RT on DVD & Blu-Ray: The Campaign and Alfred Hitchcock

Plus, a few worthy indie releases and a horror classic on Criterion.

This week on home video, our biggest movie is also the lowest-rated one on the list. This isn't to say it isn't any good (it still earned a 66% on the Tomatometer), but the smaller releases and the Blu-ray reissues are much stronger. See below for the full list!

The Campaign

67%

Who better to direct a political farce than the guy who helmed both films like Recount and Game Change as well as the Austin Powers movies? While we're at it, why not throw in a couple of comedy heavyweights like Will Ferrell and Zach Galifianakis to play a pair of ruthless political opponents running for the same office? It all seems to make perfect sense, doesn't it? Well, critics had a fine enough time with The Campaign, but that was also part of the problem: it was only just fine. Not uproarious, not particularly incisive, but just fine. At 66% on the tomatometer, The Campaign wasn't as smart or sharp as many believed it had the potential to be, but most who saw it still got their fair share of laughs from the film's charismatic leads.

Safety Not Guaranteed

94%

If her career continues to take off, this will be the film people point to for Aubrey Plaza?s "breakout performance." Based on a real-life joke ad-gone-viral, Safety Not Guaranteed follows a magazine journalist and two of his interns as they attempt to track down the author of a bizarre classified posting asking for companions on a time-traveling quest. As one of the interns (Plaza) earns the man's (Mark Duplass) trust, it becomes evident that there may be more to the story than they expected. Safety Not Guaranteed is full of great performances, nuanced humor, and charming characters, and it's Certified Fresh at 94%.

Ruby Sparks

79%

High-concept romantic comedies are hit-or-miss, but when executed properly, they can offer a refreshing break from typical fare. In the little seen Ruby Sparks, Paul Dano plays a young writer named Calvin struggling to duplicate the success of his first novel who begins a new work about a girl named -- you guessed it -- Ruby Sparks (Zoe Kazan, who also wrote the script). One day, Calvin wakes up to find that Ruby has materialized into a real person, and her personality manifests in whatever way he writes her. It's not the most original premise, but critics largely found it charming and delightful, if a bit twisted, and most had good things to say both about Kazan's acting and writing. Certified Fresh at 79%, this one will score with those looking for something a little out of the ordinary.

Elena

93%

Unless you live in a really big city with a flourishing independent cinema scene, or you happened to be in Cannes last year, you probably never got the chance to see Elena. This noir-ish Russian drama earned rave reviews en route to a Certified Fresh 93% and the Un Certain Regard Special Jury Prize at 2011's Cannes Film Festival. The story follows a late middle-aged woman named Elena who marries a wealthy businessman named Vladimir, a former nursing patient of hers. Her own son lives in poverty, and when Vladimir refuses to help with her son's family finances, Elena turns to a desperate plot that may backfire. Critics called Elena a slow-burning, superbly acted psychological thriller that paints a dark and haunting yet utterly riveting portrait of modern family dynamics in Russia. Definitely worth a watch if you're looking for a satisfying foreign drama.

Rosemary's Baby - Criterion Collection

98%

Just in time for Halloween, The Criterion Collection offers up its release of Roman Polanski's classic psychological thriller, Rosemary's Baby. Polanski's American debut, the film has earned a Certified Fresh 98% on the Tomatometer and is a staple of "best horror movie" lists. Mia Farrow stars as Rosemary Woodhouse, who moves into a new apartment building with her husband (John Cassavetes) and finds her new neighbors eccentric and unsettling. When she eventually becomes pregnant after a disturbing dream, Rosemary begins to suspect that her husband and the other tenants are conspiring to take her baby away. This Criterion edition features extras like a new making-of doc, an interview with Ira Levin (author of the source material), and a feature-length documentary on Krzysztof Komeda, the jazz musician who composed the score.

Alfred Hitchcock:The Masterpiece Collection - Blu-Ray

Several years ago, Universal released a 15-disc box set containing a solid chunk of Alfred Hitchcock's most famous work and called it The Masterpiece Collection. Though you won't get the same velvety box with Hitchcock's famous silhouette on the cover, The Masterpiece Collection is available this week on Blu-ray, and this time, they've seen fit to include one film many were disappointed they left out the first time: North by Northwest. The other films range from well known favorites like Psycho, Vertigo, and The Birds to less frequently mentioned works like Marnie and Saboteur. Each film comes with its own set of bonus features, so there's plenty to chew on here, but the price tag is hefty, so keep that in mind if you plan on putting this on your wish list.

Kadeem S.

Kadeem Stewart

Rosemary's Baby, now that's the kind of movie I'll be watching this Halloween.

I better see that punching baby movie, The Campaign is very funny.

Oct 29 - 07:17 PM

Kriftonucci

Jim Ylonen

All of them look rentable except Ruby Sparks...
THAT one I might buy.

Oct 29 - 07:36 PM

nathanpoitras

nathan poitras

Safety Not Guaranteed is worth owning as well, one of the best of the year easily.

