How to Spend $20

By Eric Hughes

July 22, 2008

Buy the Spaced DVD or I'll come to your house and force you to watch fat-suit comedies.

New at BOP:
Share & Save
Digg Button  
Print this column
Welcome to How to Spend $20, BOP's look at the latest DVDs to hit stores nationwide. This week: Adult Swim creates some waves with a Star Wars parody, Jesse Metcalfe sets aside the housewives for new body art and Shaun of the Dead's star goes apartment hunting.

For people who can tolerate animation even worse-looking than South Park: Robot Chicken: Star Wars

Robot Chicken's Emmy-nominated special, Robot Chicken: Star Wars, finally hits stores today after airing on Adult Swim just over a year ago. Though Family Guy's homage to Star Wars (titled Blue Harvest) is perhaps better known than this special, Robot Chicken actually beat the pop culture behemoth to air by about three months. In the special, Seth Green and his team of stop-motion animators unload a series of off-beat sci-fi sketches, all relating in some way to Star Wars. Sketches include Darth Vader making a collect call, Obi-Wan having some lightsaber problems and George W. Bush discovering his Jedi powers. (Man, can you imagine what kind of world we'd be living in if this wasn't fiction?)

At a list price of $14.98, however, this is probably the most you'll ever pay for 22 minutes worth of content (minus the extras, of course). Seriously, 15 bucks for a single episode? That's like dropping more than $200 for the 14-episode fourth season of The Office when it's released in two short months. I love you Michael Scott, but not that much. Sheesh.

Disc includes: Video commentary, animation meeting, on-air bumps, trailers, behind the scenes, alternate audio, time lapse, photo gallery, panel presentations, episode commentary.




Advertisement



For people who need to get Kevin Spacey's role in Fred Claus out of their systems: 21 (Deluxe Edition)

Partially based on Ben Mezrich's 2003 bestselling book, Bringing Down the House, 21 stars Jim Sturgess as one of a group of real MIT hotshots who literally took Vegas by storm, using code skills, hand signals and other nifty tricks to take down millions at the blackjack table. Led by professor Micky Rosa (Kevin Spacey), the five students – including the blue eyed (or is it brown eyed?) Kate Bosworth – try to not let greed get the best of them, all while doing their best to stay off the radar of casino security officer, Cole Williams (Laurence Fishburne).

Dissed by critics but more or less enjoyed by casual moviegoers, 21 turned out to be a lucrative little project over at Columbia, collecting just over $80 million domestically – including two straight weekends at number one – against a $35 million budget.

Disc includes: Filmmaker commentary, digital copy of the film, making-of featurette, 21: The Advantage Player featurette, Money Plays: A Tour of the Good Life featurette.


Continued:       1       2

     


 
 

Need to contact us? E-mail a Box Office Prophet.
Friday, November 1, 2024
© 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc.