Friday, October 18, 2013

Happy SAHD: A Documentary About 21st Century Stay At Home Dads



Students Loved It
My students loved the video, as it coincided very well with a book that they were reading for the class. I also thought that it captured the research findings regarding stay-at-home dads really well.

So SAHD, so BAD
At first I was very surprised to discover a documentary on the subject and quite eager to see it. Disappointment came in very fast though.

Quite naive and amateur misrepresentation of what could be an enriching social change, all be it due to malicious causes. The movie gives an impression of an outdated "reality-show" about a bunch of male babysitters, constrained to a single demographic of a suburban dads, with mostly toddlers sampled from just a hand-full of states. These guys are predominantly "accidental" fathers, forced to stay at home due to employment issues (unsurprisingly most laid off from government jobs). Stay at home dad by Choice is not even touched upon.

And what is this "support group" cliche? For recovering bread-winners and home-wife wannabes? Really, do these men have any self-esteem? Just because public education destroyed their imagination does not mean they are constrained by play-dates and going to playground every day. The whole depiction...



Click to Editorial Reviews

Rugrats: Season 8



Rugrats Season 8 DVDs
This DVD set has 22 episodes:

Disc 1:

Pre-School Daze
Curse of the Werewuff
Bow Wow Wedding Vows
Quiet Please
Early Retirement
The Doctor is In
The Big Sneeze

Disc 2:

The Fun Way Day
The Age of Aquarium
Daddy's Little Helper
Hello Dilly
Cynthia Comes Alive
Trading Phil
Murmur on the Ornery Express
Back to School
Sweet Dreams

Disc 3:

A Step at a Time
Angelica's Assistant
A Tale of Two Puppies
Okey-Dokey Jones and the Ring of the Sunbeams
Happy Taffy
Imagine That

Rugrats Fan
This was a gift for my 6-year old grandson. He loves the rugrats and I have been purchasing every season for him.

Rugrats
This season amazon did a amazing job on because it is a complete season has all the episodes that should be there in order. It is also a reasonable price. Here are the episodes in the season.Pre-School Daze"
147 "Curse of the Werewuff"
148 "Bow Wow Wedding Vows" 4 August 2002 1103
149 "Quiet Please / Early Retirement" 7 September 2002 1104
150 "The Doctor is In / The Big Sneeze" 14 September 2002 1105
151 "The Fun Way Day / The Age of Aquarium" 13 October 2002 1106
152 "Daddy's Little Helpers / Hello Dilly" 20 November 2002 1107
153 "Cynthia Comes Alive / Trading Phil" 27 November 2002 1108
154 "Murmur on the Ornery Express" 15 February 2003 1109
155 "Back to School / Sweet Dreams" 29 January 2003 1110
156 "A Step at a Time / Angelica's Assistant" 29 January 2003 1111
157 "A Tale of Two Puppies / Okey-Dokey Jones and the Ring of the Sunbeams" 9 December 2002 1112
158 "Happy Taffy / Imagine That"

Click to Editorial Reviews

Hickey And Boggs



Warning to Review Readers
It should be noted that many of the reviews that Amazon has chosen to post on this page are for previous DVD and VHS releases of this film. The reviews are quite correct, those versions are horrible. This one is excellent, as MODs go, and is certainly going to be the best quality version that you are going to find anywhere. So please ignore the low overall rating as it is being dragged down by these erroneous comments.

Detectives Aren't Heroes Anymore.
A few years after their successful run as partners in espionage on television's "I Spy", Robert Culp and Bill Cosby teamed up for "Hickey & Boggs", a cynical 1972 neo-noir that Culp directed. Far from the adventurous, optimistic duo that Culp and Cosby portrayed in "I Spy", Al Hickey (Bill Cosby) and Frank Boggs (Robert Culp) are private investigators with a dearth of clients and abundance of personal problems. They are hired by a Mr. Rice (Lester Fletcher) to locate a woman named Mary Jane Bower and given a short list of her known acquaintances. The first person on the list is found dead, the bodies pile up, the guns get bigger, and the police lose their patience with the detectives' habit of withholding evidence. But Mary Jane (Carmen) seems to be the key to the loot from a big armored car heist, so Hickey and Boggs keep plugging away, with a $25,000 reward at stake and little left to lose.

"Hickey & Boggs" excels in presenting the private investigator as an emasculated...

Terrific film, really bad DVD
You can tell how bad the DVD is of this film; the website for which I am doing this review does not even list this title on DVD anymore. No question, it is a terrible DVD transfer. I am giving this three stars because it's a great film. The screenplay is by none other than Walter Hill and one of the two leads, Robert Culp, directed--as far as I know, his only feature film directorial effort (he did direct a number of TV show episodes, different shows).

This is a tough as nails noir film with Culp and Bill Cosby as two cynical PIs who get mixed up in a money laundering caper to the tune of 400 grand from a prior bank heist. Also involved are a slick crime boss and his henchmen--one of them is played by a very young Michael Moriarty--and, echoing Chandler, an effeminate lawyer, as well as the cops. The main two of that group are Vincent Gardenia, Sgt. Papadakis, and another early appearance, this time by James Woods at Lt. Wyatt.

But the two title characters...

Click to Editorial Reviews

George Bush: The 9/11 Interview



Phenomenal movie!
This DVD gives us an insight as to one of the many challenges that a President encounters while in office. I was inspired and in awe by the grace in which President Bush handled this attack! Thank you W!

