New on DVD - Special DVD Releases - MSN Entertainment

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Special Releases

'To Let'/Lionsgate
If you're tired of the unending sequels, remakes and knockoffs of American and Japanese horror films, take a look at the industry coming out of Spain, where guilt and ghosts and fear of the devil all seem quite alive in the 21st century. The six films in this three-disc collection, all made for Spanish TV, are not the most ambitious productions to come out of the country. These are more austere miniatures made by some of the most interesting genre directors in Spain. Alex de la Iglesia directs "The Baby's Room," a darkly witty little tale of young parents who buy a bargain house and find it haunted by spirits who only show up on the baby-cam (a video version of the baby monitor). It's a little too slight for a theatrical production, but, at 80 minutes, the spooky little ghost story -- spiced with a well-handled sense of humor and an underplayed but wicked little twist that brings the film full circle -- makes for a tasty little feature.

Jaume Balagueró's "To Let" takes another young couple (this one expecting a blessed event) and another creepy old place (a dilapidated dump of an apartment building), but this one is haunted by the real-estate agent from hell. Balagueró turns the cavernous location into a dreary dungeon and delivers the struggle with a few choice moments of gore. If they aren't the epitome of Spanish horror, they effectively focus their small budgets on tight little stories and leave the viewer just a little creeped out. The set also features "Xmas Tale," "A Real Friend," "Spectre" and "Blame," plus making-of featurettes for each feature, all in Spanish with English subtitles.

©Buena Vista
Nixon: Election Year Edition
Just in time for election season -- and Oliver Stone's upcoming "W" -- is a new release of his 1995 "Nixon," which I like to think of as "Natural Born Presidents." Like so many of Stone's revisionist, fabulist histories, it's a mix of biographical drama, historical speculation, psychological fantasy and fever dream imagery. Anthony Hopkins anchors the cinematic play with a meaty portrayal, taking Nixon from ambitious politician to paranoid commander-in-chief with messianic visions. The historical insights are filled with conspiratorial suggestions, but the sheer audacity is entertaining. Joan Allen is a severe Pat Nixon, and James Woods, David Hyde Pierce, Powers Boothe, Ed Harris, J.T. Walsh and E.G. Marshall co-star. Features the extended, 212-minute director's cut. New to this release is "Beyond Nixon," a 35-minute documentary on the history and legacy of Richard Milhous Nixon by Stone's son, Sean, and featuring commentary by author and historian Gore Vidal, John Dean (White House counsel to President Nixon) and others. The rest of the previously available supplements include two separate commentary tracks by Stone, 10 deleted/expanded scenes, and the complete 55-minute Charlie Rose interview with Stone. Also available on Blu-ray.
©Koch Lorber
Marco Ferreri Collection
Eight films in an eight-disc digipak box set from Italian iconoclast Marco Ferreri. He brings a decidedly European slant to his 1981 Bukowski adaptation "Tales of Ordinary Madness," dragging his Italian crew to the streets of Los Angeles to find a seedy Hollywood of dim bars and cheap apartments for Ben Gazzara's skid row poet Charles Serking. In his best moments Gazzara kicks off his mask and drinks from the same bottle as his wino compatriots, but otherwise he's a grizzled intellectual knight of a poet, too poised to sink into rummy depths of his alcoholic character. "Seeking Asylum" stars Roberto Benigni as an unconventional kindergarten teacher, part doting dad-figure, part anarchist. The humor is more Ferreri than Benigni, but the actor delivers a curiously introspective and certainly unpredictable performance. Ferreri's 1973 satire "La Grande Bouffe," his most notorious film, stars Marcello Mastroianni, Ugo Tognazzi, Michel Piccoli and Philippe Noiret as friends tired of living who decide to go out in grand, indulgent style in one final orgiastic weekend full of gourmet food and call girls. Also features "El Cochecito," "The Seed of Man," "Don't Touch the White Woman," "Bye Bye Monkey" and "The House of Smiles," plus the bonus documentary "Marco Ferreri: The Director Who Came From the Future," and a 16-page booklet.
©Criterion
The Small Back Room
This claustrophobic drama about a research scientist and military bomb-disposal expert (David Farrar) who has crawled inside the bottle is a marked change of pace for director Michael Powell, the British master known for his creative visual style and vivid narratives. His style is just as vivid here (the most memorable scene is a nightmare image of a monster bottle of alcohol pulling him into its orbit) as he closes the frame down upon his haunted hero. Farrar and co-star Kathleen Byron previously starred in Powell's hothouse drama of desire and repression, "Black Narcissus," and Jack Hawkins and Michael Gough co-star. The Criterion disc features commentary by film scholar Charles Barr, a new video interview with cinematographer Chris Challis, excerpts from Powell's audio dictations for his autobiography, and a booklet with a new essay by film scholar Nick James.
©Image
Orson Welles' Don Quixote
The footage in this film was directed by Orson Welles for a dream production of Miguel de Cervantes' landmark novel, a project that he filmed on and off for 15 years with Francisco Reiguera (strikingly gaunt and theatrically animated) and Akim Tamiroff as Quixote and Sancho Panza, respectively, in the modern world. This isn't a restoration -- Welles never completed the film -- and it's not really a reconstruction of what might have been; it's more a compendium of recovered footage edited into a rough narrative by cult director Jess Franco, who assisted Welles on the production. The footage varies wildly in quality from shot to shot, the awkward, indifferent editing only draws attention to the weakness, and Franco piles in footage that Welles never intended to use in the film. But the real crime against art is the slapdash narration and dubbing and the distracting and sloppy visual effects that Franco adds to the film. It works better as a flawed historical document than a movie, because it sure doesn't look, sound or feel like a film by Welles.

In addition to his regular contributions to MSN Movies, Sean Axmaker is a film critic for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and a DVD columnist for MSN Entertainment. He is also a contributing writer for GreenCine.com, Turner Classic Movies Online and Asian Cult Cinema, among other publications.

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