DVD Tuesday: Planet of the Ape
Movie geeks love Tuesdays, and here's why: It's DVD Day! With each new Tuesday comes the promise of varying DVD goodness, so I thought it might be fun to do a reminder-piece each week, if only to help my fellow disc junkies to keep their shopping lists in order. And it looks like I picked a pretty good week to get started, because beginning today, Peter Jackson's "King Kong" can be yours!
Scoring an impressive 84% on the Tomatometer and tallying nearly $218 million at the domestic box office, "King Kong" was a huge treat for tons of moviegoers. True, Universal was betting on a relatively higher box office showing, but it's tough to knock a flick that crossed the $210 million mark. And now that the DVDs are out, the profit margin is about to skyrocket. "Kong" hits DVD in your choice of a single-disc serving or a two-platter SE ... but be warned: Universal is well known for "double (& triple) dipping, and the eventual arrival of a multi-disc Mega-Swanky Kongdition is almost a foregone conclusion. (The two-discer, which is what I'll be purchasing in about two hours, comes with three hours worth of post-production diaries and various Peter Jackson-y treats.)
And for those who still need a copy of the original "King Kong" on DVD, WB sliced their phenomenal special edition down to a bare-bones single-disc release, which also hits stores today.
Most of the majors are (wisely) opting to stay out of the monkey's way this Tuesday, but Sony's not afraid. Today you can also purchase your "Memoirs of a Geisha" DVD (35% Tomatometer, $57m box office), which comes with a pair of audio commentaries, 11 featurettes, and some recipes. (Yep, I said recipes!)
Also hitting the shelves today is the urban drama "Get Rich or Die Tryin'," which scored a measly 18% on the Tomatometer and grossed about $31 million at the box office, the psycho-thriller "Stay" (26% T-meter, $3.3m), and the sci-fi turkey "A Sound of Thunder," which hit a whopping 7% on the Tomatometer on its way to a $1.7 million box office run. (This one's good for fans of bad cinema. Rent it and see!)
Fans of the catalog titles will want to check out an all new "Godzilla" Monster Edition (or maybe not), Adam Goldberg's directorial debut "I Love Your Work," the "Sliver" special edition that nobody asked for, and (finally!) the DVD debut of some Peanuts classics: "A Boy Named Charlie Brown" and "Snoopy Come Home" both arrive on DVD today, and I know a few Gen-Xers who're pretty darn psyched about it. (Bring on "Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown" and "Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (and Don't Come Back!") already!)
Last but in no way least is a mega-massive-huge "Planet of the Apes" collection from Fox. This 14-disc behemoth includes the following movies: "Planet of the Apes" (1968), "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" (1970), "Escape from the Planet of the Apes" (1971), "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes" (1972), "Battle for the Planet of the Apes" (1973), Tim Burton's 2001 remake of the original, all 14 episodes of the 1974 spinoff series (epsiodes of which were, at one point, wedged into a pair of TV movies called "Back to the Planet of the Apes" and "Farewell to the Planet of the Apes," but that's some mega-geeky trivia there, so let's move on), all 13 episodes of the 1975 animated spinoff "Return to the Planet of the Apes," the 1998 feature-length documentary "Behind the Planet of the Apes," and more extra Apes goodies than you can shake a banana at. PLUS it comes in this box:

Whew, that's a lot of apes for one Tuesday. The secret words for next Tuesday are "Narnia" and "Brokeback."
Scoring an impressive 84% on the Tomatometer and tallying nearly $218 million at the domestic box office, "King Kong" was a huge treat for tons of moviegoers. True, Universal was betting on a relatively higher box office showing, but it's tough to knock a flick that crossed the $210 million mark. And now that the DVDs are out, the profit margin is about to skyrocket. "Kong" hits DVD in your choice of a single-disc serving or a two-platter SE ... but be warned: Universal is well known for "double (& triple) dipping, and the eventual arrival of a multi-disc Mega-Swanky Kongdition is almost a foregone conclusion. (The two-discer, which is what I'll be purchasing in about two hours, comes with three hours worth of post-production diaries and various Peter Jackson-y treats.)
And for those who still need a copy of the original "King Kong" on DVD, WB sliced their phenomenal special edition down to a bare-bones single-disc release, which also hits stores today.
Most of the majors are (wisely) opting to stay out of the monkey's way this Tuesday, but Sony's not afraid. Today you can also purchase your "Memoirs of a Geisha" DVD (35% Tomatometer, $57m box office), which comes with a pair of audio commentaries, 11 featurettes, and some recipes. (Yep, I said recipes!)
