I am thrilled to share with you the new teaser trailer and poster for THE LION KING!
THE LION KING opens in theatres everywhere on July 19th, 2019
https://youtu.be/4CbLXeGSDxg
Helping families save on everyday items.
Disclosure: This is not a compensated or sponsored post I was provided the product for review purposes only. All opinions expressed here are my own.
This holiday season, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment brings consumers a triple dose of everyone’s favorite green grouch, the Grinch with the release of How the Grinch Stole Christmas!: The Ultimate Edition. Available in stores October 23, 2018, this must-have release features three animated Dr. Seuss specials including How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, The Grinch Grinches the Cat in the Hat and Halloween is Grinch Night. All three animated specials are offered together in a Blu-ray™ Combo Pack, which includes a Blu-ray™, DVD and digital copy, and will retail for $24.98 SRP. This title will also be available in standard definition and will retail for $19.98 SRP.
This holiday season, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment brings consumers a triple dose of everyone’s favorite green grouch, the Grinch with the release of How the Grinch Stole Christmas!: The Ultimate Edition. Available in stores October 23, 2018, this must-have release features three animated Dr. Seuss specials including How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, The Grinch Grinches the Cat in the Hat and Halloween is Grinch Night. All three animated specials are offered together in a Blu-ray™ Combo Pack, which includes a Blu-ray™, DVD and digital copy, and will retail for $24.98 SRP. This title will also be available in standard definition and will retail for $19.98 SRP.
How the Grinch Stole Christmas!: The Ultimate Edition will be available to own September 25, 2018 on Digital via purchase from digital retailers.
The best-selling, perennial holiday classic, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!: The Ultimate Edition got even better with the addition of two Grinch specials, which are available in high definition for the first time ever! Based on the beloved book by Dr. Seuss, How the Grinch Stole Christmas! is considered among one of Dr. Seuss’ finest works for children. The story was originally adapted to television as an animated TV special and was highly praised by audiences. It has been re-broadcast numerous times since its debut, with annual airings continuing to the present day.
How the Grinch Stole Christmas!: The Ultimate Edition featured specials:
How the Grinch Stole Christmas!:
Magnificently narrated by Boris Karloff (Frankenstein, The Mummy) and directed by animation genius and cartoon legend Chuck Jones (Looney Tunes, What’s Opera, Doc?), How the Grinch Stole Christmas! tells the story of the miserable Grinch, who wants to sabotage Christmas for all the Whos in Who-ville.
The Grinch thinks that by stealing the Whos Christmas trees and presents, he’ll succeed in stealing their joy. However, when Christmas morning arrives, the Grinch is taken by surprise when he notices the Whos greet the day joyously singing Christmas carols regardless of the fact that their village has been completely stripped of holiday gifts, decorations and treats. The cheerful attitude of the Whos prompts the Grinch to ponder the true meaning of Christmas and he slowly comes to realize the spirit of the season is not generated by material possessions. Will the Grinch have a change of heart and consider returning the Whos’ Christmas gifts?
The Grinch Grinches the Cat in the Hat:
The Grinch is up to his old tricks again in The Grinch Grinches the Cat in the Hat, the Emmy® Award-winning special directed by legendary animator Friz Freleng. In this special, the Cat in the Hat encounters the Grinch while picnicking one day. He refers to the Grinch as Mr. Greenface, which the Grinch takes an as insult, prompting him to retaliate by building a series of outrageous devices designed to cause all sorts of disruption. First, he creates a “Vacusound Sweeper,” which distorts any and all of the sounds within a 50-mile radius of the Cat in the Hat. Then he creates the “Dark House,” which is the direct opposite of a light house and puts the Cat in the Hat into complete darkness. He then uses the “Flummox Deluxe” to further warp the Cat in the Hat’s surroundings, which sends him and everything around him into complete chaos. Will the Cat in the Hat figure out a way to stop the Grinch and outsmart all his crazy devices?
Halloween is Grinch Night:
When the Sour-Sweet wind starts to blow in Who-ville, all the Whos take cover because this signifies the beginning of Grinch Night, an evening in which the Grinch descends upon Who-ville to terrorize all its citizens. As the Grinch sets out on his journey to Who-ville, he encounters a courageous young Who named Euchariah, who attempts to stall the Grinch from reaching Who-ville. The Grinch however puts Euchariah into a trance in which he encounters all sorts of strange creatures who try to intimidate him. Will Euchariah manage to snap out of the trance in time to stop Grinch from reaching Who-ville?
“Since he was first created by Dr. Seuss over 60 years ago, the Grinch has become an iconic character heralding the arrival of the holiday season. He’s been loved by generations for his transformation by the true spirit of the holiday. This television special featuring the Grinch and the Whos of Whoville has become a seasonal classic and we’re delighted to offer this new release with two other classic Grinch specials,” said Mary Ellen Thomas, Vice President Family & Animation Marketing. She added, “How the Grinch Stole Christmas!: The Ultimate Edition is the perfect addition to everyone’s holiday movie collection.”
How the Grinch Stole Christmas!: The Ultimate Edition will be available to own on September 25, 2018 on Digital HD. Digital HD allows consumers to instantly stream and download all episodes to watch anywhere and anytime on their favorite devices. Digital HD is available from various digital retailers including Amazon Video, iTunes, Google Play, Vudu and others. A Digital Copy is also included with the purchase of specially marked Blu-ray™ discs for redemption and cloud storage.
As a child I remember sitting down with my parents to watch many of these Dr. Seuss holiday specials. This is one DVD that you’ll want to pick up this holiday to add to your family’s video library. It’s a great holiday gift idea to give or receive. As my mother would say, a great DVD to have on-hand at grandma’s house for when the kids come over to play.
