Classic Sellers film shines on Blu-ray

Published: Wednesday, June 17, 2009 6:02 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

A classic gets the Blu-ray treatment and a forgotten '50s melodrama makes its DVD debut, leading off these new-to-home-video movies.

"Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb" (Columbia/Blu-ray, 1964, b/w, $38.96). One of the greatest movies ever made gets a shiny, new Blu-ray brush-up, and it looks fabulous, proving that hi-def can also add sheen to black-and-white cinematography.

If you've never seen this one, you're in for a treat. Oscar-nominated Peter Sellers heads the fabulous cast with three roles in a very dark satirical thriller that has lost none of its paranoia bite in 45 years.

The plot has a crazy general (Sterling Hayden) sending a bomber squadron (with Slim Pickens and James Earl Jones onboard) to attack the Soviet Union, while another equally cockeyed general (George C. Scott) encourages the president to seize the moment and launch an all-out attack. Sellers plays a British captain trying to stop the madness, the ineffectual U.S. president and the German former-Nazi scientist of the title.

Hilarious and chilling.

Story continues below

Extras: widescreen, featurettes (all from the 40th anniversary special edition), new picture-in-picture interviews (with five experts on the Cold War) about what the film got right, new pop-up trivia track; new 32-page booklet (an expansion of the previous edition's booklet)

"The Strange One" (Columbia, 1957, b/w, $19.94). Ben Gazarra, re-creating his Broadway role, made his film debut in this strange movie as a manipulative cadet in a Southern military academy who gets his comeuppance in an unexpected way. George Peppard, also making his film debut, plays a fellow cadet. It's a bit stagy in places with a couple of performances that are too cartoony, but Gazarra is great, and the film makes for an interesting acting exercise.

Extras: widescreen, new interview with Gazzara

"Jesse Stone: Thin Ice" (Sony, 2009, $24.96). Tom Selleck shines in another excellent CBS TV movie as disgraced big-city homicide detective Jesse Stone, now serving as a small-town police chief in Massachusetts. In this episode, he moonlights on a Boston stakeout that goes awry, then has to figure out why. In a parallel plot, Camryn Manheim guests as a mother who believes her long-kidnapped son is alive and in Stone's jurisdiction.

Extras: widescreen

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Sony Home Entertainment

Hilary Duff and Steve Coogan in "What Goes Up."

previousnext

Latest comments

It is true, Food is not the Enemy. However, our thinking, concepts, values...

Letters: No constitutional right

I have a job now that provides me and my family with good insurance. However...

BYU's old uniforms?

Bring back the "bib" uniforms. They only used them one year so they should...

Blah, blah, yada, yada, yawn. Tis the season of forgetfulness. Forgetting...

Ryan, Why do you care what people do of their own free will?

Maybe they should close Angels Landing trail. Using the same logic as closing...

Sure the Cougs may win (and I hope they do), but this will be yet another...

Jazz involved in 4-team race

Last take on Iverson: It is beyond ridiculous the criticism from the posts...

Budget cuts won't help in 2011

Why do so many people cry,"raise the taxes on the rich!" (you define rich.)...

Letters: No constitutional right

If our nation can afford to pay corporate execs hundreds of millions per year...

Advertisements