ReportWire

Tag: tv reviews

  • Peanuts: 75th Anniversary Ultimate TV Specials Collection Blu-ray Review: 40 Specials in HD

    Everyone loves Peanuts, right? Snoopy and Charlie Brown are cartoon icons and have endured many decades with some classic television specials and the original comic strip. To celebrate its 75th anniversary, Warner Bros. has put out the Peanuts: 75th Anniversary Ultimate TV Specials Collection Blu-ray, which packages together 40 specials that were released between 1965 and 2011 (with just five being omitted).

    “Since Charles Schulz first introduced the kid with the zigzag shirt, fans of all ages have loved the Peanuts gang. This 75th-anniversary compilation features 40 TV specials that celebrate the charm and humor that have established Charlie Brown, Lucy, Linus, Snoopy and their friends as cultural treasures. Watch your most beloved specials – and discover new favorites – in this comprehensive collection,” says the official description.

    Like nearly everyone, the first thing I did was check out some of my favorites, such as Why, Charlie Brown, Why? and the Christmas specials. Some of the later specials, mainly the ones made after Charles Schulz’s death, aren’t as good and won’t be ones you revisit often. However, there’s a lot of quality specials among the 40 included, including some really fun ones I wasn’t familiar with, such as It’s Flashbeagle, Charlie Brown, and A Charlie Brown Valentine. You’re sure to find some new favorites, which is a lot of the enjoy of this comprehensive offering.

    Most of the Peanuts specials look good to great in this Blu-ray set, especially the more iconic ones, such as A Charlie Brown Christmas and It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. However, some of the later specials look particularly rough. It’s Spring Training, Charlie Brown, for example, has a poor framerate, while I Want a Dog for Christmas, Charlie Brown, has vertical stretching. Likewise, the audio is a mixed bag as well, as they’re all the remastered mixes (no option for the originals), and some sound pretty bad (like It’s an Adventure, Charlie Brown). It’s great to have some of these more obscure specials on Blu-ray for the first time, but I wish more care had been taken.

    Here’s the bad news about the Peanuts: 75th Anniversary Ultimate TV Specials Collection Blu-ray: there are no special features included across the five discs. There is a really nice 28-page booklet that includes character bios and brief overviews of the different specials included within the set, though. But that’s the only deluxe-feeling part of this package, which could’ve really used a nice documentary on the franchise’s impact to flesh things out.

    Peanuts: 75th Anniversary Ultimate TV Specials Collection Blu-ray Review: Final Verdict

    The Peanuts: 75th Anniversary Ultimate TV Specials Collection Blu-ray is an easy recommendation for any Charlie Brown fans. All of the iconic specials are included, and there’s sure to be quite a few you haven’t seen that will become new favorites. It’s a shame there aren’t any bonus features and that the transfers are uneven, but having nearly all (five are sadly missing due to rights issues) the specials in one place makes this worth picking up.


    Disclosure: ComingSoon received product from the distributor for our Peanuts: 75th Anniversary Ultimate TV Specials Collection Blu-ray review.

    Tyler Treese

    Source link

  • Little House on the Prairie: The Complete Series Blu-ray Review: Massive 45-Disc Set

    After receiving individual season releases, the Little House on the Prairie: The Complete Series Blu-ray set is now available. This massive 45-disc set includes all nine seasons of the show together, plus the television movies. A true treat for collectors, this includes everything you’d want from a collection.

    “Little House on the Prairie, based on the young adult book series by Laura Ingalls Wilder, was one of the most beloved shows on television when it ran from 1974 to 1983. ‘Little House’ told the story of the Ingalls family’s life on a Minnesota farm in the late 1800s,” says the official description.

    If you’ve never seen Little House on the Prairie, then be prepared, as the Ingalls lived one wild life. Life in the late 1800s was one of contrasts, as the beauty of simple living was also met with hardships. From infant deaths to tornadoes and fires, the show throws a lot of harrowing moments at viewers. Still, there’s something that keeps people coming back to the show, even if continuity wasn’t its strong suit, and that’s the strong performances of Michael Landon, Karen Grassle, and Melissa Gilbert. It’s easy to get invested in these characters, and that’s what kept viewers coming back for 200 episodes.

    The quality of the Little House on the Prairie: The Complete Series Blu-ray set is the same as the prior season releases. Thankfully, this is a good thing as the show has been scanned in high definition. There’s the occasional scratch and color variance, but it’s a very solid set overall. There’s a mix of DTS-HD and Dolby Digital audio tracks between the seasons, each sounding good to my ears.

    There are over eight hours of special features in this collection. That includes the three movies that were released following the series’ end (Look Back to Yesterday, The Last Farewell, and the Christmas-themed Bless All the Dear Children). Other bonuses include a six-part documentary called The Little House Phenomenon, plus the original screen test between Landon and Gilbert. Getting the three TV movies is a real draw, and the documentary is well done and a fun watch (although it is split into six parts across the seasons.