Disclosure: This is not a compensated or sponsored post. I was invited to an advance screening of the movie. All opinions expressed here are my own.
Last week, I was treated to a special screening of “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” the sequel to 2012’s hit videogame-themed comedy “Wreck-It Ralph.” And let me tell you, it looks wonderful.
The basic gist of the sequel is this: There’s trouble at Litwak’s Arcade. Sugar Rush, the kart racing game that counts Vanellope von Schweetz (Sarah Silverman) as one of its racers, has a broken steering wheel. This leads Wreck-It Ralph (John C. Reilly), the videogame ogre with a hart of gold, to launch a mission to get a new steering wheel; otherwise, the game will be unplugged and Vanellope, his best friend, will disappear.
And where do they head to find that steering wheel? That’s right: the Internet.
Far from the way that the internet has normally been visualized. One of the scenes we saw had Vanellope bidding on a velvet cat painting on eBay, which, in the movie, looks like a typical auction house.
Another scene, which serves as something of the emotional fulcrum for the movie, saw Ralph — after rising in popularity as an instantly meme-able personality — reading negative comments about himself, his large heart breaking.
And, of course, there was the princess sequence, which has been screened at D23 and teased in recent promotional materials, wherein Vanellope comes face-to-face with all of the classic Disney princesses (everyone from Snow White to Moana). It’s still a hoot and as the production works to complete the sequence, has become even more visually stunning and comically precise.
After some amusing late-night interactions between the video game characters at Litwaks Arcade, the ensemble gathers to examine the latest addition to the already overloaded surge protector: a Wi-Fi router that looms as menacingly as Buzz Lightyear did to a roomful of outdated playthings in Toy Story. Just as the new device arrives, a malfunction to the Sugar Rush game forces Vanellope and her fellow racers to flee, prompting the quest that will send the glitchy princess who flickers whenever shes feeling insecure and her temperamental bestie out in search of a replacement part before Litwak (Ed ONeill) pulls the plug.
Besides, the object here is to playfully riff on the way people use the internet, contrasting all that these sites have to offer from online auctions to auto-complete search engines with the frustration of figuring out how everything works in the absence of an experienced adult.
For parents that worry about their children using the Internet, a word of mild caution, reinforcing the importance of understanding the sites one visits: Social-media commenters are depicted as potentially toxic, and eBay can be dangerous. In their naiveté, Ralph and Vanellope accidentally wind up bidding $27,001, making one nostalgic for the day when the worst a child could do was run up a phone bill calling 1-900 hotlines to listen to recordings of Hulk Hogan or the Backstreet Boys. Woefully ill-prepared for the internet, the two old-school arcade characters come across as a couple of country bumpkins overwhelmed by the big city.By this point, Vanellope has already been nursing doubts about her place in the universe, questioning whether there could be more to life than doing endless laps around the same tracks. On the internet, she discovers Slaughter Race, a more grown-up, Grand Theft Auto-style driving game where shes finally able to pit her daredevil driving skills against someone as well-matched to her tricks: That would be Shank (Gal Gadot), a strong female role model who does wonders for her self-confidence. Its a crime-infested hellhole, but to Vanellope, its paradise, inspiring her hilariously unconventional I want song, and one of the movies standout sequences, A Place Called Slaughter Race.
Whenever a CG character suffers an existential crisis of this magnitude, the creators are cribbing from the Pixar playbook. Even though this movie was made by the folks at Disney (John Lasseter gets a credit but was on leave for the final year of production), it adheres far closer to the feel-good formula of its NorCal cousins. In this case, thats an asset, considering how much of the original films renegade spirit remains as in the openly satirical approach the sequel takes toward so many other Disney brands, the princesses in particular.
While Ralph discovers how easily a reformed meanie can become a meme, Vanellope ventures over to the Oh My Disney virtual world, where she spots several Star Wars characters and the obligatory (newly poignant) Stan Lee cameo. There, living happily ever after in a posh lounge, she stumbles on Disney royalty, now idle celebrities: Anna and Elsa, Ariel, Aurora, Belle, Cinderella, Jasmine, Moana, Mulan, Pocahontas, Snow White, and Tiana all but the eldest voiced by the original performers (Ribon subs for Snow White). Even Kelly Macdonald, who embodied Brave for the other studio, drops in, earning laughs by making Meridas Scottish brogue all but unintelligible.
When fickle audiences lose interest, Ralph gets desperate, venturing into the dark net for a shortcut that will exploit his insecurities and, you guessed it, break the internet. Things could have spiraled out of control in this last act, as a swarm of tiny Ralphs (who was loosely modeled after Donkey Kong in the first place) combine to form a massive King Kong-like mega-monster. In this virtual city, of course Google owns the equivalent of the Empire State Building, making it the logical place to stage the final showdown. Luckily, the jokes keep coming even as the film takes this potentially intense turn, giving all those princesses a chance to flip the script on their traditional gender roles.
Trace Disney animated features back to their roots, as many an academic has, and one can find plenty of sexist and racist problems, though the studio has taken a proactive role in trying to correct that over the past decade or so, culminating in 2016s brilliant cant-we-all-just-get-along parable Zootopia. Ralph is a disruptor by design, and in many ways, hes the ideal character to bring about the next seismic shift, creating a space where the studio can poke fun at itself while presenting a more enlightened narrative for fans. The movie isnt all laughs, however, managing to surprise at times by how nuanced the animation can be. Who would have thought that while breaking the internet, Ralph might be breaking our hearts as well?