TRAILER: "This is Where I Leave You"

This family relationship dramedy looks pretty good actually, based on the novel by Jonathan Tropper, who also wrote the screenplay. The cast is star-studded with TV heavyweights plus Jane Fonda as the matriarch of a family who reunites when the father dies. Jason Bateman, Tina Fey, Adam Driver and Corey Stoll are four grown siblings who spend the next week at home, and the usual hilarity/heartwarming antics ensue. Shawn Levy is the director (the guy who did Night at the Museum and Date Night), so I wouldn't say it's guaranteed to be good, but the trailer doesn't look so bad overall. It's coming out September 12th.

Blu-Ray Pick of the Week: "Red River" (1948)

A great western from the 40's is out today on blu-ray, and it was one that cast John Wayne in one of those darker roles that he was always so good in (see him in The Searchers for a look at his most famous twisted character). Always great as the traditional western hero, but even better as a shady antihero with ulterior motives, here he played a damaged rancher leading a cattle drive from Texas to Missouri, who grows ever more at odds with the younger cowboy he took under his wing (Montgomery Clift), when he slowly reveals how disturbed he really is. The movie has an old Hollywood copout of an ending, clearly not the natural climax the story was headed towards, but overall it's a great film from the genre worth seeking out.

Trailer (sorry about the subtitles on this one):

TRAILER: "Life, Itself"

Aww. It makes me sad just seeing the trailer for this. The Roger Ebert documentary directed by Steve James (Hoop Dreams) is coming out July 4th, and was praised to the skies when it premiered at the Sundance Film Festival a while back. I can't wait to see it and yet I also know it's going to have me bawling by the end. Anyone who loves movies and wants to write about movies needs no explanation as to what a towering influence Roger Ebert was, up until the day he died. I'm just glad you can still hear his voice in the thousands of reviews and essays he left behind.

FEATURETTE: "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes"

In what's sure to be a much better film with the word "dawn" in the title, here's a mini-featurette showing all the motion capture that goes into creating the apes for the new Planet of the Apes movies. There's still debate being raged over whether the more and more frequently used motion capture technology should be considered acting or not. Many actors certainly don't think so, but they're probably biased and worried over what this could signal about the necessity of their jobs in the future. All I know is that Andy Serkis personally deserves some kind of recognition for all the characters he's created in the last ten years- Gollum, King Kong and Caesar didn't come from nothing.