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I think this is for the Spanish release of the DVD, but I am not sure.
http://www.zonadvd.com/modules.php?name … e&sid=9927
The translated to English page:
http://translate.google.com/translate?u … uage_tools
If I read the Special Features correctly, it looks like the DVD will have a trailer, filmographies. Doesn't look like they even get the featurette.
Perhaps someone who can read that can translate it better.
Just thought I'd past it on.
Sorry if it's already known.
Region 2 DVD has been announced and you guys were probably expecting this, but the extras are exactly the same as on the Region 1 DVD that Universal put out.
Info below.
http://www.dvdactive.com/news/releases/alpha-dog3.html
Official, AD made more overseas than in the U.S.
TOTAL LIFETIME GROSSES
Domestic: $15,242,450 49.9%
+ Foreign: $15,326,428 50.1%
= Worldwide: $30,568,878
Just thought I'd chime in again with box office totals/ DVD rentals. (Can't figure in DVD sales as I can't find a site that actually lists such stats.)
TOTAL LIFETIME GROSSES
Domestic: $15,242,450 50.3%
+ Foreign: $15,061,134 49.7%
= Worldwide: $30,303,584DVD / HOME VIDEO SUMMARY
Rental Gross: $12.07 million
(as of 5/20/07)
So it has made a total of at least $42,373,584
Not too bad at all.
I heard that Matt Damon was going to play the young Kirk.
Also that Ryan Gosling is interested in a role in it.
And that Adrien Brody, Gary Sinise and Daniel Dae Kim may also be intersted in it.
It's supposed to have more action than anyother Trek film.
It's due for release in December 2008.
Look what arrived today (thanks, Deb!):
-TeeJay
I see a Star Trek: DS9 fan. Major Kira and Dr. Julian Bashir.
I used to subscribe to the Official Star Trek fan club, never got into Enterprise though.
Hopefully the new Star Trek film will be good.
http://www.davisdvd.com/news/dvd.html
Expected DVD street date is in September.(Region 1)
This will likely piss off some people, but I thought that I would show you what Black Snake Moan DVD will feature in terms of extras.
http://www.thedigitalbits.com/
will include audio commentary with writer/director Craig Brewer, deleted scenes and 3 featurettes (Conflicted: The Making of Black Snake Moan, Rooted in the Blues and The Black Snake Moan).
So here we have Paramount release a film that made only $9,387,734 at the box office on DVD with more extras, and then we have Universal release a film that made $26,781,871 at the box office on DVD with only 1 featurette and a "timeline".
So this can't be about the money, it must be because of something else.
Just chiming in again. I got the DVD today. I got it at Meijer. I was able to use 2 coupons that I got from them last week on todays shopping.
One coupon was for $10 off any DVD that was $10 or more in price (which I got by buying $15 worth of certain brand food products last week.
The other coupon was for $5 off of my shopping total of $25 or more (which I got last week by doing my regular grocery shopping).
So Meijer was selling the DVD for $19.95, but with the 2 coupons I got it for $4.95.
When I get the time I'll watch it, but I did open it up and as usual for Universal DVD lately the DVD itself has no artwork at all. You also get a little insert that promotes the HD-DVD format.
Alpha Dog has been nominated for 1 MTV Movie Award.
http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles … tory.jhtml
Breakthrough Performance (vote now!)
» Emily Blunt, "The Devil Wears Prada"
» Abigail Breslin, "Little Miss Sunshine"
» Lena Headey, "300"
» Columbus Short, "Stomp the Yard"
» Jaden Smith, "The Pursuit of Happyness"
» Justin Timberlake, "Alpha Dog"
I think if we ever get a special edition, it'll likely be 1 to 3 years away. Nick has already posted on IMDB that there is no work being done at all on a SE and that Universal hasn't even contacted him about doing one.
As of right now I consider talk of a SE as just wishful thinking. Even if Nick or Matt posted on IMDB that work on a SE has begun I would consider that as a rumor. The only way I consider it as a fact is when Universal officially announces the DVD, and then when it's available for pre-order.
