Page 26 THE VILLADOM TIMES I, II & III • June 22, 2011 (continued from Restaurant page) authority while writing masterpieces. The film opens with the British government burning copies of “The Rainbow,” and continues through his exodus around the globe, joined by his combative wife Frieda (Janet Suzman). From his destructive journey to the American Southwest to an explosive visit to Oaxaca, Mexico, and concluding with his erotic adventures in Italy, “Priest of Love” provides a colorful portrait of Lawrence’s life and art, including the uproar that greeted the sexually explicit prose of “Lady Chatterley’s Lover.” Director Christopher Miles is at his best showing Lawrence’s frustrating, lifelong battle with righteous censors, and illustrating Frieda’s tireless inspiration. She even turned away from her children in order to nurture his literary work and helped him abandon his strait-laced, Puritanical past. Gardner plays American patron of the arts Mabel Dodge Luhan, who entertained Lawrence during his stay in New Mexico. Special features include a making-of featurette, interviews with McKellen and director Christopher Miles, deleted scenes with commentary, and outtakes. “Priest of Love” is available on both Blu-ray and DVD. “Ceremony” (Magnolia Home Entertainment) is the feature film directorial debut of Max Winkler (Henry’s son). Sam Davis (Michael Angarano) talks his former best friend into spending a weekend with him to rekindle their friend- DVD releases ship at a beachside estate owned by a famous documentary filmmaker (Lee Pace). Sam, however, is secretly infatuated with the filmmaker’s fiancée, Zoe (Uma Thurman). The film attempts to show, comically, how Sam goes about derailing the upcoming nuptials. This is not an earthshaking debut for Winkler, who has peopled his film with vapid characters. Thurman, so magnetic in Tarantino movies, seems to pop up a lot in small movies that go nowhere, and “Ceremony” will likely be added to her growing list of movies that no one has seen. There are no extras on this R-rated Blu-ray and DVD release. “Breaking Bad: The Complete Third Season” (Sony Home Entertainment) contains 13 episodes from the third season of the AMC series. Teacher turned drug lord Walter White (Bryan Cranston) brings his partner, Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul), home from a stint in rehab. Walter turned to cooking crystal meth after he was diagnosed with lung cancer. He did this to provide for his family after he was gone and to pay for an experimental treatment. Jesse is still reeling from the overdose death of his girlfriend, a recovering addict. The show is about Walter’s ambivalence about his transformation from good guy to bad guy. The fact that he continues to sell meth even after his cancer is cured provides the show’s hook. The “hero” is doing despicable things, indirectly killing people who die from the meth he sells, and literally killing rival drug dealers. The three-disc set contains cast and crew commentary on nine episodes in the set, outtakes, deleted scenes, mini podcasts for every episode with the cast and crew, and five all-new behindthe-scenes featurettes.