A Presidential Perspective of 9/11
I first learned of this video in a listing of upcoming TV specials in a National Geographic magazine that was designed to promote its cable television network. Within the first ten minutes of watching the show on television, I knew that I just HAD to buy the DVD for my library. I make no secret of my high degree of respect and admiration for President George W. Bush, and this show only increased both. For the first time in the ten years since the horrific events of that day, I saw an in-depth interview with President Bush that gave him plenty of time to share his feelings beyond, as another reviewer said, the typical soundbite.

This production is brutally candid, and we see a range of human emotions from the President, including anger, frustration, fear, impatience. He shares in an honest and vulnerable approach the stresses of being the Commander-in-Chief when we've come under attack as a country. President Bush admits some faults in hindsight, but this video, much...

A great documentary on George Bush and his involvement in post 9/11
This is one of the best documentaries I have seen showing the thought processes, and reasoning from the sitting President during an emotional decisive time in their career.
It does not matter what your personal opinions of George Bush are, this shows what happened from his perspective during 9/11. What shaped his policies, and how he led the United States through this period.
Personally I found his honesty and forthright talking refreshing, compared to what you normally see during sound bites on the evening news.
A must if you are interested in history, whether you a Bush fan or not.

Click to Editorial Reviews

Tandem Surfing - The Love Story



Mid West Book Review
Tandem Surfing: The Love Story is an amazing documentary about the beautiful and demanding sport of tandem surfing featuring male-female couples. Professional tandem surfers demonstrate their extraordinary skills amid the waves, and vintage footage from California tandem surf legends Steve & Barrie Boehne round out this exceptional presentation. A treat for armchair travelers and sports fans, Tandem Surfing: The Love Story lives up to its title and is highly recommended.





Click to Editorial Reviews

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Ghost Ships of the Great Lakes



Great Program!!!
I have always had a passion for history, particularly in Great Lakes maritime history and the storms that have claimed many a vessel and sailor. National Geographic Channel is known for producing quality documentaries, including those relating to marine archaeology, so I had high hopes for this show. After receiving and watching Ghost Ships of the Great Lakes, I can say I am honestly jealous that I was not a part of the expedition team that discovered both these shipwrecks.

Jealousy aside, this program tells an amazing story, bringing everything together with one woman's story, miraculously surviving one storm that claimed her vessel's tow-ship , yet meeting her tragic demise years later in an eerily similar gale. Even though the woman, Frankie Waters, died over one-hundred years ago, her account of the 1898 storm, along with the discovery of her remains in the 1960s, led to the discovery of both the L.R. Doty and the Olive Jeanette. Two long-lost and nearly forgotten...

Beware---Only plays on Windows 7
I returned the first copy of this title because it would not play on my DVD nor on my computer. Amazon sent a replacement. The replacement did not play either. It turns out that it only plays on a Windows 7 operating system--which we only have on our newest computer---I would have liked to watch this on our TV while comfortably lying on the sofa rather watching on a monitor while seated on a desk chair in my husbands office. I'm sure the film is great but it'll probably be a long time before I'll sit at a desk to watch it.



Click to Editorial Reviews

Negima!? The Complete Series S.A.V.E.



Aaaaaaand take two!
Technically, there's already been an anime series -- "Negima" -- about preteen wizard/schoolteacher Negi Springfield.

But apparently that isn't stopping them from creating another parallel series, rebooting and revamping Ken Akamatsu's bestselling manga into the visually lush, fantastical "Negima!?" (see, the question and exclaimation mark mean it's a different show!). And this series is a vastly different creation -- while it's rarely faithful to the original manga's storylines, it's still a solid fantasy story sprinkled with some fun comic relief. And chupacabras.

Negi has been assigned to a vast all-girls Mahora Academy in Japan -- but things start going wrong before he even starts. Half-asleep student Asuna witnesses a small magical display, and a vampire is attacking students. A vampire who is also his student.

Even worse, the vampire Evangeline and her robotic partner Chachamaru are targeting Negi, since the boy is her only ticket out of a curse...

Negima--sort of
After Studio XEBEC adapted the first bit of Ken Akamatsu's popular "Negima" manga, many fans were left wanting more. The first adaptation was for the most part faithful to the manga but took a drastic turn at the very end (which I will not spoil here). Though it was all in all a solid adaptation it left fans divided and desiring some more closure. Then the news broke that Studio Shaft would be taking on the franchise, starting with the spring and summer ova's that adapted (kind of?) a little bit more of the manga. Fans waited in anticipation for the next stage of the adaptation, hopefully filling in what got left out.
They did not get it.
What they did get, though, was this delightful little series which simultaneously confuses the hell out of me and makes me chuckle at its oddities.
After adapting the Evangeline vampire arc the story quickly shifts into something original, not following the manga at all. The story here is interesting, but not as good as the story in...

When they say re-imagined, they mean it. But this is definitely the superior anime.
First of all, I love the Negima manga series. The U.S. release is now up to volume 20 and it has been a fantastic ride the whole way through. The first anime series was ok. For the most part it followed the stories laid out in the first few volumes of the manga pretty accurately. Then for the final few episodes they created original material to wrap up the series. Overall, it was fun to see a great manga series in animated form with voices and music, but they really only scratched the surface.

This second Negima anime series starts over and pretty much tells its own story. Some might complain because they want to see the Manga better represented, but I see no need for this. I can enjoy the anime series as an alternate storyline, and this one is just all around fun. The animation is fantastic and the characters are well represented. Since it's a new story I get the same sense of wondering what will happen next that I do when reading the manga.

One bit of...

Click to Editorial Reviews