Found another review of the DVD. Looks like the fans of Chris will not like the extras at all, it apears he isn't in them at all.
A Cautionary Tale: The Making of Alpha Dog (11.32 mins)
Writer/director Nick Cassavetes, executive producer Butch Kaplan and stars Emile Hirsch, Justin Timberlake, Shawn Hatosy, Ben Foster and Sharon Stone talk about bringing the true story of Jesse James Hollywood to the silver screen. The group talk about adapting the story, casting and the chain of events that led to the tragic events that took place. The cast talk about the themes of the movie and how the story and their characters affected them playing the roles.Witness Timeline
Read the witness statements and watch their moments in the movieTrailers
Previews of 'Breach', 'Children of Men', 'Smokin' Aces', 'Hot Fuzz' and 'The Hitcher'OVERALL
With only a short featurette and a timeline special feature, fans will be a little disappointed with the bonus materials for 'Alpha Dog'. This is a movie crying out for commentary track, especially from the talented and young ensemble cast.
On this weekends Ebert & Roper they have about AD in their Thumbs Up Video segment.
It comes on about 1/2 way through the show.
You might, yes. (Invisble extras)
The Good Shepherd only got deleted scenes. No featurettes, no commentaries with the director or the cast. And that film was a critical success, and even that got short changed in the extras.
But then you have other studios putting out dvd's with very good extras. For instance the upcoming release of Happily N'Ever After (which was a critical and box office bomb) gets the following extras from Lionsgate:
Happily N'Ever After? - Alternate Ending
Deleted Scenes: Lost in Fairy Tale Land
3 Fun Featurettes:
·Journey of the Characters in the Enchanted Forest
·Creating the Happily Story: Bringing N'Ever After to Life
·From Storyboard to Fairy Tale: A Comparison
Director's Commentary
Games from The Department of Fairy Tale Security:
·Munk's Fairy Tale Fix
·Mambo and Munk's Magical Matchmaker
·Create Your Own Witch's Broom
Doesn't make sense at all, why a kids film gets better extras than AD.
He'll need another surgery to replace the part of his mandible (sp?) that they had to remove due to his cancer, so it'll be a long time until he'll be able to return.
I just wish they would pick a permanent "guest reviewer" then having all of these people that most of us never even heard of. This past weekend they had the singer John Cougar Mellencamp on as the guest reviewer, and he basically liked everything.
Don't get me wrong about Ebert. I want him to return and of course get better first. But sometimes I think he should retire because of his health, but then again I admire his strength to want to continue.
I don't know if you saw the footage of Ebert attending the film festival recently, but he looks very different than before. I don't think he'll ever return to the show again. Don't want to seem mean or anything, but I wonder why they keep his name in the show's title. He hasn't been on there for a very long time now and it's likely he'll never be able to return to it. Do they keep it in the title because of contractual reasons or is it just name recognition.
Getting back to Alpha Dog, someone on the home theater forum posted this about Universal and their lack of good extras on their DVD's.
Why is Universal releasing many newer films with so few extras?
Here are some of the extras on some newer films released by Universal.Because I Said So:
· The Making Of Because I Said So.
· Designing a Wilder World.
· iVillage Ad.
· Music Video World Spins Madly On By The WeepiesAlpha Dog:
A Cautionary Tale:
·The Making of Alpha Dog
Witness Timeline
·Get detailed information on each witness as the shocking events unfold.Smokin' Aces:
Alternate Ending and 18 Minutes of Deleted Scenes and Outtakes
Shoot 'Em Up: Stunts & Effects
·Uncover the secrets behind some of the film's most action-packed scenes!
And Much More!The Good Shepherd:
16 Minutes of Deleted ScenesLet's Go To Prison:
Includes Deleted Scenes and Original R-Rated Theatrical Version.Man of the Year:
Robin Williams: A "Stand Up" Guy
·Get a rare behind-the-scenes look at the hilarious improvisational genius of Robin Williams.
