Sentences with phrase «great audio commentary»

This may not be as expansive as some of the studio's other sets, but it's a fine disc, providing a substantially improved feature presentation and first - rate extras, most notably a great audio commentary and vintage Kirk Douglas interview.
Speaking of Coogler, there is a great audio commentary featuring him and production designer Hannah Beachler.
There is a great audio commentary with director Bill Condon, he really seems to be an actor's directory and really enjoys the filming experience.
A good transfer and a great audio commentary pivotally contextualize The Big Knife as a neurotic and lastingly influential American melodrama.
There is a great audio commentary with Writer / Director Zack Whedon and Producer Chris Ferguson.
In terms of special fearures there is a great audio commentary track with Stamm along with Webber, Perlman, and Graye.
There is a great audio commentary with John Carpenter and Peter Jason.
There is a great audio commentary track with the director Roy Ward Baker, writer Tudor Gates and of course Ingrid Pitt, which is moderated by Jonathan Sothcott.
Decent video, excellent audio, and surprisingly plentiful bonus features (including great audio commentaries on every episode) all help tip the scales in favor of a recommendation.

Not exact matches

The film's greatest achievement is not the political commentary or even satire; it is in turning this material into cinematic entertainment with an acidic touch, combining visuals and audio elements with verve.
Brand new to this edition is a feature - length audio commentary with director Ron Howard, and while the guy's undeniably pleasant and all kinds of gracious, he doesn't really give great commentary, all things considered.
Blu - ray Highlight: The audio commentary with directors / producers Mike McCoy and Scott Waugh is filled with a ton of great information about making the movie, including the technical aspects of filming the combat sequences, the real stories that inspired them, and the level of realism that was achieved thanks to the cooperation of the Navy.
Along with the feature, we also get an audio commentary from Felsher, a second commentary from some of the cast and crew of the film, an additional interview from Creepshow DP Michael Gornick, extended interview clips from Romero, Savini, and Bernie Wrightson, a collection of behind the scenes footage from FX master Tom Savini, a location tour from Horror's Hallowed Grounds, a reproduction of Fangoria's Scream Greats episode on the career of Tom Savini, a news program segment from 1982 on the making of Creepshow, and a collection of behind the scenes stills.
Why Listen: Plenty of great directors struggle to maintain one's attention during an audio commentary for a movie close to three hours long.
This was a great way to see everything coming together, and the audio commentary was fun and enjoyable to listen to.
The special features themselves aren't that great (where's the audio commentary, QT?)
EXTRAS: In addition to a new 2K high definition scan that looks great, the Collector's Edition is overflowing with goodies, including three audio commentaries featuring director John Carpenter and star Kurt Russell; producer Debra Hill and production designer Joe Alves; and a new track with actress Adrienne Barbeau and cinematographer Dean Cundey.
DVD Extras A great range of features for a film so old — including an audio commentary, deleted scenes, three documentaries (The Great Idea, The Self Preservation Society and Get A Bloomin Move On) and a theatrical tragreat range of features for a film so old — including an audio commentary, deleted scenes, three documentaries (The Great Idea, The Self Preservation Society and Get A Bloomin Move On) and a theatrical traGreat Idea, The Self Preservation Society and Get A Bloomin Move On) and a theatrical trailer.
If you are a fan of this type of humor also check out Michael J. Nelson and Kevin Murphy's latest collaboration, RiffTrax, which are downloadable audio commentaries for many many great (I mean horrible films).
Next is an audio commentary by director Julian Schnabel, which is highly unusual because it pairs a great film with a nigh - unbearably bad commentary.
There is no featurette or audio commentary, which is a shame, since a movie with a title that spectacular surely comes with some great stories from the people who made it.
The fifth disc sums up this amazing collection of extras with yet another audio commentary track and a great featurettes «All Our Variant Futures: From Workprint to Final Cuts», which covers every possible aspect of the various cuts.
Two audio commentaries highlight the first disc (one with writer / director Fred Dekker and co-stars Andre Gower, Ryan Lambert and Ashley Bank, and another with Dekker and DP Bradford May), and though they both start off pretty lame, the conversations eventually turn around to deliver some great insider info.
Masterfully restored, this set includes favorites such as The Hound of the Baskervilles, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, and others, complete with six audio commentaries and many other great features.
Summit's Blu - ray provides great picture and sound, more than an hour of solid video extras, and an entertaining audio commentary.
Extras include an expected array of featurettes, audio commentary from the director, and - perhaps of the greatest interest to the fans - a series of motion comic «prequels» covering the background of the various human characters.
I imagine this is great for anyone who is blind and / or deaf, but for everyone else, it's like watching a captivating movie in your native language with closed captioning turned on while listening to someone provide an audio commentary on what you're watching.
