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Saturday, June 25, 2011

New on DVD - June 21, 2011 - The Adjustment Bureau and Unknown

Chris BarsantiChris Barsanti has been a Filmcritic reviewer since 2002. So there.Losing control of their lives: In The Adjustment Bureau, a rising politician discovers that supernatural beings are very interested in him not falling in love with a particular woman, while in Unknown, a traveling doctor finds out that everything he thought was true about his life might be false; these and a decent selection of other films from comedy (Cedar Rapids) to action (The Eagle) and classic noir (Kiss Me Deadly) coming this week to Blu-ray and DVD.

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In this adaptation of a Philip K. Dick story, Matt Damon plays a politician whose rise to power is nearly derailed by, first, an unexpected romance with Emily Blunt and, second, by some mysterious men in hats with nearly God-like abilities to warp and control reality. Many multi-dimensional chases ensue. Our critic called it "a quasi-theological chase flick that nearly transforms into a full-blown romance" and "a brisk and unexpectedly winning concoction that lies somewhere between Wings of Desire and a Christopher Nolan puzzler."

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Mysteries abound in rainy Berlin -- Liam Neeson stars as a traveling American who, after a bad car accident, discovers that his life has been wiped clean; somebody else is impersonating him and his wife no longer knows who he is. Does he get mad or get even? Given that it's Neeson, there's a lot of both. We were impressed both with the film's concept and with its ability to pull off its more out-there aspects, calling it "taut and tidy, a one-two punch we don't always get from today's thrill rides."

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In Robert Aldrich's bizarre 1955 noir, Ralph Meeker plays Mickey Spillane gumshoe Mike Hammer, who nearly gets killed by some thugs after picking up a scared beauty on a deserted road. So he tries to get to the bottom of things, and gets even in the meantime. The results ain't pretty. Our critic called this curiously apocalyptic film a "cubist noir of the atomic age." Now available in a sparkling new edition from the Criterion Collection.

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On The Office, Ed Helms plays a mild-mannered preppie paper salesman who never gets the girl. In this Miguel Arteta (Youth in Revolt) comedy about a raunchy convention at a small Iowa hotel, Helms plays a mild-mannered small-town insurance salesman who (sort of) gets the girl. Our writer termed the mix of performances here (John C. Reilly, Anne Heche, The Wire's Isiah Whitlock, Jr.) "just right," calling it the year's "first thoroughly enjoyable comedy."

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Carla Gugino is the Luxx of the title, a former porn star who quit the business after getting pregnant with a rock star who up and died on her. When Luxx finds out some secrets about her old flame, she is also tailed by a curious private detective (Timothy Olyphant) and has her film career discussed at length online by an overenthusiastic fan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt). Although little of it makes much sense, our critic liked this Pedro Almodovar-derived "candy-colored mixture of farce, melodrama, and a hint of noir."

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Set in 120 AD, this Kevin Macdonald (The Last King of Scotland) adventure has Channing Tatum as a dedicated Roman legionnaire who ventures into the unconquered northern wilderness of England to retrieve his legion's lost standard, with the help of a British slave (Jamie Bell). We thought there were some shaky moments throughout - "something akin to Rapa Nui with touches of Gladiator and Centurion thrown in for befuddled measure" -- but that ultimately it was "pure action and adventure."

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Did you see the first Diary of a Wimpy Kid? Do you know a child who made you take them? Are they going to make you see the sequel? Our critic advises not to expect anything too different from the first outing, as the sequel (in which our hero endures more problems with his big brother and classmates) is composed of "slight slapstick, comic cliches, and enough sullen after-school special messages to make even the most misguided child straighten up and fly right."


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