Digital Dynamite: The 30 Best DVDs of 2007

DVD: Extras
TV Show: Extras
Subtitle: The Complete Second Season
Network: BBC
Network: HBO
Cast: Ricky Gervais, Ashley Jensen, Stephen Merchant
Website: http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/extras/
MPAA rating: N/A
Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F0Gd7BsAyvY
Distributor: HBO
US Release Date: 2007-07-10
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/e/extras.jpg

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List number: 20

Extras: The Complete Second Season

HBO Home Video

If the first season of Extras was about the angst of middle aged stasis then the second, which begins at the pilot taping for Andy Millman’s dreadful workplace sitcom When the Whistle Blows, focuses on the problems of dealing with a promotion one might not be equipped to handle. Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant restructured the series around the angst of the creative act with much funnier and cohesive results. They struggled with Andy in trying to understand their love of comedy and its relation to themselves. The DVD lightens the caustic undertones of the series with backstage footage showing that the creators aren’t perpetually neurotic about their sense of humor. Plus it includes an interview with David Bowie that proves he is a very funny man. Michael Buening

Extras

Director: Judd Apatow
Film: Knocked Up
Studio: Universal Pictures
Cast: Katherine Heigl, Seth Rogen, Paul Rudd, Leslie Mann, Jay Baruchel
Website: http://www.knockedupmovie.com/
MPAA rating: R
First date: 2007
Distributor: Universal
US Release Date: 2007-06-01 (General release)
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/k/knocked-up-2007-poster.jpg

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List number: 19

Knocked Up: Unrated and Extended Edition

Universal

Even in this new, expanded form Knocked Up is a Tootsie for our times, a smart, subversive comedy that meshes different forms of wit to create a singular source of hilarity. It’s a combination of the practical and the profane, the character driven and the crazy. It has more heart than any standard RomCom ridiculousness and goes places your normal motion picture matchmaking would never attempt. Fleshing out his constantly coupling foursome with an amazing array of supporting and cameo casting choices, Apatow never lets his movie meander. It stays constantly focused, drawing even the most oddball remarks and riffs into a devastating study of what it takes to be human. Unlike other comedies of its type, Knocked Up is out to expand and dimensionalize its personas, careful to give even the most obscure references a concrete connection to reality. Bill Gibron

Knocked Up

Director: Sergio Leone
DVD: The Sergio Leone Anthology
Studio: MGM
Cast: Clint Eastwood, Eli Wallach, Lee Van Cleef, Rod Steiger, James Coburn
MPAA rating: N/A
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/s/sergio-leone.jpg

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List number: 18

The Sergio Leone Anthology

MGM

He was born into the belly of Italian show business. By the time he was a teenager, he was very familiar with the Italian film biz. While helping out on the peplum epic The Last Days of Pompeii, he suddenly found himself behind the lens, and it would be a place he’d remain for the rest of his career. He only made nine credited films, but for fans of the spaghetti Western, four would remain major motion picture milestones. But there was much more to Sergio Leone than squinting antiheroes and one-horse towns draped in quick-draw bloodshed, as illustrated all throughout this sensational box set. It’s the perfect place to begin your journey into the bleak bombastic world of the director, and all the cinematic splendor that comes with it. Bill Gibron

The Sergio Leone Anthology

Director: Fred Dekker
Film: The Monster Squad
Studio: Tristar Pictures
Cast: Brent Chalem, Leonardo Cimino, Michael Faustino, Lisa Fuller, Andre Gower, Jack Gwillam, Jason Hervey, Robby Kiger
MPAA rating: N/A
First date: 1987
US Release Date: 1987-08-14 (General release)
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/m/monster-squad.jpg

