Skins, Volume 2 (2009, BBC Video)
purchase from Amazon: DVD
Skins, the British teenage drama that airs in the states on BBC America, is the best teen series to come to television since My So Called Life went off the air in 1995. Funny, poignant, and at time heartbreaking, Skins explores the social activities and the emotional rollercoaster of being a teenager in the 21st Century with such devastating accuracy that nothing else on television compares to it. BBC Video has just released Skins Volume 2, compiling the entire second season of the show. The second season wraps up the stories of the group of friends attending Roundview Sixth Form College we met in Season 1 and is essential viewing for anyone who is a fan of Skins — and anyone who just likes quality television.
Skins season 2 picks up six months after the cliffhanger season one. Tony, the cocky, brash young man who is the lynch pin to the group of friends in the show, is a shell of his former self. In final moments of that finale, he was struck by a bus and his fate was left unknown. We soon learn that he survived the tragic accident, but spent in a coma (the “Lost Weeks” supplemental videos on disc 3 detail what happened to the other characters while Tony was in the hospital). As the season begins, Tony is slowly regaining his memory and how to use his limbs and other body parts. Tony is portrayed by Nicholas Hoult, who came into prominence as the boy in About A Boy. Hoult shows exceptional range as an actor charting all of Tony’s pain, frustrations, fears and emotional triumphs over the course of the entire second season’s 10 episodes. Equally effective are Mike Bailey as Sid, Tony’s oldest and most enduring friend and April Pearson as Michelle, the girl Tony loves. Both Sid and Michelle were devastated by the accident. In fact, Michelle was he was on the phone with Tony when he was hit by the bus. Moments after uttering that he loved her, the bus barreled into him. While Sid sat bedside and visited Tony everyday, Michelle was nowhere in sight, too overcome with grief to be there. However, now that Tony is recovering at home, Sid doesn’t know how to act around him and Michelle has decided that sleeping around is a good cure for her pain. All of these storylines are resolved by the end of episode 10, but not before feelings are betrayed and friendships nearly severed. (more…)

Milk (2009, Focus Features/Universal)
As for singing old songs, I don’t think “Money (That’s What I Want)” or that old Destiny’s Child chestnut “Bills, Bills, Bills” are going to solve any problems, though my longtime girlfriend, 
DVD News: 20th Century Fox — Disaster in the Making
by Lance Berry20th Century Fox used to be one of the most respected film studios in the business. Its catalog of films is virtually legendary: Miracle on 34th Street (the 1947 version, not the 1994 remake), The Day the Earth Stood Still (the 1951 classic, not the crappy remake from last year), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, The Seven Year Itch, the original Planet of the Apes film series, Young Frankenstein, the Star Wars films, the Alien series, The Princess Bride, Wall Street, Home Alone, Die Hard, and dozens of others.
Now it’s reached a new low by revealing that from now on all extras — commentaries, background features, deleted scenes, etc. — on DVDs of its films won’t be included on any discs designed for rental purposes. This means that if you rent your DVDs from Blockbuster or some other store or service (possibly Netflix — more on that in a second), you won’t have the option to decide if you like the extras enough to later buy the DVD — you’ll be forced to buy them from stores, sight unseen, and have to hope that the extras are special enough to warrant the purchase of the disc, regardless of how you feel about the film.
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Tags: 20th century fox, blockbuster video, commentaries, dvd extras, DVD sales, film production, greed, Lance Berry, netflix, opinion column, rentals, Slumdog Millionaire, special features, The Dark Knight, the day the earth stood still, Wall Street, watchmen
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