Sentences with phrase «while featuring bonus»

[2] As such, the games often feature simple core gameplay, while featuring bonus levels and modes meant to appeal to more seasoned gamers.

Not exact matches

While its apps use the freemium model — a no - charge download with in - app purchases to access bonus features or accessories — the company has deployed measures to avoid the kind of kiddie overspending that garners bad press.
While Marriott is preserving that feature and the bonus points that it sometimes gives out during the transfer, earning fewer points through card spending means fewer miles on the other side of the trade.
However I usually try to reserve this cup for meal times because while it will not spill if knocked over, it will drip if turned upside down... a bonus feature for my two year old.
Moms will receive the stylish Mommy Bag while taking advantage of the convenient bonus features on drugstore.com including automatic shipping and 5 % back, helping them in managing a busy schedule and more time to enjoy with their children.
While steam and UV light can take 10 minutes or so, it has bonus features.
Equipped with a myriad of bonus goodies, including a sun shade, flip up lens covers, and 20 mm rail mounts, this scope is designed to deliver maximum results, while providing features that make your hunting trip easier.
At Samana, they have cool bonus features like color therapy and an auxiliary hookup for playing mantras while you float.
There is a paid 3 day trial that you can start off with to see if the bonus features are worth your while.
Full mobile access lets you flirt on the go, while bonus features such as an XXX theatre and the Free Porn App will ensure you're never bored with your membership.
Saving Private Ryan has its negligible flaws, but serious Blu - ray aficionados shouldn't hesitate for a moment to pick Paramount's «Sapphire Series» HD release — the video and audio is simply peerless, and the bonus features, while not new, are none too shabby either.
THE BLU - RAY DISC Scream Factory disburses these bits of Pierce's low - budget oeuvre in a fond double - platter package that gives The Town That Dreaded Sundown the Blu - ray spotlight while relegating bonus feature The Evictors to the normally - disposable bundled DVD.
Extras are, per Anderson's M.O., exasperatingly abstract: The cover copy refers to the bonus features as «special trailers,» but one is just a deleted scene of Shasta and Doc watching the waves lap against the shore at dusk (their lips are moving, but a dreamy Greenwood composition mutes everything they say), while the fourth and final, «Everything in this Dream,» is an artful 6 - minute montage of cutting - room scraps, including a few shots of Doc and Sauncho watching a schooner leave port that could be construed as the ending from Inherent Vice the novel.
While he is featured frequently in the bonus materials, the movie itself could have used more of his self - proclaimed «Piggy Power.»
Housed in a Blu - ray case in turn stored in a complementary embossed cardboard slipcover with lenticular imaging, this release ports over all of the special bonus features from the movie's 2008 two - disc collector's edition DVD release, while also offering separate Blu - ray discs, in both the conventional format and (for those with enabled players or a PlayStation 3 unit) 3 - D viewing.
The static lone menu attaches a looped minute of 8 - bit-esque score to the cover art, while simply giving you the choice to watch either the movie or the bonus feature.
While almost all of Studio Ghibli's films have been treated to two - disc Disney DVDs, few have been really jam - packed with bonus features.
While the bonus features are slight, the making - of documentary does an excellent job of charting the course of a movie that took a long time to come together.
While other DVD bonus features have attempted to explain the animation process, this one succeeds with simplicity.
While The Shaggy Dog took quite a bit longer than most films to land on disc, the wait seems acceptable, as Walt's first all - out comedy is treated to a delightful widescreen transfer and three worthwhile bonus features.
The DVD's pitiful two bonus features will leave much to be desired for that format's audience, while the Blu - ray's picture - in - picture commentary, deleted scenes, and Easter egg go a ways to meet expectations on that format.
While it might be better appreciated as a bonus feature on one of the movies ($ 20 is a lot to pay these days for a completely barebones DVD), it has enough value to justify this standalone release.
A couple of the bonus features are worthwhile while others aren't so much and the self - praise runs the risk of hardening an audience's criticism.
While you might think that Great Britain's first computer - animated feature film lends itself to some insightful bonus material on how the Brits did things differently (and less expensively), Valiant lays a big egg in the supplements department with just two measly offerings.
The new cut of the film includes 13 minutes of extra film footage that extends individual scenes, while the discs will include nearly nine hours of new bonus features and will be available just ahead of the December 13 theatrical release of the second film of the trilogy, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug.