Commander And Chief
·Go on-set to see how acclaimed director Barry Levinson got the most hilarious performances out of his all-star cast.And then we get lame extras on the upcoming Flash Gordon special edition, even though we've been waiting for it for years and other regions have a better special edition.
Then the recent re-release of Brokeback Mountain was also nothing special at all.Seems that very few of Universal's releases of new films have many good extras anymore. Seems most don't have audio commentaries at all, or even deleted scenes. Seems that all they do is putting one or two featurettes on the DVD and releasing it.
I remember that Universal used to put out some very good DVD's, but for over a year they have released some very lame DVD's in terms of extras.
I have no idea who she is, never heard of her before. But I found this site about her.
http://www.libertyfilmfestival.com/inde … &Itemid=30
The Liberty Film Festival was founded in July of 2004 by Govindini Murty and Jason Apuzzo to celebrate free speech, patriotism, religious freedom and democracy by providing a forum in the heart of Hollywood for conservative and libertarian filmmakers.
Seems like she may be a right wing, conservative nut, which may explain why she didn't like the film. It also would explain why at the end of the review she brought up why didn't they make a film about a young guy going to Iraq and fighting for his country.
You can see the review at the following link, click on "Review Archive" at the bottom of the page and then go back up and scroll through the list until Alpha Dog shows up and click on it.
http://bventertainment.go.com/tv/buenav … androeper/
Hey, Illinois, who was the guest reviewer on Ebert & Roeper that week? And what did he/she and Roeper have to say? I missed it.
Sorry it took so long to get back about this.
The guest reviewer was "Govindini Murty" an actress/ Film Columnist
Roeper said that he liked Justin's performance. The film was shocking. It had many outstanding performances. Sharon Stone gave one of her best performances of her career in this film. That the film teeters on being a cautionary tale and exploitation. He gave it a Thumbs Up
She didn't like it at all. She called it emotionary pornography. That the film condones their behavior, that it glamorizes it. And that "We have enough films like this." She gave it a thumbs down.
The review maybe on their official site.
I'm starting to dub the tapes over to DVD now. I'm using a Magnavox MWR 10D6 that I bought from Wal-Mart for around $100. Great recorder that works great and records to all the DVD+R discs I've used so far. Not a bad recording so far.Most of it I'll record at the 2 hours speed, towards the end I'll switch to the 2.5 or 3 hour speed.
About 90 minutes will be the two recordings of the Dateline piece.
Video interview here: http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=20058
The previews look very interesting, May check it out when it comes out o DVD.
Found another review of the DVD.
http://www.upcomingdiscs.com/dvd_review … ate_posted
If any of you watch America's Most Wanted or have followed the news over the past few years, chances are you know about Jesse James Hollywood, the notorious twenty-year-old drug dealer. Alpha Dog is based upon Hollywood, his crew, and their unlawful activities. Of course the names are changed due to the fact that there are trials pending, but the story is a chilling tale of how young men can push each other too far trying to adhere to a "tough guy" image.
Johnny Truelove (Emile Hirsch, The Girl Next Door) isn't your typical twenty-year-old; the owner of a nice home, numerous exotic vehicles, and the head of an expanding drug empire. He runs a tight crew with a few close friends shadowing his every movement - Frankie Ballenbacher (Justin Timberlake, Black Snake Moan), Elvis Schmidt (Shawn Hatosy, The Faculty), and Tiko Martinez (professional middleweight boxer Fernando Vargas). When the group isn't peddling drugs they spend their time partying, which is exactly what they are doing when Jake Mazursky (Ben Foster, Hostage) comes over to settle a debt with Johnny. After a disagreement, Johnny attacks Jake, but ends up submersed in his own pool after being thrown threw the patio window. Jake returns home to his girlfriend and is shortly thereafter visited by his brother Zach (Anton Yelchin, House of D). After a few beers and joints Jake drives his fifteen year old brother home to distressed parents.
