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'Spaced: The Complete Series'/BBC
Before "Shaun of the Dead" and "Hot Fuzz," director Edgar Wright and actor/writer Simon Pegg collaborated with actress/writer Jessica Hynes (nee Stevenson) on this 1999 cult BBC sitcom about a couple of slackers, Daisy (Hynes) and Tim (Pegg), who meet at a pub and decide to pose as a couple to get a great flat. They're not exactly the odd couple, but they are definitely odd roommates, a pair of goofball slackers with aspirations of professionalism that are largely extinguished by killing time over TV, video games, banter and pints at the local pub, usually in the company of Tim's gun-toting best buddy (Nick Frost) or Daisy's dizzy pal Twist (Katy Carmichael). This is funny, funny stuff. The lively humor is crammed with pop culture references and playful gags, all executed with an inventive sense of style (for TV, anyway) and terrific energy. You can find the inspiration for "Shaun of the Dead" in the opening minutes of Episode 3. Julia Deakin co-stars as their weird landlady, and Mark Heap is the darkly strange artist in the basement apartment.

The series only ran for two seven-episode seasons, and all 14 episodes are collected in this three-disc set. Creators Wright, Pegg and Hynes offer commentary on each episode; choose the original commentary tracks recorded for the initial British release with other members of the cast, or newly recorded tracks featuring American guest fans (among them Kevin Smith, Quentin Tarantino, Matt Stone, Bill Hader, Patton Oswalt and Diablo Cody) adding to the party atmosphere. The third disc features the 80-minute "Skip to the End," a marvelously entertaining retrospective documentary hosted by creators Wright, Pegg and Hynes; and the 2007 reunion Q&A "Spaced on Stage." Also features deleted scenes and outtakes, raw footage from various scenes, cast and character bios, and teasers and episode promos, many of which feature original footage.
   ©BBC
Earth: The Biography
Geologist Dr. Iain Stewart hosts and produces this five-part documentary on the origins of the planet itself: how the Earth became what it is; how the continents, the mountains, and the seas formed and continue to change; and why they are essential to sustaining the environment necessary for life -- or, in Stewart's own words, "How our planet works." Each of the four great geological forces that shape the planet are covered in separate 45-minute chapters -- "Volcanoes," "Atmosphere," "Ocean" and "Ice" -- while the fifth chapter, "Rare Planet," explores the unique geological events that helped to make the planet Earth compatible for complex life to form. Stewart is an engaging narrator with dramatic flair, and the imagery is thrilling: vivid high-definition footage of dynamic landscapes and natural wonders, interspersed with satellite imagery, time-lapse photography, and computer-generated imagery created to illustrate the geological concepts and the forces at work millions and billions of years in the past. It looks even better on the Blu-ray release. It's more proof that the British are still producing the most ambitious and greatest natural history documentaries. This one was seen in the United States on the National Geographic channel. Two discs in a standard case, with no supplements.
    ©Warner
Robot Chicken: Star Wars
"Not long ago in a galaxy not far enough away ... " Seth Green and Matthew Senreich have been skewering pop culture for a couple of seasons now with "Robot Chicken," their offbeat skit comedy performed entirely by toy action figures brought to life via the old-school magic of stop-motion animation. This supersized special (all of 23 minutes long, sans commercials) focuses all their energy on the cultural phenomenon of the "Star Wars" series, celebrated and spoofed in rapid-fire, channel-surfing bits (including a George Bush fantasy as a fledgling Jedi using his powers for frat-boy pranking and a musical "Empire on Ice" version of the story). And, yes, that's really George Lucas providing the voice of George Lucas, on the run from celebrity-crazed fans at a convention. The disc is filled out with "Chicken Nuggets" video commentary that you can jump to from each skit (it's longer than the program itself!), footage from Green's "Animation Meeting," 22 minutes of "On Air Bumps" recorded by Green and friends for the show's premiere on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim, and other supplements.
   ©Paramount
Comedy Central's TV Funhouse
Robert Smigel created this 2000 parody of children's shows with costumed hosts and puppet animal sidekicks presenting cheaply made cartoons, but the sensibility of this short-lived Cartoon Network show is more "Saturday Night Live" than Saturday morning cartoons. Smigel channels Triumph the Comic Insult Dog for the canine contingency of the foul-mouthed Anipals, who have a tendency to leave the human host (Doug Dale) in the lurch for ill-conceived road trips and raunchy extracurricular activities. In between live-action skits are bizarre parodies of educational films and cartoons that are decidedly not for kids. Keep this one far out of reach of the little guys: It's not just foul, it's uncensored on DVD. Eight episodes on two discs in a box set of two thinpak cases. Features commentary, outtakes and behind-the-scenes footage among its supplements.
     ©Universal
Las Vegas: Season Five
The fifth and final season of the splashy, sexy TV series set in the lavish trappings of the (fictional) high-rolling Montecito sees the exit of James Caan's Ed Deline, the entrance of Tom Selleck as new owner A.J. Cooper, and Camille Guaty as concierge Piper, in addition to plenty of weddings (both secret and public). Danny (Josh Duhamel) and Mike (James Lesure) compete for Ed's position; Delinda (Molly Sims) competes for Danny's attention; and Vanessa Marcil has her own issues, as usual. Four discs in a box set of three thinpak cases contain 17 episodes (including the feature-length season premiere and series finale). Also includes a gag reel and a featurette on the visual effects.

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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