Theres a wide variety of films hitting DVD this week just in time for holiday shopping.
The Dark Knight Rises, Grade B: Batman returns to save Gotham City after Bane unleashes his destruction.
Christopher Nolan is a victim of his own success. Under other circumstances, his latest venture into the dark and gritty world of the comic book hero Batman, The Dark Knight Rises, would be a triumph. But it comes in the wake of his nearly perfect The Dark Knight. By comparison, this last film falls short, from plot to villain to those wonderful toys.
Beasts of the Southern Wild, Grade B-plus: The 6-year-old Hushpuppy (Quvenzhane Wallis) and her father, Wink (Dwight Henry), live a spare existence, with almost all modern contrivances wiped from their lives.
Director Benh Zeitlin layers this hard reality with a fantastic story of the Aurochs, prehistoric beasts that escape their ice prisons to charge the small community. Real or not, these creatures personify the world Hushpuppy must face. Zeitlin creates a world that exists in both the real and surreal, where each foot is so deeply planted that its difficult to tell the existences apart.
Men in Black 3, Grade C-minus: Its been a decade since the last Men in Black, and time has not been good to the franchise. The latest film lacks energy and is cinematically wrinkled by a plot that includes the always tricky twist of time travel.
Will Smith gives his best effort, but the dark and offbeat humor that made the first two films a success has faded away over the decade. The best the screenwriters have to offer is a few variations on jokes from past movies.
Sparkle, Grade C-plus: The remake of the 1976 film starring Irene Cara is like a great song with a bad chorus. Just when it looks like its settling into a smooth groove, it hits a sour note. Sparkle doesnt, but it does have some flashy moments especially from Jordin Sparks and Mike Epps.
Hope Springs, Grade B: The film is a return to the classic romance. Seasoned actors Tommy Lee Jones and Meryl Streep play a long-married couple who have reached apathetic levels.
Arnold (Jones) is content to live an uneventful life; Kay (Streep) longs to rekindle the romance and enrolls the couple in a clinic offered by Dr. Feld (Steve Carell) in the New England hamlet of Great Hope Springs. Outside the two stars, the film has some problems. There are places and people introduced that never fully pay off.
The Odd Life of Timothy Green, Grade C: A couples dreams of having a child come true because of some garden magic. This family film is rooted in good intentions and positive messages. Sadly, the idea was not nurtured by director Peter Hedges, who co-wrote the script, and the story wilted.
ALSO NEW THIS WEEK:
2012 World Series Champion Season in Review: San Francisco Giants: A look at the teams winning season.




