To view this page ensure that Adobe Flash Player version 11.1.0 or greater is installed.
Page 20 THE VILLADOM TIMES II • July 31, 2013
DVD releases
(continued from Restaurant page)
battles, this installment often looks more like a big-screen
motion picture than a TV show.
Other notable episodes include the “Manchurian Can-
didate”-inspired “The Mind’s Eye;” the comedy-laced
“Data’s Day;” and the creepy “Night Terrors,” in which
the Enterprise crew finds the missing starship Brittain
and discovers that the crew members murdered each
other. Special features include the multi-part documen-
tary, “Relativity: The Family Saga of Star Trek: The Next
Generation,” a gag reel, deleted scenes, archival mission
logs, and audio commentary on two episodes.
“G.I. Joe: Retaliation” (Paramount Home Entertain-
ment) finds the G.I. Joes successfully fighting terrorist
forces around the world. Led by Duke (Channing Tatum),
the team emerges from many of its battles unscathed. The
team, however, is betrayed by the government, and Snake
Eyes (Ray Park) is framed for the death of the Pakistani
president. After an intense attack on the G.I. Joes, the
surviving soldiers -- Roadblock (Dwayne Johnson), Jaye
(Adrianne Palicki), and Flint (D.J. Cotrona) -- must find
out who has betrayed them and retaliate for the murder of
their comrades. Their investigation leads them all the way
up to the president of the United States (Jonathan Pryce).
Based on a series of toys, the film is more a living
comic book than a feature picture, with action abound-
ing, muscled heroes proliferating, and a streamlined plot
geared to discourage too much thought. It seems aware of
its own silliness and geared to 10-year-old boys or anyone
who values mayhem over plot. The two-disc Blu-ray/DVD
combo pack contains behind-the-scenes featurettes and
director and producer commentary.
“The Demented” (Anchor Bay) follows six college
friends meeting for a carefree weekend in a beautiful
home in Louisiana. A terrorist missile attack on the Gulf
Coast infects many of the townspeople with a deadly
virus that induces rabies-like symptoms with devastat-
ing consequences. The area is quarantined as the mad-
ness spreads. Ravenous and fast-moving, the infected,
rage-crazed townspeople turn their sights on the vacation
home where the friends are now barricaded. Despite a
slow opening geared to offer some background, the main
characters are hardly engaging, largely because the actors
are wooden. With so many zombie films being turned out,
a director should put a unique stamp on his, but Chris-
topher Roosevelt, who also wrote the screenplay, resorts
to one cliché after another, though he does know how to
handle the action and gore sequences. There are no extras
on this film, which is available in both Blu-ray and DVD
formats.