
Girls: The Complete First Season


Beasts of the Southern Wild
Girls: The Complete First Season
Did Sex and the City make you feel bad about your own life? Who’s got the money for a Louis Vuitton bag, anyway? Not Hannah, who shamelessly mooches free hotel food from her parents, falls for men who aren’t classically hot (and for gay ones, too), and who dances on her own to Robyn. She’s the Carrie – only because she’s the one with the most screen time, and because she’s a writer – of this NYC girl group. Clueless as to what she should do with her life, Hannah spends a lot of time having sex with the weirdly handsome Adam and worrying about everything. Lena Dunham plays her, and she’s also the head writer of the phenomenal Girls, one of the best series on TV right now – a real-world take on life as we know it, with adorable, sexy, funny and fearless anecdotes (next time you pee on someone, try not to think of Hannah’s "ew" face). HBO goes all out with the extras, but the coolest supplement comes to you in 144 characters or less: a journal of Dunham tweets.
Pitch Perfect
If Glee wasn’t singing the lowest
note of its four-season run, it might at least stand a chance against Pitch
Perfect. But with the zany musical-comedy about an all-girls collegiate a
cappella group, the TV show’s recent episodes are even more unbearable. Yup,
Pitch Perfect is so good that it makes Glee suck harder. If only Ryan
Murphy had a competitive riff-off in a giant pool, more screwball writing, some
aca-awesome vernacular, or Rebel Wilson – because no film/TV show should get
made without her in it. But even if Wilson, as Fat Amy, crushed every scene she
was in with one-liners and mermaid-dance improv, the cast – a myriad of types,
including a mousy Asian, a handsy lesbian and a sex fiend – practically made
this pitch perfect. The fun doesn’t stop there, either: Watch them get even
weirder during the Line-O-Rama extras.
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Just 6 years old and suddenly
living in the "Bathtub," Hushpuppy must defy her physical and mental
limitations and find the courage, strength and love to face the devastation
Hurricane Katrina has left on her ravaged bayou home. Part of that means caring
for her ailing father and standing up to the monsters that try to stop her from
rising up. First-time director Benh Zeitlin’s slice of reality-meets-mythology
poeticism is one of the most moving experiences of 2012, buoyed by newcomer
Quvenzhané Wallis’ Oscar-nominated performance – one of remarkable maturity,
fierce vigor and genuine moments of heartbreaking poignancy. She’s a little
powerhouse, and not just in the movie. That adorable audition tape during the
extras shows what a cute firecracker she is.
ParaNorman
How do you make a zombie movie
without brains? You don’t. So there’s that mushy mind stuff in ParaNorman,
but it’s not the only organ in this wonderfully animated kind-of-kid
adventure-comedy from Coraline creators. There’s heart, too. In this gooey
good time, Norman doesn’t just see dead people; he talks to them. Says hi to
the hippie ghost on the way to school. But he’s also the only person who knows
how to break a curse to cease a zombie attack on his town. And his grandma is
Elaine Stritch. Oh yeah. Who’s cool now? Norman is a fake-life "It Gets Better"
story, but he’s not the only thing progressive about ParaNorman: The jock
loves boys. Cast members voice their characters during a behind-the-scenes
special feature, which also includes a clip explaining how they brought
ParaNorman to, uh, life.
Sparkle
The remake of this Motown musical
about a flashy girl group will be remembered as one thing and one thing only:
Whitney Houston’s last film before her untimely death. Which is kind of a
shame. The great singer’s career has seen better days. Houston’s tough-love mom
role – serving as a cautionary tale to the rising star of her daughter, Sparkle
(Jordin Sparks in her screen debut) – has less range than the icon belting one
of her classic hits, though she earns those tears running down your face when
she puts her heart into "His Eye is on the Sparrow." But not that bittersweet
moment – or all the music, drama and infectious charisma of Sparks – can give
Sparkle the boost it needs to be more than just a very second-rate
Dreamgirls. Remembering the icon on "A Tribute to Whitney Houston," the
special features do more justice to her legendary status than the
conventionally middling movie itself.
The Dark Knight Rises
Like Heath Ledger in The Dark
Knight, the (probably not) final installment in Christopher Nolan’s dark and
political Batman trilogy got its standout star: Anne Hathaway as Catwoman.
Destroying any doubt that "Mia Thermopolis" couldn’t handle the part that
Michele Pfeiffer made iconic, Hathaway reinvented the sneaky jewelry thief as a
purr-fect version of the sexy comic-book legend. And she’s not the only one
rocking her role: Michael Caine is still a scene-stealer, Tom Hardy is relentlessly
nasty and Christian Bale’s Batman is our Obama. Plus, it’s got Joseph
Gordon-Levitt. Nolan’s astonishing "last" chapter feels conclusive enough to
close the saga, but who knows: Its epic ending hints that, maybe, The Dark
Knight will rise again. Over three hours of bonus features are included in the
combo’s standalone disc. They’re all worth a look, but no more than the nerd
guide to the Batmobile.