Sony Pictures Home Entertainment have announced that Insidious: Chapter 2 will be released on DVD and in a DVD/Blu-ray combo pack on December 24.
Tag: Horror
Funko have announced that they will release a series of their POP! Vinyl Figures based on characters from different horror movies — including Scream, Child’s Play, and Army Of Darkness — on November 12.
NECA have announced that they will release a series of 2-inch tall wire-hugging figures, which they’re calling Scalers, starting in January.
Gentle Giant have announced that they’ll release a statue of Michonne from The Walking Dead this fall.
Funko have announced that they will release 7-inch tall versions of their Walking Dead Mystery Mini Vinyl Figures on October 10.
The company previously released 2.5-inch tall versions of these figures in closed boxes this past June.
Freddy and Jason are teaming up again, but no, not in another movie.
NECA have announced that they’ll release a pair of retro-style action figures for Freddy Krueger from the Nightmare On Elm Street movies and Jason Voorhees from the Friday The 13th flicks.
Both the Freddy and Jason figures will be 8-inches tall, and will have clothing that’s actually made of fabric, just like similar toys were back in the 1970s.
Scream Factory have announced that the undead British comedy Cockneys Vs. Zombies will be released on DVD and Blu-ray on September 3.
Written by James Moran (Torchwood) and directed by Matthias Hoene (Beyond The Rave), Cockneys Vs. Zombies — which has a bunch of retirees joining with some damn kids to save their homes from both developers and the living-impaired — stars Michelle Ryan (Bionic Woman), Honor Blackman (Goldfinger), and Alan Ford (Snatch).
Scream Factory have announced that they will release The Vincent Price Collection — which presents six of the horror icons movies on Blu-ray for the first time — on October 22.
The four-disc set will include 1960’s The Fall Of The House Of Usher, 1961’s The Pit And The Pendulum, 1963’s The Haunted Palace, 1964’s The Masque Of Red Death, 1968’s Witchfinder General, and 1971’s The Abominable Dr. Phibes.
For big fans of the show, deciding whether to buy The Walking Dead: The Complete Third Season is a no-brainer (no pun intended; or was it?). But if you haven’t seen it, and you’re not much for macho bravado influencing people’s decisions, well…
Available on DVD, Blu-ray, and in a special version of the Blu-ray that comes with a fish tank full of zombie heads, The Walking Dead: The Complete Third Season augments its sixteen episodes with deleted scenes, commentaries on select episodes, and making-of featurettes.
For avid viewers of this zombie drama, the eight behind-the-scenes minidocs show how they make the show, while the five commentaries provide some insightful tidbits. But the extras that really puts the “special” in “special feature” are the half-dozen deleted scenes. Granted, they don’t change anything greatly, and in some cases you’ll probably be glad they were cut, but it’s kind of like getting a little more of that fix.
If you haven’t seen the episodes, however, this season might be problematic. Or right up your alley. Either way, though, it was never boring.
At the beginning of the season, our heroes take us residence in a prison, which provides them with security from the zombie horde. Unfortunately, it’s also right near a walled-in town that’s run by a man called The Governor. As a result, much of the season is spent with these two outposts dealing with each other.
And therein lies the problem. Without spoiling too much, suffice it to say that much of the drama this season comes about because certain people on both sides don’t act reasonably or responsibly and instead let ego, especially macho bravado, dictate their decisions.
Some of which doesn’t make a damn bit of sense. Now, I can’t cite one without ruining things, but imagine if you lived in that world and came across a truck full of food but, instead of taking it, you destroyed it because bringing it home would make someone else in your group look good. Again, that’s not something that happened, but something along those lines did, and, watching it unfold, it was hard not to let such stupidity slide.
The irony, of course, is that if everyone acted reasonably and rationally, the season would’ve only been one episode long, and it would’ve been a dull one. But as someone who prides himself on trying (and often failing) to be practical and without macho ego, it did make this season kind of frustrating to watch.
What did help redeem things was the introduction of Michonne, a favorite from the comics who’s played perfectly by Danai Gurira. Granted, you probably wouldn’t want to be stuck in a prison or walled-in town with her, but watching her slice up zombies, while also dealing with the other stuff in a calm and intelligent though sometimes skeptical manner, more than made up for any frustration born of stupid people making stupid decisions.
SCORE: 8.0
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