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List number: 17

Monster Squad: 2 Disc 20th Anniversary Collection

Lionsgate

It’s one of the oddest tales in revisionist cinema — a slightly surreal late ’80s horror comedy that suddenly became a glorified geek stepping stone for an entire generation of cinephiles in training. Naturally, this meant any future DVD release had to meet the messageboard masses exacting standards. After many battles over copyright and bonus features, this 20th anniversary release did the terror tale proud. It’s overloaded with extras, and provides the kind of critical clarification that helps illustrate the film’s endearing qualities. Even better, it allowed fans a chance to rest, if only to ratchet up their obsession on some other lost in limbo title. Bill Gibron

The Monster Squad

Director: Guillermo del Toro
Film: Pan’s Labyrinth (El Laberinto del Fauno)
Studio: Picturehouse
Cast: Ivana Baquero, Doug Jones, Sergi López, Ariadna Gil, Maribel Verdú, Álex Angulo, Roger Casamajor, Sebastián Haro
Website: http://www.panslabyrinth.com/
MPAA rating: R
Trailer: http://www.ifilm.com/video/2769804
First date: 2006
Distributor: Optimum Releasing
US Release Date: 2006-12-29 (Limited release)
UK Release Date: 2006-11-24 (Limited release)
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/p/pans-labyrinth-poster.jpg

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List number: 16

Pan’s Labyrinth – Two Disc Special Edition

New Line Home Video

Guillermo Del Toro’s harrowing adult fairytale set in Spain under Franco’s fascist rule casts as much of a spell on DVD as it did on the big screen. Del Toro uses a combination of old-fashioned movie trickery (puppetry, costumes) and CGI compositions to create an earthy fantasy in which Ofelia (Ivana Baquero) escapes her grim reality by imagining another world of fauns and fairies, one in which she might be a princess. Del Toro uses his visual artistry not just on the fantasy elements but on the dark-hued forests in which the war-story unfolds. And the story is simplicity at its best: good and evil exist in all realms, imagined or not. Peter Swanson

Pan’s Labyrinth (El Laberinto del Fauno)

Display Artist: Fax Bahr, George Hickenlooper
Director: Fax Bahr
Director: George Hickenlooper
Film: Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse
Studio: American Zoetrope
Cast: Eleanor Coppola, Francis Ford Coppola, Charlie Sheen, Marlon Brando, Laurence Fishburne, Dennis Hopper, Albert Hall, Frederic Forrest, Sam Bottoms, Robert Duvall, George Lucas
MPAA rating: R
First date: 2007
Length: 96 minutes
Price: $19.99
Distributor: Paramount
UK Release Date: Available as import
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/h/heartsdarkness-filmmakers.jpg

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List number: 15

Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse

Paramount Home Video

There were rumors for years that the strangely long delayed DVD release of this thoughtful, eye-opening 1991 documentary about Coppola’s self-immolation during the seemingly cursed making of Apocalypse Now was due to it possibly being included in a future DVD package of Coppola’s pretentious war epic (maybe a new six-hour edit, Apocalypse Now Redux Redux). Such was not the case but at least we finally have George Hickenlooper and Fax Bahr’s film to present to future generations of filmmakers who may wish to avoid similarly self-destructive hubris in their own work. Chris BarsantiHearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse

Director: John Ford
DVD: Ford at Fox: The Collection
Studio: Fox
Cast: Margaret Mann, James Hall, Henry Fonda
MPAA rating: N/A
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/f/ford-at-fox.jpg

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List number: 14

Ford at Fox: The Collection

Fox

It’s an absolutely astounding overview — one man, one studio, 24 career defining films. John Ford remains the very epitome of American movie making. Including such classics as My Darling Clementine, How Green Was My Valley, The Grapes of Wrath, and Young Mr. Lincoln, this must-own box set cements Ford’s status as one of the greatest directors of all time (especially when you consider the amazing masterpieces — Stagecoach, The Searchers — not included). While the price may seem a bit steep, it’s worth every penny. Like owning a cornerstone of cinematic history, there’s a lifetime of pleasures to be pulled from this dense DVD collection. Bill Gibron

Ford at Fox: The Collection

Director: Peter Watkins
Film: The Cinema of Peter Watkins
Subtitle: 5-Disc Box Set
MPAA rating: Unrated
First date: 2007
Distributor: New Yorker Video
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/p/peterwatkins.jpg