Oct 31 - 11:47 AM

Bertram Krogh

Bertram Krogh

Safety Not Guaranteed and Ruby Sparks. Two of my favorite films this year. So far.
The Campaign was funny as heck, too. *SS ANd T*TT**S, *SS AND T*TT**S!

Oct 29 - 11:44 PM

MisterVile

Mister Vile

The Campaign was terrible. Anyone looking for laughs will be disappointed.

Oct 30 - 10:06 AM

ap sirius

karl anderson

Zack and Will seem to not know how to make a good comic film anymore.... And you can throw Ben Stiller and Adam Sandler onto that list too....Take the money and run seems to be everyone's credo nowadays.......

Oct 30 - 04:15 PM

Total  S.

Total Stranger

I agree, they're all taking dumps, though I feel Sandler is in a separate bucket than the rest. Sandler, at least, is still apparently trying to make us 'Laugh Out Loud', though failing in a repeating, cataclysmic fashion. The rest have given up on such an angle. Instead it seems the new direction is a 'so fucking dry its almost completely unwatchable but if you don't think its funny, its because the humor is too smart for you and you must be an idiot so don't speak out against it.'

Well, guess what? I'm an idiot. Greenberg and Visioneers were fecal piles. I'd rather watch a slideshow of bowel movement stills than those films again.

Turds...There. That's four, maybe even five bathroom references in the same post, if you include the bucket Sandler is in.

Oct 31 - 07:16 AM

MisterVile

Mister Vile

This post proves humanity has a chance. Dramatic, i know.

Oct 31 - 08:03 AM

MisterVile

Mister Vile

Movies like that prove critics can be wrong.

Oct 30 - 10:06 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

"Rosemary's Baby"! This is really happening! The extras sound tasty.

I might have a different idea of "masterpiece" than some folks, but, c'mon, "Topaz"? "Torn Curtain"? Over "Notorious", "Suspicion", "Foreign Corrospondant", "Spellbound", "Wrong Man", "I Confess", "Strangers on a Train"? Hitch is obviously an embarrassment of riches, but for 2-fiddy, I should be able to select my faves for a set this size. Plus, there are no new extras. Pass.

I'll have to see "Elena" and "Safety Not Guaranteed", but "Ruby Sparks" seems grating to me. That plot device is more worn out than Kelly Le Brock's T-shirt, ala "Weird Science" meets "Lars and the Real Girl". Paul Dano is a decent actor, but he's turning into the Jeremy Davies of the decade.

"Campaign" wasn't bad, worth a rental or cable watch. I think it's Ferrell's funniest since "Anchorman", and much better than either "Hangover" movie. And whether anyone cares or not, what the film says about money + politics is right on the nose.

Oct 30 - 12:25 PM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

Yeah I kind of think I'm gonna go with buying the Blu-Rays of the Hitchcock movies I love and keeping them collected in a box of my own making. Arts and Crafts anybody? I'm new to Hitchcock thanks to Netflix. Loved Dial M for Murder and Rebecca was amazing. Saw The Birds and Psycho of course. Looking forward to seeing Strangers on a Train.

I hate the premise of Ruby Sparks but I love the cast so I do look forward to seeing it. I just hope the protagonist isn't strumming a guitar on a bus at the end like most indie films.

Rosemary's Baby might be a bit to frightening for me to own with little ones running around. I'll admit it that movie still gives me the flipp'n creeps.

Oct 30 - 03:46 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

"Loved Dial M for Murder and Rebecca was amazing."

Ah, two more that are NOT in the box. I know much of this comes down to who owns the rights to which movie and such. But if we're talking 'masterpiece', then keep it affordable with a collection of the half dozen true classics (which would have to be Rear Window, North By Northwest, Vertigo, Psycho, The Birds and either Shadow of a Doubt, Strangers on a Train, Notorious, or Dial M for Murder) rather than padding it out with some films that aren't really as good. "Topaz" is almost certainly Hitchcock's worst film since the silent era.

Oct 30 - 04:01 PM

Dave J.

Dave Jordon

"Safety Not Guaranteed", "Ruby Sparks" and "Elena" look like something I'd watch, and seen everything else except "The Campaign" which I can probably wait!

Oct 30 - 12:46 PM

Jérémy Dion

Jérémy Dion

Safety not Guaranteed was a nice movie. Plus I needed my dose of Aubrey Plaza's deadpan humor. I also liked Ruby Sparks (especially towards the end). I really have to check out Elena, I've been hearing about it on the web for a while now. I think I'll pass on The Campaign.

Oct 30 - 12:59 PM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

Safety Not Guaranteed and Ruby Spark's for me. Get your indie Hipster freak on. Kind of curious about Ruby Sparks, it was praised as a years best at early on than later "meh" was the majority of critics feelings about it.

I really would like Alfred Hitchcock: The Masterpiece Collection but that is an awful lot of moola. What to do.

Oct 30 - 03:41 PM

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