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Closeup: Tom Cruise

by Alex Castle

It’s kind of weird — there’s nobody in Hollywood that attracts as much snark and derision as a personality than Tom Cruise, and yet almost all of his movies make money, there are so, so many of them, and more of them are good than bad. Is it his impossible good looks? His religion? His excessive enthusiasm and zest for life? The fact that most of the time he plays super-cocky guys that could stand to be taken down a peg or two? I don’t know, but I do know better than to bet against Oblivion, which opened this past weekend. Need proof? Cue up almost any of his 24 movies available on Blockbuster On Demand, lie back, and enjoy The Cruise.

Tom-Cruise2

Risky Business

A straight-A high school student (Cruise) meets an extra sexy young call girl (Rebecca DeMornay), drives his dad’s Porsche into a lake, and turns the family home into a whorehouse while his parents are out of town for the weekend. Princeton could use a guy like Joel!

Top Gun

A super-cocky Navy pilot (you know who) goes to train with the best of the best, breaks all the rules, shares some uncomfortably long stares with Val Kilmer, plays volleyball, and beats the Russkies in a dogfight without starting World War III. All in a day’s work!

Rain Man

A high-end car salesman (who else?) learns he’s been cut out of his estranged father’s will in favor of the severely autistic older brother (Dustin Hoffman) he never knew he had, so he kidnaps him in hopes of getting a cut of the cash. Everyone remembers Hoffman’s performance, but this was Cruise’s first meaty dramatic role, for which he drew (deserved) critical accolades.

Born On The Fourth Of July

Clear-eyed Long Island kid Ron Kovic eagerly enlists in the Marines to fight in Vietnam, but when he comes back paralyzed from the Read More

Classic Baseball Films

by Alex Castle

Rejoice, friends, for this week the colors are a little brighter, the food tastes a little better, and the children are laughing a little louder; the awful five-month gray wasteland known as the baseball off-season has come to a merciful end. But why should you limit your enjoyment of the national pastime to every day (and most nights) between now and November? There are tons of baseball movies just a click away on Blockbuster On Demand to help fill in the gaps — here are some of the best:

The Natural

A baseball prodigy so devoted to the game he carves his own bat out of a felled tree, and so good-looking he’s played by Robert Redford, misses out on his prime when he gets shot by Barbara Hershey, but eventually gets a second shot as a 35-year-old rookie. Not the most realistic movie, but still very entertaining, with Robert Duvall, Glenn Close, and Kim Basinger co-starring.

 

 

 

Field Of Dreams

“If you build it, they will come.” Never has a more patently untrue piece of advice made it into the lexicon, as many a failed restaurant owner can attest. But one ghostly whisper into the ear of Iowa corn farmer Kevin Costner leads him to build a full-on baseball diamond in his cornfield, and next thing he knows, ghosts are playing on it. It sounds weird when you write it out like that, but it’s a good flick.

 

 

 

Moneyball

The massaging of a major-league team’s payroll through the use of innovative statistical analysis may seem like pretty thin gruel for a movie, but screenwriters Aaron Sorkin and Steven Zaillian wisely keep the focus on Oakland A’s GM Billy Beane (Brad Pitt) and his struggle to get the organization to go along with his plan, and his relationship with his daughter. Far more compelling than it has any right to be.

 

 

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More Where That Came From


by Alex Castle

Now that the smoke has cleared at the Oscars and Argo, Daniel Day-Lewis, Jennifer Lawrence, Christoph Waltz, Anne Hathaway, and Ang Lee have all taken home their trophies for the major awards, it’s natural not to want to let the moment end. But except for Argo, none of the winning movies are out on VOD yet, so if you need a little more J-Law or A-Hath or, uh, D.D.-Lew? D-Day-Lew? (not every name really works for that), we’ve assembled some of the best past work by the 2013 Oscar winners, all available to watch instantly at Blockbuster On Demand!