The following morning Zach wakes up, and hoping to delay the inevitable argument with his parents, leaves through his window and kills time walking around the neighborhood. Little does he know that his life is about to change forever. Johnny Truelove and his crew are out looking for Jake but instead see Zach walking alone. They chase Zach down and kick him around a little before throwing him into their van and driving off. The group keeps Zach pretty docile, constantly feeding him beer, pot, and introducing him to girls. He is even given several opportunities to escape captivity but refuses to so he doesn't cause his brother any more problems. The good times start to spiral with doubt over Zach's future and everyone is starting to get a little paranoid over the situation.
Alpha Dog is a solid and mostly factual look into the story of the notorious Jesse James Hollywood (Johnny Truelove in the movie). Surprisingly well cast, it proves to be a powerful representation of what people are capable of when pushed into a corner. Nearly the entire cast made worthy performances especially the short-lived role of Sonnny Truelove by Bruce Willis. At first inclination one might think that Justin Timberlake would be better suited as a singer, but as an actor he wasn't all that bad, although his role wasn't very challenging he came through quite well. The characters were all pretty straight forward; young males so caught up in their tough guy wannabe gangster image it spelled their own demise. Characters like this aren't awfully challenging to play but the entire cast did quite well doing so.
Alpha Dog was one of the better new movies I've seen this year; although it was far from being perfect, it was surprisingly well put together and well directed by Nick Cassavetes. The story of all these young men is really compelling and powerful, at times you sympathize with the characters and at other times you hate them. Like I mentioned this movie isn't a masterpiece like Goodfellas, but manages to be a good teenage alternative.
Video
Alpha Dog is presented in 2.35:1 widescreen format. At times it looks rather impressive, but most noticeably in the blue-screen shots the facial features lack detail and the night scenes include some compression artifacts. For the most part, the details were quite nice from the sandy dunes of California to its vibrant streets. Maybe the most impressive details were in the characters tattoos, which were always very sharp and clear. In the end, Alpha Dog satisfied my video needs and left little to be desired except for the odd scene.
review continues below...
Audio
Universal has included a Dolby Digital 5.1 audio track on this release, and present the film's material well – especially the numerous party scenes (the shouting crowds and music). The rear channels and bass are continually in use as the film contains a soundtrack that is predominantly hip-hop music. The dialogue remains consistently clear throughout the duration with no noticeable faults, which is a good thing considering this movie is dialogue drive. Overall a fairly impressive audio section makes for an enjoyable listen.
Special Features
Universal hasn't packed much into the special feature department of Alpha Dog, and the two features we are given aren't that impressive.* A Cautionary Tale: The Making of Alpha Dog – A ten-minute feature on the making of Alpha Dog, includes interviews with the cast as well as director Nick Cassavetes.
* Witness Timeline – Quotes from real witnesses throughout the duration of the kidnapping.Final Thoughts
The film is better than I originally thought it would be, and the cast meshed together well and put out solid performances. The story is captivating, and although it drags on a little bit longer than it could have, Alpha Dog proves to be a rather good movie. Unfortunately, if you're into special features, you won't be blown away with what you're given, but the audio and video should make up for it. Overall, Alpha Dog is at minimum worth the rental, and if you're a fan of the movie you don't get much extra so make you're decision based on how much you enjoyed the movie.
I'm a little busy right now, but I'll look at the Ebert & Roeper review and let you know who it was and what they thought of it.
I went through my tapes and here is what I am going to be putting on the DVD.
Original airing of the Dateline documentary on the real life case
Hollywood Justice (about the legal trouble to get it to theaters}
Showbiz Tonight (about the legal trouble to get it to theaters}
Updated 2007 airing of the Dateline documentary
Court TV - Catherine Crier show
Court TV - Hollywood Heat
Tonight Show w/ Jay Leno (JT interview about AD
MTV/VH1 - interview junket
Alpha Dog news from various news shows (Extra, E! News, Ent. Tonight, Access Hollywood)
TV Spot
Dean Richards review
Reel Talk review
Ebert & Roper Review
Premiere footage from (Extra, E! News, Access Hollywood)
There may be more footage laying around.