Also hitting the shelves today is the urban drama "Get Rich or Die Tryin'," which scored a measly 18% on the Tomatometer and grossed about $31 million at the box office, the psycho-thriller "Stay" (26% T-meter, $3.3m), and the sci-fi turkey "A Sound of Thunder," which hit a whopping 7% on the Tomatometer on its way to a $1.7 million box office run. (This one's good for fans of bad cinema. Rent it and see!)
Fans of the catalog titles will want to check out an all new "Godzilla" Monster Edition (or maybe not), Adam Goldberg's directorial debut "I Love Your Work," the "Sliver" special edition that nobody asked for, and (finally!) the DVD debut of some Peanuts classics: "A Boy Named Charlie Brown" and "Snoopy Come Home" both arrive on DVD today, and I know a few Gen-Xers who're pretty darn psyched about it. (Bring on "Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown" and "Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (and Don't Come Back!") already!)
Last but in no way least is a mega-massive-huge "Planet of the Apes" collection from Fox. This 14-disc behemoth includes the following movies: "Planet of the Apes" (1968), "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" (1970), "Escape from the Planet of the Apes" (1971), "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes" (1972), "Battle for the Planet of the Apes" (1973), Tim Burton's 2001 remake of the original, all 14 episodes of the 1974 spinoff series (epsiodes of which were, at one point, wedged into a pair of TV movies called "Back to the Planet of the Apes" and "Farewell to the Planet of the Apes," but that's some mega-geeky trivia there, so let's move on), all 13 episodes of the 1975 animated spinoff "Return to the Planet of the Apes," the 1998 feature-length documentary "Behind the Planet of the Apes," and more extra Apes goodies than you can shake a banana at. PLUS it comes in this box:

Whew, that's a lot of apes for one Tuesday. The secret words for next Tuesday are "Narnia" and "Brokeback."
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dracus writes: on Mar 28 2006 09:43 AM [b]MORE KONG COMING LATER THIS YEAR.[/b] If you’re a fan of King Kong, you would have noticed that the beach scene in the previews wasn't in the movies and you would have also realised that a lot of back story had to be missing in the theatrical version. Despite it's length, I always figured that an extended version would be released in an elaborate 3-4 disc set much the way LOTR's was. On the Kong is King Site today, Jackson pretty well confirmed in an interview that will be the case with King Kong later this year. So, if you’re a Kong and Jackson fan like I am, we have something to look forward. You can read the interview at: (Reply to this) |
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nogard64 writes: on Mar 28 2006 10:12 AM [b]wow[/b] yeah good day for DVDs I'd like to get just about all those. Even Godzilla, and all those planet of the apes episode? Man days like these you wish you hit the lottery! haha (Reply to this) |
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lavatory love machine writes: on Mar 28 2006 11:48 AM the thing is that the extended cut will be anunced in a couple of weeks when most of the fans of the film have purchase already the standart edition there's a lot of stuff to extended, I hope to see more beginning on new york (Reply to this) |
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IMAmoose24 writes: on Mar 28 2006 12:51 PM [b]Im waiting for Kong.[/b] Darcus is right. They're will definately be a extended version later this year. Im gonna try to hold out for it like i did for LOTR. (Reply to this) |
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dracus writes: on Mar 28 2006 03:35 PM In reply to this comment (#832880) Right away I couldn't but feel that there's going to be a different opening scene; one that will explain how Jack and Carl came to be such good friends. Another time I felt a scene was missing was between the times we saw Kong lying in the ocean to being on stage. It just seemed to be too much of a jump in the story for Jackson. I'm looking forward to seeing what was left out. Critics of Jackson will no doubt call this a cash grab, but I don't see it that way. I enjoyed comparing the 2 cuts of the LOTR's movies and for those who have yet to see the extended versions of those movies, you'd be surprised at just how much was missing from the theatrical versions without even knowing it. No one but Jackson could pull that off so seamlessly. (Reply to this) |
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South_park300 writes: on Mar 28 2006 04:30 PM well it's not really Jackson's choice to release the 2 different versions. im sure if it was his choice, he would just release the freakin' huge adition first thing. although I am sure I will have to wait until November for it, I am going to wait for the extended edition. the movie rocked. screw the naysayers (Reply to this) |
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dracus writes: on Mar 28 2006 05:33 PM In reply to this comment (#832882) I agree, if it was Jackson's choice, I'm sure he'd go with the full extended versions of all his movies in the theaters, much the same way Tarantino wanted release the Kill Bill movies as one movie (Reply to this) |
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esmeralda_16 writes: on Mar 29 2006 10:56 AM [b]the old kong[/b] i havent seen the original king kong and dont really feel the need to since this movie rocked. but somebody told me that no matter how old that movie was, it had more feelings and this one was pure action. i dont agree since i cried twice (when they sedated him and when he died).Maybe i will see the old one but i dont think id like it better than this one cause i prefer action. (Reply to this) |
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