Daniel Day Lewis, Best Actor for Lincoln
I don’t know about you but I was struck during DDL’s unprecedented third Best Actor acceptance speech by what a diminutive, unassuming, small-voiced fellow he is, in stark contrast to his other two Oscar-winning performances: in My Left Foot, where he played a sclerotic poet either drinking, verbally abusing someone, or convulsing (usually more than one at a time); and even more so, in There Will Be Blood, where he played deep-voiced, imposing, intimidating oil baron Daniel Plainview. Has anyone else ever actually been able to make their eyes gleam with evil? DDL does it here, and it’s the most impressive transformation into a character I can think of.

Jennifer Lawrence, Best Actress for Silver Linings Playbook
Could this gal have stolen America’s heart any more decisively than she did Sunday night? Did you see her meet Jack Nicholson? Is there anyone not on board with Jennifer Lawrence right now? Her performance in Silver Linings Playbook was great: manic and charming at the same time (not an easy combination to pull off), so if you’re hankering for more, her Oscar-nominated turn in Winter’s Bone as a young girl taking care of her siblings and mentally ill mother in dirt-poor Misssouri meth country should get you over the hump. It’s a very different performance from Silver Linings, but then that’s why they hand out trophies for this kind of thing. Likewise, Lawrence provided a welcome shot of both pathos and charisma in the role of shapeshifting alien Mystique in X-Men: First Class.

Anne Hathaway, Best Supporting Actress for Les Miserables
In the whole field of Oscar nominees, the only one I would have actually bet money on to win was Anne Hathaway, and I didn’t even see Les Miz, just a short clip of her singing into the camera in despair. It’s hard to find anything as intense or as soul-baring as that in her previous work — or anyone’s, for that matter — but to show how much range she has, don’t forget she was the only bright spot in The Dark Knight Rises, the (I’m sorry) bloated, overserious, too-grim-by-half capper to Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy. And for a third totally different tone, check her out in The Devil Wears Prada, which could have been a very by-the-numbers “ingenue in the big city” but is elevated with strong turns by Hathaway, Emily Blunt, Stanley Tucci, and of course Meryl Streep, nominated for her 83rd Oscar as Vogue editor Anna Wintour. I mean, “Runway” editor “Miranda Priestly.”

Ang Lee, Best Director for Life of Pi
It’s hard to imagine a bigger filmmaking challenge than to set an entire movie in a rowboat on the ocean with a young boy and a tiger as your only characters, but Ang Lee not only pulled it off, Life of Pi was nominated for Best Picture and 11 other Oscars, winning four. Ang Lee has had a very diverse career from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon to Hulk to Taking Woodstock, but for me his best movie is The Ice Storm, a suburban drama set over Thanksgiving 1973, as both adult and adolescent characters struggle to break out of ennui, boredom, and well-worn roles through drink, drugs, sex, and of course, putting all their car keys in a bowl. Lee also won a Best Director for 2005′s Brokeback Mountain, the poignant story of a love more forbidden than most in 1960s Wyoming, starring Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway, and Michelle Williams.

Quentin Tarantino, Best Original Screenplay for Django Unchained
Whatever else you want to say about Quentin Tarantino, give him this: the man can spin a good yarn. Over the last 20 years he’s written quite a few great screenplays, and Django was certainly no exception, but for me his best were both from very early on: True Romance, his first produced script, was directed by Tony Scott and was as clear a mission statement as any artist could ever hope for. The off-topic conversational dialogue, the wall-to-wall pop culture references, the over-the-top violence, the matter-of-fact drug use… it’s all there. And, Tarantino’s directorial debut, Reservoir Dogs, may be his tightest script of all: the aftermath of a jewel heist gone wrong turns into a circular firing squad as the crooks try and figure out which of them tipped off the cops.