    Little House on the Prairie: The Complete Series Blu-ray Review: Final Verdict

    Little House on the Prairie: The Complete Series Blu-ray is a great trip down memory lane or an easy way to watch the series in its entirety. With all the post-series movies and a fascinating documentary included, it lives up to its billing. While the series does have some continuity issues, its charming quality and strong performances more than make up for it.


    Disclosure: ComingSoon received product from the distributor for our Little House on the Prairie: The Complete Series Blu-ray review.

    Tyler Treese

    Source link

  • Disney+ and Hulu Are Raising Prices Again

    For the third straight year, Disney is planning an October price increase for its two streaming services, Disney+ and Hulu.

    Starting on October 21, the price of Disney+ with ads will rise from $9.99 to $11.99 per month. The price for a subscription without ads jumps three dollars, from $15.99 to $18.99 per month.

    If you use Hulu, you’re looking at an increase only for the service with ads, from $9.99 a month to $11.99 a month. The price of the premium Hulu subscription that bypasses ads remains at $18.99.

    Disney recently launched a new standalone ESPN app, but its still-available previous ESPN service, ESPN Select (also known as ESPN+) is going to raise its price as well, from $11.99 to $12.99.

    Disney previously raised prices on its streaming offerings in October of 2024 and 2023.

    READ MORE: Why Are Disney Remakes So Bad?

    No price increase is ideal for users of any subscription service, but this one feels particularly dicey as some subscribers have been threatening to cancel their subscriptions to Disney’s streaming services over the company’s decision to pull Jimmy Kimmel Live! off the air following its host’s controversial comments about the suspect in the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

    Disney announced on Monday that Jimmy Kimmel Live! would return to the air on Tuesday, September 23. Nextstar Media and Sinclair, the local affiliate groups whose threats not to air Kimmel’s show after his remarks sparked Disney to suspend production of the show in the first place, have said they will continue to preempt the broadcast for the time being. (Jimmy Kimmel Live! episodes are available to stream after they air on ABC on Hulu.)

    The Kimmel kerfuffle may blow over soon enough. But the price increase is not going anywhere. If you pay month by month for any of these services, expect to see a change on your bill very soon.

    Forgotten Animated Disney Movies That Deserve Another Look

    From groundbreaking CGI animated movies to lesser-known traditionally hand-drawn gems, here are 11 Disney movies that deserve to be rediscovered.

    Gallery Credit: Erica Russell

    Matt Singer

    Source link

  • ‘La Máquina’ Review: Boxing Series Throws a Lot of Punches That Don’t Land

    ‘La Máquina’ Review: Boxing Series Throws a Lot of Punches That Don’t Land

    Gael García Bernal, Andrés Delgado, and Jorge Perugorría (from left) in La Máquina. (Photo by: Nicole Franco/Hulu)

    Daddy issues, mommy issues, traumatic brain injury issues, international organized crime syndicate issues . . . Hulu’s first Spanish-language series, La Máquina, is full of issues. Ostensibly an underdog boxing tale crossed with a crime thriller, the show collapses under the weight of its own story, making for a messy and often confounding viewing experience.

    La Máquina starts with a devastating blow to Esteban “La Máquina” Osuna (Gael García Bernal), as he’s knocked out in the first round of a massively hyped boxing match. His manager-slash-best friend Andy (Diego Luna, unrecognizable under layers of makeup and prosthetics) is left to pick up the pieces of his career. After some wheeling and dealing—and maybe some stealing—Andy manages to set up not only a rematch, but a world championship-level fight for Esteban.

    However, Esteban is hardly in title-reclaiming shape; he’s still recovering from his previous injury, and years of getting his head bashed in as well as drug and alcohol abuse have taken their toll. It’ll take a lot of work to get him in the right headspace and weight class, but that’s not all. A shady, secretive, seemingly omniscient organization that Andy worked with earlier in his and Esteban’s career is coming to collect, and their request for payment is that Esteban throws the fight. If he doesn’t, Andy, Esteban and everyone they’ve ever loved will be killed. Yikes!

    La Máquina throws a lot of punches, but few ever really land. Plot points and story beats become excessive, whether it’s Andy’s creepy, co-dependent relationship with his mother (Lucía Méndez) or the decision by Esteban’s ex-wife Irasema (Eiza González, who delivers some of the best work among the cast) to pick up her late father’s investigation into boxing match fixing. The writing gets overbearing, and there’s no time for any of these moments to sit and settle for the viewers and the characters alike. The stakes fluctuate so wildly and so often that it’s hard to take the drama seriously, and at just six episodes (of which only five were provided for critics) the series tries to do far too much.