Now all I have to do is time all of these and figure out what speed to record them at. I want good quality, so I may need to spread it to 2 dvd's.
Found a review about the DVD at http://www.cinemablend.com/dvds/Alpha-Dog-2257.html
The Disc:
The special features for Alpha Dog consist of eleven minutes of the actors talking about what the film was supposed to be about. They have great points to make and if the movie really "showed" that, well, there wouldn't be a need for this making of. If the intention came across just by watching the movie that this is a story about absent parents, kids forcibly growing up too fast, and what drugs and violence do to families, it could have been a great film. Unfortunately, for twenty bucks, that's all there is aside from a really uncreative witness timeline with fake quotes and button that jumps to the section in the movie where they appear. That's all. More alpha doggie do-do.
What the disc should have had at the bare minimum was an audio commentary by someone. That's for starters. It wouldn't have hurt in 2006 to have put a little more effort into making a longer making of featurette, a real life documentary about the stolen boy or the kidnappers, a behind the scenes showing how long it took to give everyone fake tattoos, bloopers and outtakes, more interviews with the "name" actors (Sharon Stone, Bruce Willis, Alan Thicke), audition videos - egad, more than one audio commentary, a fold out timeline of events, a T-shirt, a stapler (worked for Office Space), anything else to give this disc value and purpose.
Great movies are made to stand alone and stand the test of time. The not-so-good ones need a ton of extra features to give the viewer something more to hold onto to make it worth their money. If there isn't a Director's Cut of Alpha Dog in the near future, then there's money to be made on Ebay.
As you can tell the reviewer didn't care for the movie.
I agree that the DVD should have had more extras, especially audio commentaries and featurettes.
See what I'm going to do is go through my tapes and find all of the Alpha Dog stuff that I could find, especially the documentary on the real-life case and the court tv segments and transfer those to DVD and then put that in the AD case. While not as good as a regular "Special Edition" it'll carry me over until (if) one is released.
I PM'd Deb on IMDB about the deal I'm going to get. Through coupons that my store is giving this week I'll be able to save $15 off the DVD. So I should be able to get the AD DVD for around $5 or so.
Here is the first review of the DVD that I could find. Not much info about the extras though.
http://www.moviehole.net/reviews/200704 … g_dvd.html
Alpha Dog (DVD)
Ben Foster, Shawn Hatosy, Emile Hirsch, Christopher Marquette, Sharon Stone, Justin Timberlake, Bruce Willis, Anton Yelchin, Harry Dean Stanton, Sharon Stone
It mightn't have as much Bark as it probably should've, but Nick Cassaevttes' cautionary tale "Alpha Dog" still embodies quite a bit of bite.
Featuring stand-out performances by a young ensemble including Justin Timberlake (yep, that Justin Timberlake!), Emile Hirsch and Anton Yelchin, the nail-biting drama fixes on a piece of recent American history: A time when a gang of hoodlums, owed money by another, kidnap the brother of the latter as ransom. Despite getting along well with their hostage, they ultimately decide to end his life – in what they believe, is their only chance of getting out of jail. Fools.
The first three-quarters of Cassevettes' film is very solid. All of the characters are fleshy and interesting, the storyline is captivating and the message rings loud and clear – don't play with fire if you don't wanna get burned. Then, in the film's last twenty-minutes (the important part of the movie in many ways), Cassevettes' lets the ball drop: his effects shots look terribly cheap; the choice is made to 'fatten' Sharon Stone's mother character (she plays the mother of the kidnapped kid) to the size of Norbit (to much amusement), and most notably, the punch that the film should entail never really comes.
Still, "Alpha Dog" isn't half as bad as many critics have made it out to be it's actually quite a well-done piece. Also a great show reel for the abovementioned Timberlake.
DVD extras include an entertaining but too-short making-of and a witness timeline (text) of the events.
Rating : 3 out of 5 stars
Reviewer : Clint Morris