? Insipid dance routines break up a film that follows Grease’s lead but removes such deadweight as plot, character development or memorable songs. It provides kids with a view of school that’s so unrelentingly sweet that it makes the sexual swaying of Travolta and Newton John seem like something that should only be available on the internet, locked behind a password and a crucifix. Extras include a sing-a-long karaoke version. HHHHH Nacho Libre £19.99 | PG | 4 DECEMBER Superman Returns £25.99 (2 discs) | 12 | 4 DECEMBER X-Men director Bryan Singer adored the first two Superman movies so much that he’s crafted a love letter that picks up where Superman II left off. The result is a mixed bag of nostalgia and action scenes that, while directed with bravado, fail to deal with the problem of finding heroism in an invincible hero. The film opens with Superman returning to Earth after a five year absence. While he was gone, searching for the remnants of his home planet of Krypton, Lois Lane has become engaged and has a five-year-old-son (yes, you’re meant to be suspicious...). She’s also gone from being Superman’s number one fan to being his biggest detractor (and winning a Pulitzer prize for her efforts). The rest of the film has Superman playing out some kind of sad stalker fantasy, desperate to rekindle his relationship with Lois, while simultaneously dealing with archfiend Lex Luthor’s plans to enter the real estate business by creating a new super-continent. Thankfully, there’s plenty of jaw-dropping moments, too, as Superman rescues civilians from falling masonry, saves a Shuttle from crashing and stops a speeding bullet in the blink of an eye. Literally. Kevin Spacey enjoys himself playing a pantomime Luthor while newcomer Brandon Routh does his best to fill the cape and tights left behind by Christopher Reeve – although his performance comes dangerously close to mimicry at times. Superman Returns is an effective reboot of the franchise – more a recreation than a reimagining – that works best if seen as a set-up for 2009’s Superman: The Man of Steel. HHHHH Jack Black is a Mexican priest who decides to realise his true calling by entering the wrestling ring as the masked Nacho Libre. Black does his best with a script so light that his determined stare and slapstick pratfalls provide the funniest lines and the quirky mind of Napoleon Dynamite writer/ director Jared Hess continues to find small smiles in unusual places. Unfortunately, the film comes across as a series of gentle sketches puffed up by the usual money-for-the-orphans storyline. The result is 100 minutes of barely-conscious movie that feels like it should have made a humorous 15 minute short. HHHHH Over The Hedge £19.99 | U | 4 DECEMBER DVD EXTRAS n This two-disc set is bolstered by the addition of Requiem for Krypton: Making Superman Returns, a twohour warts-andall documentary. It includes Roth’s screentest, lots of behind-thescenes clips – you’ll believe a man can fly (on a piece of string) – and Singer losing his temper on set. There are also 11 deleted scenes to enjoy and a minifeaturette on the digital trickery needed to bring Marlon Brando back to life. RJ the Racoon, voiced by Bruce Willis, has until Full Moon to replace all the food he stole from a bear or end up as its dinner. Enlisting the help of a group of cute forest foragers he introduces them to the fun of boosting grub from suburbia. Expect a satirical look at urban life with smirks coming through characterisation and a knowing script rather than any much-needed Tom & Jerry action. The Special Edition disc features a wealth of cast interviews, loads of kids’ games and a five-minute short starring Hammy, the hyperactive squirrel, coming to grips with the aerodynamics of a boomerang. Ouch. HHHHH Trivial Pursuit £19.99 | PG | 4 DECEMBER the original board game was a painful exercise in humiliation as it slowly dawned on you that you didn’t actually know anything. At all. The DVD edition is even less fun thanks to its insistence on only two teams of players. Questions, although boosted with video clips, rely heavily on multiple choices and timed rounds and so much of the excitement for the individual getting a question right is limited by group yelling. There are some benefits to this screen version, though, since no one can be blamed for deliberately skipping a square or losing a piece of plastic pie down the sofa. HHHHH DVD BOXSETS With Christmas fast approaching, DVD boxsets are coming thick and fast. Marvel Heroes combines the first two X-Men movies with the hollow final act, adds the ignoble Elektra, irritating Daredevil and barely acceptable Fantastic Four and suggests you pay £44.99 for the privilege. Infinitely dumber super heroics can be found in the Chuck Norris Collection where Missing in Action, Code of Silence and Lone Wolf McQuade all combine to provide the fastest and most ironic way to spend £24.99 yet devised by man while the curiously entitled The Best of Stephen King manages to include six movies over ten discs without touching on Carrie, Christine or Misery. John Wayne Volume 4, at £12.99 the cheapest set on offer, features two films, McLintock and Angel and the Badman, and two documentaries while The Peter Sellers Box Set 1 gives enthusiasts Hoffman, The Smallest Show On Earth and CarltonBrowne Of The F.O. and zero extras. American Pie 1-5 does include all the movies from the series, which, even at £34.99, is a mixed blessing with more toilet humour being available as Rik Mayall and Ade Edmondson splutter 6th form laughs in The Big Bottom Box. Whether they still have toilets in the 23rd Century is never made clear, but Star Trek: The Animated Series (£39.99) is a lost gem and features the voices of most of the original crew of the USS Enterprise including William Shatner (Kirk) and Leonard Nimoy (Spock). If you really want to play it safe come present giving time, plump for the fivedisc Martin Scorsese Collection (£45.99). Class.