    Jorge Perugorría, Diego Luna and Gael García Bernal in La Máquina. (Photo by: Cristian Salvatierra/Hulu)

    It’s a shame too, given that it’s the first television collaboration for long-time creative partners Gael García Bernal and Diego Luna. The project has been in the works for over a decade, with the actors also serving as executive producers; in interviews and press materials, they tout their love of boxing and how they’ve wanted to make something about the sport. That passion doesn’t really come through—you won’t find any expertly shot boxing matches here.

    Instead, La Máquina feels almost self-indulgent for the two talented actors: Luna gets to play a larger than life, cosmetic surgery-obsessed character, and García Bernal tackles a role that, in theory, is serious and emotionally complex. García Bernal does well to bring some of Esteban’s struggles to life, such as the aging boxer’s brain trauma-induced hallucinations that provide a pretty literal window into his psyche, but his character arc goes in so many different directions that it’s impossible to grapple with.

    La Máquina takes a real kitchen sink approach to its storytelling, stretching credulity with every scene. It’s not enough for the match fixing crime syndicate to just threaten the protagonists; the organization must also be part of an apparent international political conspiracy and somehow maybe have something to do with Esteban’s relationship with his father. Very little makes sense the longer the series goes on, and it seems unlikely that the final episode would tie up the show’s many, many loose ends. It’s a genuinely bewildering watch, and it’ll leave you scratching your head over how it got so out of hand.

    ‘La Máquina’ premieres on Hulu on October 9th. 

     

    ‘La Máquina’ Review: Boxing Series Throws a Lot of Punches That Don’t Land

    Laura Babiak

    Source link

  • Netflix’s ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’ Is Barely Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes

    Netflix’s ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’ Is Barely Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes

    Well, the good news is the new live-action TV series of Avatar: The Last Airbender is getting better reviews than the last live-action adaptation of the beloved cartoon series. (That one was a film, directed by M. Night Shyamalan, released in 2010.)

    The bad news is the reviews for the new show, which is streaming on Netflix, still aren’t so good.

    As of this writing the show has a 60 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. That’s good enough for a “fresh” score … but only by the thinnest of margins. (In fact, while I was putting this post together it briefly dipped into “rotten” territory before more reviews came in and it crept back up into positive territory.) So at best, the reviews are mixed.

    READ MORE: The Worst Live-Action Anime Adaptations Ever Made

    So what are the critics saying? Well, I’ve kind of already summed it up: This new show isn’t as bad as the Shymalan movie, but that’s not really saying that much, given that The Last Airbender movie is often called one of the worst movies of the 2010s. No matter whether the critics you read are a little more or a little less positive on the show overall, they all largely agree that Netflix’s Avatar can’t hold a candle to the original.

    Here’s a selection of the reviews of the live-action Avatar so far:

    Charles Pulliam-Moore, The Verge:

    Avatar: The Last Airbender is everything that’s disappointing about Netflix’s live-action cartoon shows

    Maya Phillips, The New York Times:

    The streamer’s latest big money, live-action adaptation that proves just how difficult it is to capture the magic of a beloved original.

    Coleman Spilde, The Daily Beast:

    The beloved Nickelodeon cartoon doesn’t deserve a crappy live-action adaptation—let alone two of them.

    Kambole Campbell, Empire:

    Sadly, the new live-action take on Avatar: The Last Airbender, developed by Albert Kim (after the original creators stepped down, citing creative differences), mostly sheds the original’s cartoonish charm and dynamic presentation in favor of more self-serious fantasy.

    Jeremy Mathai, /Film:

    Despite its obvious good intentions, “Avatar: The Last Airbender” ultimately lets itself down through the most predictable of issues: a medium that doesn’t fit the story, a wildly uneven grasp of pacing and tone, and a nagging sense of soullessness where the original’s heart and spirit used to reside.

    Aramide Tinubu, Variety:

    A beautifully crafted disappointment.

    Gavia Baker-Whitelaw, TV Guide:

    This Netflix remake is an insult to everyone involved.

    Therese Lacson, Collider:

    Struggles with time constraints due to a shorter season and loses out on the depth of the original show.

    Rollin Bishop, Total Film:

    Netflix’s live-action take on Avatar: The Last Airbender, for all its foibles, feels like an earnest attempt at a harmonious middle ground that never quite leaves the original behind nor faithfully recreates it enough.

    Belen Edwards, Mashasble:

    The new show is nowhere near the failure of the film, nor as spectacular as the series.

    Elijah Gonzalez, Paste:

    The animated version is still undeniably the definitive one, but there are enough interesting additions here, especially in the final stretch, to make things worthwhile for those who already know how this adventure goes.

    Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender series is now streaming.

    The Best Box-Office Bombs in History

    These films flopped in theaters — but they are worth watching now.

    Matt Singer

    Source link