Enchanting ‘Bride’ debuts on DVD
Published 9:00 pm Wednesday, February 1, 2006
Selected home-video releases this week:
“Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride” – Filmmaker Burton spins an enchanting animated tale for friends of the bride and ghoul alike. in a movie nominated for an Oscar in the animated feature film category.
Using characters made of rubber meticulously shot through stop-motion animation a frame at a time, Burton and company tell the story of a jittery 19th century groom (voiced by Johnny Depp) who is hauled off to the underworld as the betrothed to a dead, decaying bride (voiced by Burton’s own romantic companion, Helena Bonham Carter).
The DVD has a nice range of background features on the vocal talents, the intricacies of breathing life into inanimate objects and the design of the worlds of the living and dead. Burton’s musical comrade, Danny Elfman, offers insights on the styles he created for both worlds, while Burton discusses the inspiration of the story, drawn from an eastern European folk tale. $28.98. (Warner Bros.)
Last year’s other stop-motion tale, “Wallace &Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit,” hits home video on Tuesday; meantime, the 1985 Claymation stop-motion cartoon “The Adventures of Mark Twain,” with James Whitmore providing the voice of the rascally author, makes its DVD debut. $14.94. (Sony)
“The Legend of Zorro” – Audiences snored some “Z’s” of their own for the return of Antonio Banderas’ Zorro, a box-office dud that reunited the actor with “The Mask of Zorro” co-star Catherine Zeta-Jones and director Martin Campbell.
The comic action caper picks up 10 years after the first movie, with Zorro and his wife’s marriage on the rocks as the masked crusader for justice takes on a secret society intent on unleashing the 19th century equivalent of a weapon of mass destruction.
Campbell offers commentary on deleted scenes and joins his cinematographer for commentary on the full movie. The DVD also has making-of features offering background on stunts and visual effects. $28.95. (Sony)
“In Her Shoes” – Another box-office underachiever, director Curtis Hanson’s comic tale of sibling jealousy features excellent performances from Cameron Diaz, Toni Collette and Shirley MacLaine.
Diaz plays the pretty, perky, air-headed sister who’s always coasted along on her looks and the charity of sibling Collette, a workaholic attorney who feels handicapped by her plain-Jane appearance. After a falling out, the two learn to see the world from the other’s point of view with help from a grandma (MacLaine) they never knew they had.
The DVD is light on extras, but its three features include one animal activists will love: The novel on which the movie is based called for a purebred canine, but Hanson settled on a mutt rescued from a shelter, noting that some viewers emulate films by buying purebreds they see on screen; instead, Hanson hoped the cute little mutt would encourage audiences to adopt strays. $29.98. (20th Century Fox)
“Bubble” – Steven Soderbergh makes a small movie with big implications for Hollywood. Soderbergh’s low-budget drama with a cast of nonprofessional actors is a test case for simultaneous release on the big-screen, television and DVD, a possible future for Hollywood film distribution. “Bubble” debuted Friday in about 30 theaters and premiered on the HDNet TV channel that night, with the DVD following four days later.
It’s a taut little film following the relationship between two lonely co-workers at a doll factory. The DVD features an alternate ending that was wisely cut from the finished film, which concludes more poetically and provocatively without it. The disc also has excellent portraits on Soderbergh’s cast of unknowns. $29.98. (Magnolia)
“The Pink Panther Classic Cartoon Collection” – The cool cat that debuted in 1964 in the title credits of the Blake Edwards-Peter Sellers crime comedy “The Pink Panther” gets his own boxed set. As the debut nears for Steve Martin’s new take on Sellers’ bumbling detective, a five-disc collection gathers 124 of the cartoon shorts made between 1964 and 1980 for theatrical release and television, including the Academy Award-winning first installment, “The Pink Phink.”
The set also has the animated title sequences from five “Pink Panther” feature films, plus segments on the creation of the character, his popularity and the artists behind him.
Available as single discs are three volumes of “Pink Panther” shorts containing 27 cartoons each. Also arriving are single-disc versions of five feature films – “The Pink Panther,” “A Shot in the Dark,” “The Pink Panther Strikes Again,” “Revenge of the Pink Panther” and “Trail of the Pink Panther” – previously available in a boxed set, along with two making their DVD debuts, “Curse of the Pink Panther” and “Son of the Pink Panther.” DVD set, $69.96; single DVDs, $14.94 each. (Sony)
Some DVD issues may not have corresponding VHS releases. VHS prices vary widely.