Ben Affleck, producer, director, and star of Best Picture winner Argo
The win for Argo, the snubs for Actor and Director notwithstanding, was Affleck’s second Oscar. The first was for co-writing the screenplay for Good Will Hunting, a surprisingly assured debut script about a math whiz with a troubled background. Then there was about 10 years of increasingly not so good movies, and then Affleck re-emerged in 2007 as the director of Gone Baby Gone, a tight kidnapping thriller starring Ben’s brother Casey (between you and me, a better actor than his big brother) and drawing on Affleck’s love of his hometown to make Boston a character in the movie. Affleck’s second feature as director, The Town, he took the lead role for himself, and although I didn’t like the movie quite as much as Gone Baby Gone it was nominated for Best Picture, which set the stage for Sunday’s Argo triumph. I’m happy for Mr. Affleck and I wish him continued success, but let us never forget: Gigli happened. 

Gigli happened.

Steve Carell’s Rise in Movies

little_miss_sunshine

Improv veteran, character actor, and former Daily Show correspondent Steve Carell became an unlikely movie star when, after giving the funniest performance in a movie packed full of them (Anchorman), he won the lead in TV veteran Judd Apatow’s first feature as a director, the sleeper smash The 40-Year-Old Virgin. Since then Carell has built a diverse career of both leading and supporting roles, leading up to this week’s release of The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, a comedy about magicians with Jim Carrey, Olivia Wilde, and Steve Buscemi. So let’s take a look back!

The 40-Year-Old Virgin

Both Judd Apatow and Steve Carell burst on the scene with the story of a man who’s completely given up on love and dating after a lifetime of failure, forced to grow up when he meets Catherine Keener. This movie also brought Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill, Paul Rudd, Mindy Kaling, Jane Lynch, and Kat Dennings to their widest audiences yet, and each and every one of them took that ball and ran it downfield, through the locker room, and past the parking lot.

Little Miss Sunshine

On the far opposite end of the tone spectrum, Carell plays a gay Proust scholar, despondent about the end of a long-term relationship and dragged on a cross-country trip with his sister’s family. Though Alan Arkin won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar, Carell’s Read More

2013′s Oscar Winners’ Best Past Movies

Now that the smoke has cleared at the Oscars and Argo, Daniel Day-Lewis, Jennifer Lawrence, Christoph Waltz, Anne Hathaway, and Ang Lee have all taken home their trophies for the major awards, it’s natural not to want to let the moment end. But except for Argo, none of the winning movies are out on VOD yet, so if you need a little more J-Law or A-Hath or, uh, D.D.-Lew? D-Day-Lew? (not every name really works for that), we’ve assembled some of the best past work by the 2013 Oscar winners, all available to watch instantly at Blockbuster On Demand!

Daniel Day Lewis, Best Actor for Lincoln

“I drink your milkshake!”

 

We don’t know about you but we were struck during DDL’s unprecedented third Best Actor acceptance speech by what a diminutive, unassuming, small-voiced, slightly effeminate fellow he is, in stark contrast to his other two Oscar-winning performances: in My Left Foot, where he played a sclerotic poet either drinking, verbally abusing someone, or convulsing (usually more than one at a time); and even more so, in There Will Be Blood, where he played deep-voiced, imposing, intimidating oil baron Daniel Plainview. Has anyone else ever actually been able to make their eyes gleam with evil? DDL does it here, and it’s the most impressive transformation into a character we can think of.

Jennifer Lawrence, Best Actress for Silver Linings Playbook

Could this gal have stolen America’s heart any more decisively than she did Sunday night? Did you see her meet Jack Nicholson? Is there anyone not on board with Jennifer Lawrence right now? Her performance in Silver Linings Playbook was great: manic and charming at the same time (not an easy combination to pull off), so if you’re hankering for more, her Oscar-nominated turn in Winter’s Bone as a young girl taking care of her siblings and mentally ill mother in dirt-poor Missouri meth country should get you over the hump. It’s a very different performance from Silver Linings, but then that’s why they hand out trophies for this kind of thing. Likewise, Lawrence provided a welcome shot of both pathos and charisma in the role of shapeshifting alien Mystique in X-Men: First Class.

