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New on DVD: Moore shines in bleak look at Alzheimer’s

The Columbian
Published: May 14, 2015, 5:00pm

Capsule reviews of the May 12 video releases, on DVD and Blu-ray, including special features:

“Still Alice” (PG-13, 101 minutes, Sony): Julianne Moore won an Academy Award for her role in this tearjerker about a renowned linguistics professor afflicted with a rare form of Alzheimer’s that’s both early onset and genetically passed. Alice is barely 50, and already the symptoms are impossible to ignore. She gets lost on a jog around Columbia University, where she works; she introduces and reintroduces herself to people in short order; and words, which have been Alice’s life, are becoming increasingly elusive. It’s tough to watch, and the inevitability of Alice’s fate doesn’t soften the blow. But for all its bleakness, the movie, with strong supporting performances from Kristen Stewart and Alec Baldwin, never loses its luster. Directors Wash Westmoreland and Richard Glatzer, who are married, decided to make the movie after Glatzer was diagnosed with ALS; he died in March. Contains mature thematic material, and brief language including a sexual reference. Extras include deleted scenes, a look at Glatzer and Westmoreland’s journey to create the film, an interview with composer Ilan Eshkeri on the soundtrack, and “Finding Alice,” in which the cast, filmmakers, Alzheimer’s experts and executive producer/ women’s health advocate Maria Shriver discuss the film’s depiction of Alice’s disease.

“Mortdecai” (R, 106 minutes, Lionsgate): This farce about a chichi and shady art dealer who helps the British government track down a stolen Goya is at times funny, but it’s also a half-baked heist movie with a protagonist who is only barely tolerable. Johnny Depp, man of many accents, plays the lead. Things are a bit strained between Mortdecai and his wife, Johanna (Gwyneth Paltrow), who has relegated him to a guest bedroom. So there’s no better time for Martland (Ewan McGregor), an MI5 agent who has been smitten with Johanna since college, to show up asking for Mortdecai’s assistance. Paltrow and McGregor have chemistry, and their interactions are far more vivacious than any of the scenes of real action. Contains strong language and sexual situations. Extras include an on-set featurette, “Stolen Moments,” and “The Art of Noise: Making Music for Mortdecai.”

“Blackhat” (R, 133 minutes, Universal): An unthrilling thriller about an imprisoned cyber-criminal who is let out of jail in order to track down the mastermind behind a pair of computer attacks — one on a Chinese nuclear power plant and the other on Chicago’s soybean futures market. In his quest to save the world, hacker Hathaway (played by Chris Hemsworth) hooks up with Lien (Wei Tang) along the way. Seemingly shot on a shaky smartphone, director Michael Mann’s blurry, jerkily edited digital video is hard to read, especially during action sequences. And first-time screenwriter Morgan Davis Foehl’s script is a stew of romance and action-movie leftovers, smothered under a gravy of incomprehensible techno-speak. Contains violence, brief sensuality and obscenity. Extras include an on-location look from around the world and featurettes “The Cyber Threat” and “Creating Reality.”

“Beloved Sisters” (unrated, 170 minutes, in German and French with subtitles, Music Box Films): Although writer-director Dominik Graf’s speculative historical drama assumes a love triangle between German poet and playwright Friedrich Schiller (played by hunky Florian Stetter), his wife Charlotte (Henriette Confurius) and Charlotte’s unhappily married older sister, Caroline (Hannah Herzsprung), the three protagonists never share a bed. And what little sex there is takes place only between Friedrich and Caroline, also a writer. To be fair, Graf exercises appropriate restraint throughout, concerning himself with such themes as class, the French Revolution and innovations in printing technology. “Beloved Sisters” is really about the dawn of modernity, with a subtext of female empowerment. Contains brief nudity and a few steamy scenes. No special features.

Also

“The Cobbler” (Adam Sandler comedy directed by Tom McCarthy also stars Cliff “Method Man” Smith and Steve Buscemi, with cameos by Dustin Hoffman and Ellen Barkin; Image Entertainment), “Tracers” (parkour thriller with Taylor Lautner and Marie Avgeropoulos, Lionsgate), “Two Men in Town” (with Forest Whitaker, Harvey Keitel and Brenda Blethyn), “Just Before I Go” (director Courteney Cox’s feature debut, with Seann William Scott and Olivia Thirlby), “These Final Hours” (end-of-world drama, Australia), “Make Way for Tomorrow” (1937, The Criterion Collection), “Batman Unlimited: Animal Instincts” (DC Comics original animated movie), “Jamaica Inn” (1939, early Hitchcock film, with Charles Laughton, Cohen Film Collection), “The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne” (1981, with Udo Kier, France), “Retaliation” (1969, Japan), “The Drownsman” and “Adventures of Pepper & Paula” (family film based on the life of Pistol Packin’ Paula).

Television Series

“Unforgettable: Season Three” (CBS), “The Midnight Special” (three-disc set of classic performances from the 1970s groundbreaking late-night live music show, StarVista/Time Life), “Texas Rangers: The Real Stories” (History), “The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show” (1948-1971, six-disc set; also, “Unforgettable Performances” separate single disc), “The Magic School Bus: Season Two” (1995, Scholastic), “Mister Ed: Sixth Season” (1965-66), “The Colbys: Complete Series” (1985-87) and “Digimon Tamers Volume 2.”

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