Everything Kids
Posts Tagged ‘Movie’
Best of Both Worlds Concert: The 3-D Movie: Extended Edition (2008)
The Hannah Montana & Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds live concert was a sold-out sensation everywhere it played, and this concert video is the next best thing to being there for all the fans that couldn’t get tickets to attend the concert in person. The movie opens with Miley Cyrus backstage in make-up and hair, warming up with vocal exercises, then cuts to Hannah Montana (her alter ego)’s performance of “Rock Star,” and then back in time to four weeks before her performance when concert rehearsals were just beginning. It runs like a backstage special feature for a while, following Hannah Montana through coaching, choreography scenes with Kenny Ortega, and rehearsal sessions. Then it’s back to concert footage from opening night in St. Louis and all along the tour, seasoned here and there with some fun looks at the concerts’ special effects, quick costume changes, other logistical challenges (Hannah gets dropped during a routine early in the tour), and lots of shots of the enthusiastic, mostly female ‘tween audiences. The 3D format gives the audience a nice sense of being there and includes some effective, if somewhat overused shots of the crowd waving, Hannah/Miley reaching out to the audience, and fun stunts like the drummer’s twirling stick thrown high in the air and the guitar player’s pick being tossed out into the audience. The sound is adequate, but fails to replicate the live concert experience (the plus side is that the audience’s ears won’t be ringing for hours after the performance). Hannah Montana’s performance includes “Rock Star,” “Life’s What You Make It,” “Just Like You,” “Nobody’s Perfect,” and “We Got the Party.” The Jonas Brothers perform “When You Look Me In the Eyes” and “Year 3000,” and then Miley hits the stage with “Start All Over,” “I Got Nerve,” “I Miss You” (which Miley wrote in honor of her Granddad’s passing), “Going Away,” “GNO: Girl’s Night Out,” and “The Best of Both Worlds.” This 3D concert presentation truly is the “best of both worlds,” a 3D concert experience with easy availability and minimal expense. Better yet is the message that girls can do anything they want if they put their minds and hearts to it. (Ages 7 and older) –Tami Horiuchi
The sold-out concert event that rocked the nation is bursting onto Disney DVD for a limited time only in a two-disc extended edition with a 3-D concert experience so real it’s like having a backstage pass! Make Some Noise and get ready for the year’s most eye-popping dance-in-your-seat music experience with HANNAH MONTANA & MILEY CYRUS BEST OF BOTH WORLDS CONCERT MOVIE! For the first time ever Miley performs as herself and Hannah in the same epic show! With a special appearance by the Jonas Brothers and exclusive bonus features including a sing-along mode additional songs and a rare inside look into the rock star lives of Miley Cyrus and the Jonas Brothers this movie sensation is as close as you’ll come to achieving the best of both worlds; (Elizabeth Weitzman New York Daily News). With additional songs and footage not seen in theatres including the songs: Right Here, SOS, Good & Broken, and Pumpin Up the Party. Comes with 2D and 3D versions plus 4 pairs of 3 D glasses!System Requirements:Running Time: 90 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: CHILDREN/FAMILY UPC: 786936767179 Manufacturer No: 05763200
See all Editorial Reviews
(more…)
Pinocchio 70th anniversary edition review

Writing recently on human conscience, Catholic commentaor Thomas Williams defined our “still, small voice” as a coach shaping and guiding us toward better decisions and higher ideals. “Conscience urges us to climb higher,” he writes, “according to the gifts received and the real possibility of doing good.”
Generations met this gift through Carlo Collodi’s beloved “Pinocchio,” a marionette granted the gifts of life by his creator’s wish upon a star and conscience through a witty, resilient cricket Walt Disney later named Jiminy. Collodi’s serialized story of a toy becoming a boy through following his conscience to unselfishness and bravery, is arguably Disney’s (and by extension, film animation’s) greatest achievement. It’s justifiably celebrated in this new 70th anniversary 2DVD set, with vivid, detailed print and soundtrack and a series of enlightening extras.
![]() |
Pinocchio (Two-Disc 70th Anniversary Platinum Edition) Pinocchio (Two-Disc 70th Anniversary Platinum Edition + Standard DVD) [Blu-ray] |
“Pinocchio”’s characters and songs have defined Disney’s mission (and not just from “When You Wish Upon A Star” being the company unofficial theme or Jiminy among its many goodwill ambassadors.) When elderly woodcarver Geppetto wishes his wooden toy to become a real boy, a blue fairy grants Pinocchio life and knights Jiminy as his conscience (”Give A Little Whistle”) and companion. Overjoyed, Geppetto sends Pinocchio to school where he’s sidetracked by fox and feline villains “Honest” John and Gideon. They tempt him first with fame (singing, “Hi-Diddle-Dee-Dee,” as they walk him to evil, funny showman Stromboli) then, when he’s rescued, by pleasure and destruction to the Coachman’s Pleasure Island. There Pinocchio, his Bowery Boy-ish friend Lampwick, and other waywards trash the island and their own lives by “behaving like jackasses,” in some of Disney’s most frightening, moving animation. Throughout, Geppetto (with beloved fish Clio and cat Figaro) searches for his kidnapped son until they battle an angry sea and its most fearsome creature to survive.

“Pinocchio’s” legend includes Walt Disney’s painstaking commitment to its quality. The results testify it doesn’t stem from infamous company salesmanship. Documentaries (including one on the “sweatbox” where Walt critiqued his animators’ daily work) describe how Collodi’s often irascible puppet became Disney’s lovable child struggling with temptation. Jiminy transforms from the story’s moralistic critic into the story’s center, friend and coach looking much like his voice (then well-known recording artist Cliff Edwards). Legendary actor Mel Blanc, a 40s superstar for his work on “Looney Tunes” and Jack Benny’s radio show, finds his speaking role reduced to yelps as “Honest” John’s evil sidekick Gideon becomes a Harpo Marx-like comic mute.
Purists may argue for the 1940 original’s muted tones, but this new DVD presents a deeper, more vivid experience than any in Disney’s classics library. Disney used the then-new multi-plane camera to provide near 3-D depth to scenes in the village and in Geppetto’s shop (especially in its first scenes). Its color palette seamlessly eases from muted yellows at the sunset cliff scene to brackish seawater as Pinocchio and Jiminy dive to save Geppetto, reaching dangerous, even more detailed scenes seeking mighty whale Monstro. The film and its remastering reward repeated viewings.
Pinocchio’s extras run from illuminating (”making of” documentaries, theatrical trailers, missing songs and deleted scenes) to interesting (a charming feature on modern puppetmasters and toymakers, “real-life Geppettos” ) to disposable (a cute children’s puzzle game, Meghan Jette Martin’s needless teenpop rendition of “When You Wish..”) But it’s Disney’s storytelling skill and umatched visual gift which turn Carlo Collodi’s moralistic tale of forming conscience into an endearing story of maturity and friendship. Simply one of the most essential films, animated or otherwise, ever made and this being the best means yet to own it.



Recent Comments