Anne Hathaway, Best Supporting Actress for Les Miserables

In the whole field of Oscar nominees, the easiest one to bet money on to win was Anne Hathaway for her role in Les Mis. It’s hard to find anything as intense or as soul-baring as that in her previous work — or anyone’s, for that matter — but to show how much range she has, don’t forget she was a shining bright spot in The Dark Knight Rises, the super intense, perhaps too grim capper to Christopher Read More

Argo Enters the Ranks of the Best Classic Historical Dramas

By Alex Castle

It’s starting to look like Ben Affleck’s Argo is the front-runner for the Best Picture trophy at this year’s Academy Awards, what with the Golden Globes and the SAG awards it’s already racked up. I’m not sure Argo was literally the best picture of 2012, though I liked it a lot; I thought what worked best about it was the way it evoked the chaotic atmosphere of post-Shah Iran and the palpable sense of dread the hostages must have felt. Likewise, Argo‘s main competition for the big prize, Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty gets the facts of the hunt for Bin Laden but also the way that search changed the people who led it.

Argo

The best historical dramas do this: they show us not just what happened, but what it felt like when it happened. Here are some of our favorite movies dramatizing real events, all available at Blockbuster stores, from Blockbuster By Mail, and instantly at Blockbuster On Demand.

The Right Stuff

The early days of the United States space program are beautifully brought to life from Chuck Yeager’s breaking of the sound barrier to John Glenn’s triumphant orbit of the Earth, with a great young cast of future stars including Dennis Quaid, Ed Harris, Scott Glenn, Sam Shepard, and Fred Ward. Not a lot of three-hour-plus movies are this compelling, but I could sit through this one twice in a row.

Apollo 13

The only triumph greater than a successful space mission is the rescue of the astronauts from a space mission gone completely pear-shaped. Tom Hanks, Bill Paxton, and Kevin Bacon play the astronauts forced to improvise their way back to Earth in a craft not remotely designed for it, with a near unbearable sense of anxiety on the ground as NASA tries to bring them home safely.

Born on the Fourth of July

Oliver Stone has made quite a few historically-based dramas, but probably the least, shall we say fanciful, is the one about Ron Kovic, a gung-ho Marine volunteer who ends up paraplegic, badly shaken by the horror of war, and an outspoken critic of the Vietnam War. Tom Cruise earned an Academy Award nomination in the role, proving (to some) that he could actually act.

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Teachers to the Rescue Collection

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William Arthur Ward said, “The mediocre teacher tells. The good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher inspires.” It’s the same with movies—especially movies about inspiring teachers. With the release of Here Comes the Boom — about a teacher who takes to the mixed martial arts octagon in hopes of raising enough money to save his school’s music program — what better time to take a look at inspiring teachers of the silver screen.

All of these titles and more great collections are available to rent at Blockbuster On Demand.

Stand and Deliver
Based on the true story of a math teacher in East L.A. who turns around the lives of his troubled students by teaching them calculus. In 2011, the Library of Congress declared this movie “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” and it has been preserved in the National Film Registry. Edward James Olmos and a young Lou Diamond Phillips in prime acting form.

Lean on Me
Another film based on a true story, Joe Clark is a strict principal who practices tough-love at a decaying school in Patterson, NJ. He uses unorthodox methods and lights a fire under his teachers and students to fight a state takeover of the school by improving test scores. One of Morgan Freeman’s finest roles, and that’s saying something.

Top Entertainment Stories of the Week

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If you love all things entertainment, you’ll love hearing about everything going on this week in the biz. Here’s the scoop:
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Top Entertainment Stories of the Week

VincentVega

Been too busy this week to catch up on the important stuff like entertainment news? Don’t worry — we have it covered! Here’s this week’s biggest celebrity news:

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Top 10 Entertainment Stories of the Week

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Get your weekly dose of entertainment news right here on our blog. We’ve compiled a list of the top 10 related stories of the week. Check it out:

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