Desperate Housewives: The Complete Collection (Deluxe
Edition)
When Desperate Housewives ended last year with a
flash-forward, we were left to believe that the four ladies who became our TV
besties never saw each other again. This is why we have DVD box sets: With the
complete series – that’s eight seasons on 45 discs, packaged like secrets in a
chest – Susan, Bree, Lynette and Gaby’s friendship is eternally preserved. And
so are some other show highlights: the hot gardener, the night Gaby cut the
lawn in an evening gown and all the disaster that hit Wisteria Lane (I’m not
talking about the tragedy known as season two). Marc Cherry’s long-running
satirical riff on burb life, where Mary Alice observes her friends from afar
after she blows her brains out, was usually highly engrossing because of its
dark comedy flair, mysterious season-long whodunits and a satisfying number of
dead neighbors. Included are all the previous extras, but what’s really special
is a bittersweet send-off for the ladies – and the fans who loved them.
Cinderella
Before life taught us that a "Cinderella story" was a total
delusion (look at the divorce rate), a young girl who went from scrubbing
floors for a family of rich snobs – and had singing/sewing rodents as friends –
to a princess was the life-dream of so many girls and gay boys. Cinderella
returns to the ball looking better than ever in Blu-ray, as Disney releases the
Diamond Edition of the whimsical 1950 classic – a movie that has more
reincarnations than Madonna’s career. This spruced-up version is, of course, as
shiny as a glass slipper, but what Disney die-hards will really love is the new
extras: a from-the-vault opening sequence, a sweet doc on the real-life
inspiration for the fairy godmother and a live-action Cinderella short. The
Little Mermaid is feeling very jealous right now.
Katy Perry: Part of Me
She can get creative with her mammaries and write songs as
infectious as her charm, but how about carrying a whole movie? Even that, it
turns out, isn’t beyond the power of Katy Perry. The secretly obsessed
pop-lovers who feel too old to watch Katy in Candyland will have to get over
being a grown-up: Perry’s story about being herself, and going from daughter of
religious zealots to singing with Snoop Dogg, is endearing for the post-tween
crowd, too. But it’s not just her sweetness (or her pretty awesome grandma);
the movie succeeds because the songs – "Not Like the Movies" foreshadows her
divorce (chronicled here); "Firework" becomes an anthem more for Perry than her
fans – coincidentally work into the film’s uplifting trajectory. More of the
flamboyant concert clips make the extras, and gram fans should be pleased – the
firecracker has her own special feature.
Damsels in Distress
As far as schoolgirl comedies go, Damsels in Distress
feels years older than its contemporaries – down to the way mumblecore star
Greta Gerwig dresses. But style isn’t the only thing that has a from-the-’50s
feel: Here at Seven Oaks College, depression doesn’t need a pill, according to
the girls who run the school’s suicide prevention center; it needs tap dance
and hotel soap. Filmmaker Whit Stillman’s sarcastic observations on collegiate
life are stretched into comedic exaggerations: progress has sucked the coolness
out of being gay and dance crazes are underrated forms of self-help. Gerwig, as
the overachieving group leader Violet, stands out among a cast that all bring
it. And there’s a weird charm to the film’s absurdist quirkiness – that rare
comedy that makes you giggle and think. Extras are outtakes,
behind-the-scenes, cast interviews and a commentary with Stillman and the cast.
Titanic
Fifteen years ago, James Cameron’s epic weepie about the
Titanic became nearly as historical as the shipwreck itself. It made box-office
bank, launched Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio into superstardom and turned
Celine Dion’s inescapable power ballad – a career-catapulter for her, as well –
into a timeless classic. That music video is included on this hi-def
anniversary edition, a fan-pleaser that goes, as Celine would say, on and on: a
nearly 90-minute myth-busters documentary for history buffs that breaks down
the cruise liner’s sinking and a look back at the epic movie itself are both
new, and 30 deleted scenes, 60 behind-the-scenes featurettes and parodies are
carryovers. And the film itself? Still the old-fashioned romantic stunner it
was in 1997 – just enhanced to ensure its status as king of the movie world.