While the lack of Bouzereau's documentary is a bummer, the bonus features on this disc are very comprehensive, and if you don't have the 2012 Blu - ray, this one is a worthwhile purchase.
Warner Archive's Blu - ray provides great picture and underwhelming stereo sound, while retaining the main bonus features of interest.
More exciting yet and in some ways the set's biggest attraction is the other bonus feature: seven student short films (in highly presentable HD) that Pixar directors John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton, and Pete Docter made while attending CalArts.
While the sole bonus feature is fluffy, it entertains, and with so many other seasons on the horizons, there's plenty of time for meatier supplements.
While there isn't the standard slate of special features you'd expect with a film like this, there's plenty of behind - the - scene and bonus content to make it worth a buy.
If you're a fan of this film, you might wish for more bonus features, but given its place in cinema history, you probably won't get much more than this for a while.
While somewhat plentiful in number, the collection of bonus features are insignificant.
Rush makes several appearances on two bonus features, and while she doesn't say whether she approved of choice of Carla Gugino to play her, the actress best known for her roles in «Spy Kids,» «Night at the Museum,» «Race to Witch Mountain, and «Entourage,» does a decent job.
The only other bonus tidbit is a seven - minute featurette, «Hellish Kitchens: Art Imitates Restaurant Life,» that features the Broken Lizard gang reminiscing about old food service employment, shared and otherwise, all while apparently riding to set together in a noisy van.
While the standard DVD contains several supplements, most bonus features remain exclusive to the Blu - ray disc.
The Deluxe Extended Edition DVD had a slew of bonus features, while this initial Blu - ray release has a much quieter package of extras.
But in an interview on Criterion's new Blu - ray of Renoir's full - length 1931 film La Chienne (which also contains «On Purge Bébé» as a bonus feature), scholar Christopher Faulkner says the French master quickly realized the possibilities of sound, even while cranking out a thudding farce.
While it's easy to accept the loss of any one of these features and it's tough to feel the need for extras beyond the over two - hour documentary included here, it is still frustrating for all this bonus material to get cut.
This 30th Anniversary DVD delivers terrific quality for the feature presentation, while its bonus features are a bit of a mixed bag.
The mock - up contains fifteen heavy - parchment pages of art from the book (a few of which made it into the movie's prologue), while Sullivan, an animator on the film, contributes the only bonus feature new to this presentation, a seventeen - minute «Evil Dead II: Behind - the - Screams» slideshow in which he narrates a series of photos he and others took on the set.
Bonus materials on the 2 - disc 4K Ultra HD / Blu - ray Combo Pack include audio commentary with director Duncan Jones, writer Ben Ripley and actor Jake Gyllenhaal; 5 Crazy Details You Might Have Missed; Access: Source Code with dynamic scene - specific features: listen to interviews with cast and crew, hear an expert's comments on time travel, go behind the science with animated documentary shorts on time travel, and enjoy trivia and facts while watching the movie.
The Play, Scene Selection, and Set - Up menu are, of course, unique to each movie, while selecting Bonus Features or Sneak Peeks from either sub-menu will lead to the same place.
While retaining the audio commentary and adding the new retrospective, this Anniversary Edition does drop the other bonus features found on the previous DVD's Disc One.
While its inclusion is worthwhile, it's best to view it on its own in the Bonus Features section rather than play it along with the rest of the film (that option is presented after selecting «Play» from the main menu).
Web of Shadows is at least watch - able for just about anyone and while the lightweight bonus features are obviously aimed at a younger (and more susceptible to advertising) group, the audio / video treatment should mostly please a home theater enthusiast.
While the cinema verite nature of this bonus feature is certainly compelling and the design and angles make use of DVD technology, watching all six angles all the way through would probably only interest the most technically - inclined of viewers.
The bonus features, at first glance a full slate, are mostly brief and highly commercial, while those that aren't are just odd.
The movie is treated to four alternate soundtracks that should cover virtually every North American viewer, while it and most of its bonus features are also subtitled in all the same ways (aside from the DVS track, for obvious reasons).
... Ahead of its home entertainment release here in the UK next Monday, Marvel has dropped details of the special features and deleted scenes set to be included with Avengers: Age of Ultron, while we've also had a sneak peek at some of the bonus material thanks to a featurette entitled «Designing New Powers» [see here], along with the film's blooper reel [see here]
It's actually a worthwhile purchase because while it replicates the bonus features from that DVD set, it features a stellar restoration of the movie, so that alone is worth the upgrade price.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z