<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Wednesday,  April 24 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Life / Entertainment

New on DVD: Reeves shows he can still tussle as ‘John Wick’

The Columbian
Published: February 5, 2015, 4:00pm

Capsule reviews of this week’s video releases, on DVD and Blu-ray, including special features:

• “John Wick” (R, 96 minutes, Lionsgate): Keanu Reeves can still tussle with the best of them, and he needs to in the title role of this action flick in overdrive. The movie is what you’d expect from two stunt-choreographers-turned-directors (David Leitch and Chad Stahelski), with the addition of a few fun flourishes. As the movie begins, Wick’s wife has just died after an illness. He is despondent, and the cinematography is cold and gray. But things warm up when Wick receives an adorable beagle puppy, a posthumous gift from Wick’s beloved, and the film take a heart-melting turn. After a fateful encounter at a gas station, Russian hooligans break into Wick’s house to steal his 1969 Mustang, mercilessly beating him as well as the pup. What these young thugs don’t realize is that Wick is a retired hit man with a frightening reputation. The killing machine’s former employer, Russian mafioso Viggo Tarasov (Michael Nyqvist), happens to be the father of the hooligans’ ringleader (Alfie Allen from “Game of Thrones,” again playing the idiot son). Naturally, Wick plans to take the kid out, while Viggo tries to stop the inevitable retaliation. Contains strong language, drug use and bloody violence throughout. Extras include featurettes “Don’t (Mess) With John Wick,” “Calling in the Cavalry,” “Destiny of a Collective,” “Assassin’s Code,” “Red Circle” and “NYC Noir.” Also, on Blu-ray: commentary with Stahelski and Leitch.

• “Dear White People” (R, 100 minutes, Lionsgate): Sam (Tessa Thompson), a hip film student, hosts a radio show called “Dear White People,” during which she recounts, with even-toned sarcasm, the ways she and her fellow students of color are routinely pigeonholed, stigmatized and condescended to. “Satire is the weapon of reason,” one character tells another in the movie, which exemplifies that sentiment with a potent combination of playfulness and pointed cultural critique. This alternately thoughtful and hilarious comedy of campus manners is the bracingly candid brainchild of first-time filmmaker Justin Simien, who has created that rarity in American society: a movie that simultaneously sends up the national “conversation about race” while advancing the conversation itself. Simien maintains a scrupulously light tone and deft touch throughout “Dear White People,” which takes place on the campus of a fictional Ivy League college called Winchester. There, African-American students — representatives of the “talented 10” percent — grapple with identity, expectations and ambition at a primarily white institution that congratulates itself for its liberalism. Contains profanity, sexuality and drug use. Extras include a making-of featurette; “Get Your Life” extended music video by Caught a Ghost; deleted scenes; outtakes; “Racism Insurance” skits; “The More You Know About Black People” (an online PSA series); “DVRS App: Black Friends When You Need Them” and a “Leaked: Banned Winchester U Diversity” featurette. Also, on Blu-ray: commentary with Simien and a separate commentary with Simien, Thompson and co-stars Tyler James Williams, Teyonah Parris and Brandon Bell.

• “Dracula Untold” (PG-13, 92 minutes, Universal): For a tantalizing half hour or so, it actually seemed like the underlying idea of “Dracula Untold” — an origin story drawing its DNA from superhero flicks, not monster movies — might go somewhere. Unfortunately, in its search for fresh blood to rejuvenate the desiccated corpse of Bram Stoker’s hero, long since drained of narrative power, it goes places it shouldn’t. The film’s problems aren’t limited to liberal cadging from comic books. In fact, that’s precisely what’s best about the film, which occasionally boasts gorgeous visuals. Contains violence, scary sequences and brief sensuality. Extras: “Day in the Life — Luke Evans”, personal moments with the film’s star on set; “Dracula Retold” production featurette; “Slaying 1000,” behind-the-scenes look at the making of Vlad’s epic battle against an army of thousands; commentary with director Gary Shore and production designer Francois Audouy. Blu-ray adds alternate opening; deleted scenes; “The Land of Dracula” interactive map that explores Dracula’s mysterious world, including Castle Dracula, Cozia Monastery, Broken Tooth Mountain and Borga Pass; “Luke Evans — Creating a Legend.”

• “The Best of Me” (PG-13, 117 minutes, Fox): Novelist-turned-producer Nicholas Sparks (“The Notebook,” “A Walk to Remember”), the reigning king of thwarted romance and tearful endings, resurrects the formula again with the usual trappings: a kissing scene in the pouring rain, a disapproving father, obstacles that lead to the wrong pairing. In this case, the story follows high school sweethearts who lose touch. Amanda (Michelle Monaghan) and Dawson (James Marsden) are reunited after a mutual friend dies, and as soon as Amanda glimpses Dawson for the first time in 21 years, two things are clear: She’s very angry with him, and they’re totally going to get together. What Dawson did to make Amanda so angry is the mystery that drives the movie. Extras include commentary by director Michael Hoffman, a “Tears of Joy” new storyline and alternate ending and a Lady Antebellum music video of “I Did.” Also, on Blu-ray: Sparks interviews and deleted scenes.

Also:

“Hector and the Search for Happiness” (a Simon Pegg road movie, with Rosamund Pike, Toni Collette, Christopher Plummer and Stellan Skarsgard, Fox), “Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic” (documentary on the comedian’s culture-defining influence), “Starred Up” (before “Unbroken,” Jack O’Connell led this 2013 Scottish prison drama that won numerous British film awards), “Coffee Town” (with Glenn Howerton and Josh Groban), “Sex(Ed) the Movie” (direct-to-video documentary on the evolution of sex education), “Every Man for Himself” (1980, by Jean-Luc Godard, The Criterion Collection), “Boys” (Dutch-made family film about a gay romance), “Tricked” (documentary on sex-trafficking in the United States), “Zombie Killers: Elephant’s Graveyard” (with Billy Zane and Mischa Barton), “Exists” (horror with a Bigfoot plot), “The Demon’s Rook,” “The Reagans: The Legacy Endures” (documentary) and “ABCs of Death 2.”

Television series:

“The Wonder Years: The Complete Second Season,” “Anzac Girls” (Australian period drama about World War I nurses in Turkey, originally aired in August, Acorn) and “The Saint, Set 2” (three 1980s British TV mystery movies featuring Simon Dutton as Simon Templar, Acorn).

Loading...