First up we have an audio commentary track with director John M. Chu and producer Lorenzo Di Bonaventura, which delivers tons of great information about the production.
There is another audio commentary track by Film Historians Jeff Bond and Nick Redman, who have great knowledge of the source.
Starting things off, there's an audio commentary from director Mark Hartley, joined by «Ozploitation Auteurs» Brian Trenchard - Smith, Antony I. Ginnane, John D. Lamond, David Hannay, Richard Brennan, Alan Finney, Vincent Monton, Grant Page, and Roger Ward; a set of 26 deleted and extended scenes, now with optional audio commentary from Hartley and editors Sara Edwards and Jamie Blanks; The Lost NQH Interview: Chris Lofven, the director of the film Oz; A Word with Bob Ellis (which was formerly an Easter Egg on DVD); a Quentin Tarantino and Brian Trenchard - Smith interview outtake; a Melbourne International Film Festival Ozploitation Panel discussion; Melbourne International Film Festival Red Carpet footage; 34 minutes of low tech behind the scenes moments which were shot mostly by Hartley; a UK interview with Hartley; The Bazura Project interview with Hartley; The Monthly Conversation interview with Hartley; The Business audio interview with Hartley; an extended Ozploitation trailer reel (3 hours worth), with an opening title card telling us that Brian Trenchard - Smith cut together most of the trailers (Outback, Walkabout, The Naked Bunyip, Stork, The Adventures of Barry McKenzie, three for Barry McKenzie Holds His Own, Libido, Alvin Purple, Alvin Rides Again, Petersen, The Box, The True Story of Eskimo Nell, Plugg, The Love Epidemic, The Great MacArthy, Don's Party, Oz, Eliza Fraser, Fantasm, Fantasm Comes Again, The FJ Holden, High Rolling, The ABC of Love and Sex: Australia Style, Felicity, Dimboola, The Last of the Knucklemen, Pacific Banana, Centrespread, Breakfast in Paris, Melvin, Son of Alvin, Night of Fear, The Cars That Ate Paris, Inn of the Damned, End Play, The Last Wave, Summerfield, Long Weekend, Patrick, The Night, The Prowler, Snapshot, Thirst, Harlequin, Nightmares (aka Stage Fright), The Survivor, Road Games, Dead Kids (aka Strange Behavior), Strange Behavior, A Dangerous Summer, Next of Kin, Heatwave, Razorback, Frog Dreaming, Dark Age, Howling III: The Marsupials, Bloodmoon, Stone, The Man from Hong Kong, Mad Dog Morgan, Raw Deal, Journey Among Women, Money Movers, Stunt Rock, Mad Max, The Chain Reaction, Race for the Yankee Zephyr, Attack Force Z, Freedom, Turkey Shoot, Midnite Spares, The Return of Captain Invincible, Fair Game, Sky Pirates, Dead End Drive - In, The Time Guardian, Danger Freaks); Confession of an R - Rated Movie Maker, an interview with director John D. Lamond; an interview with director Richard Franklin on the set of Patrick; Terry Bourke's Noon Sunday Reel; the Barry McKenzie: Ogre or Ocker vintage documentary; the Inside Alvin Purple vintage documentary; the To Shoot a Mad Dog vintage documentary; an Ozploitation stills and poster gallery; a production gallery; funding pitches; and the documentary's original theatrical trailer.
Sam Peckinpah's most underrated film receives a good rather than great transfer, with an audio commentary that formidably analyzes the filmmaker's autumnal art.
The audio commentary also gives some great information on specific scenes.
Blu - ray Highlight: There's some really good supplemental material on the disc — like audio commentaries with the movie's producers, consultants and composer Cliff Martinez, as well as demonstrations on film processing, editing and dialogue editing — but Soderberg and writer Stephen Gaghan's commentary track is jam - packed with so much great information about making the movie that you'll definitely want to start there.
Also included is a solid commentary from author Stephen Rebello, an audio excerpt from the legendary series of Hitchcock interviews conducted by the great director and cinephile, François Truffaut, and the feature - length documentary, «The Making of Psycho,» which features interviews with Janet Leigh and screenwriter Joseph Stefano, both now sadly deceased.
Bonus Features: The DVD is packed with great special features including audio commentaries, deleted scenes and features showing an in - depth look at the Battle of the Bastards and a look inside the paint hall (where much of the behind - the - scenes work takes place).
Extras include an isolated score track in 2.0 mono DTS - HD; an audio commentary with film historians Eddy Friedfeld, Paul Scrabo, and Lee Pfeiffer, which is quite good and provides plenty of insight into the making of the film and its status as a New Hollywood film that's been forgotten and worth rediscovery (I concur); the film's original theatrical trailer, presented in HD; a scroll - through of the current Twilight Time catalogue; and as always, an excellent 8 - page insert booklet with an essay by the great Julie Kirgo.
The bonus features to «The Avengers» are the typical stuff - audio commentary, deleted and extended scenes, featurettes, gag reel - but every one of them is excellent, and they even threw in a great short film («Item 47,» starring Lizzy Caplan) to boot.
Our goal has been to focus on great writers and artists and provide what we call «deluxe digital graphic novels» that include audio commentaries by the artists, interviews, production sketches and loads more.
The audio commentary thanks to Jerry Lawler and Michael Cole is very impressive and these two pros do a great job at informing the gamer or gamers what is happening.
Maffew, I am always impressed with how you are great at balancing three different kinds of clips: — botches with original audio — botches with video game music — botches with commentary from podcasts / shoot videos Leaning too far in any one direction would make the videos suffer, but you usually seem to find the sweet spot....
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