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List number: 13

The Cinema of Peter Watkins

New Yorker Video

A perennial winner of the most underappreciated director award, Peter Watkins gets the retrospective he deserves with New Yorker Video’s superb collection of his work leading up to 1974’s Edvard Munch. From his “amateur shorts” to his dramatic-documentaries addressing historical and alarmist alternative reality scenarios it tracks the heady development of Watkin’s filmmaking skills, political ideas, and aesthetic theories during his formative years. Watkins is a provocateur and there is a grand tension between the stubborn individualism and humanistic communalism in his work that can be maddening, heartrending, and inspiring. He demands the active participation of the viewer in a world marked by increasing consumerist complacency. The Cinema of Peter Watkins is waiting for a new generation of filmmakers to take notice. Michael Buening

The Cinema of Peter Watkins

Director: Edgar Wright
Film: Hot Fuzz
Studio: Rogue Pictures
Cast: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Jim Broadbent, Paddy Considine, Steve Coogan, Timothy Dalton, Martin Freeman, Paul Freeman, Bill Nighy
Website: http://www.hotfuzz.com/
MPAA rating: R
Trailer: http://www.movieweb.com/movies/film/33/3933/video.php
First date: 2007
US Release Date: 2007-04-20 (Limited release)
UK Release Date: 2007-02-17 (General release)
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/h/hot-fuzz-poster2.jpg

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List number: 12

Hot Fuzz: 3 Disc Collector’s Edition

Universal

Stop with all the spoof talk, already. The latest masterpiece from Brit wits Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg, the spectacularly anarchic action buddy cop caper Hot Fuzz is more than just a simple-minded lampoon. Such a categorization limits what the amazing movie manages to achieve, bringing it down to a level of creative crassness that the duo manage to transcend time and time again. The truth is, Wright and Pegg have much larger funny business fish to fry than merely taking on the Bruckheimer/Bay gonzo gunplay dynamic — and it’s an intention illustrated over and over again by this stunning three disc presentation. There’s so much here, one could get lost in it. Bill Gibron

Hot Fuzz

Director: Greg Mottola
Film: Superbad
Studio: Sony
Cast: Jonah Hill, Michael Cera, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Bill Hader, Seth Rogen
Website: http://www.sonypictures.com/movies/superbad/
MPAA rating: R
First date: 2007
US Release Date: 2007-08-17 (General release)
Image: http://images.popmatters.com/film_art/a/august-superbad.jpg

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List number: 11

Superbad

Sony

An argument at a New Year’s Day party over Superbad ended with the compromise that, fine, the movie was funny but, admit it, will get less funny each time you see it. With the release of the DVD, this theory proves unable to hold water and the reasons aren’t hard to find. Michael Cera’s note-perfect performance as half of a the teenage duo determined to demolish the mysteries of GIRLS before splitting up for college, grows to awe-inspiring upon closer inspections; in a movie that seemed to be defined by its willingness to heap the shocking on top of the obscene, whether he’s facing down a roomful of stubborn cokeheads or hurrying away down a high school hallway, his laughs never feel cheap. He balances Jonah Hill’s cruder acting and provides Superbad’s center. The film’s other duo, Seth Rogen and Bill Hader as police officers who seem determined to remain stuck in high school, gains the most laughs, cheap or otherwise, and keep things from bogging down. The film’s closest relative is the day-in-the-life model of Richard Linklater’s Dazed and Confused, though it never aspires to that film’s patient artistry. Superbad, instead, stakes its claim on being loud, crude, and obsessed with dicks; the noisy workings of a teenage boy’s mind transposed to film. And though certain bits of it will age worse with time and the inevitable Judd Apatow-backlash, the more thoughtful moments that co-exist with the vulgar, and the film’s affinity for the banter of teenagers, will ensure thatSuperbad will continue to ring true for quite a while. Jon Langmead

Superbad