Welcome to New Movie Releases Theatre and home. This site will be dedicated to brand movies that are coming to the Movies, Movies that are out already, what people are saying about that movie you are interested in. and also what’s coming out for home release. Will also have information on downloadable content so enjoy =)
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Saturday, March 16, 2013
K-11 March 15th 2013
Saturday, February 16, 2013
SKYFALL ON DVD
007 (Daniel Craig) becomes M's only ally as MI6 comes under attack, and a mysterious new villain emerges with a diabolical plan. James Bond's latest mission has gone horribly awry, resulting in the exposure of several undercover agents, and an all-out attack on M16. Meanwhile, as M (Judi Dench) plans to relocate the agency, emerging Chairman of the Intelligence and Security Committee Mallory (Ralph Fiennes) raises concerns about her competence while attempting to usurp her position, and Q (Ben Whishaw) becomes a crucial ally. Now the only person who can restore M's reputation is 007. Operating in the dark with only field agent Eve (Naomie Harris) to guide him, the world's top secret agent works to root out an enigmatic criminal mastermind named Silva (Javier Bardem) as a major storm brews on the horizon. Albert Finney also stars in the 23rd installment of the long-running spy series. The film was directed by Sam Mendes (American Beauty, Revolutionary Road) and shot by acclaimed cinematographer Roger Deakins (True Grit, The Reader, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford).
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Cloud Atlas Now On DVD
'Cloud Atlas' explores how the actions and consequences of individual lives impact one another throughout the past, the present and the future. Action, mystery and romance weave dramatically through the story as one soul is shaped from a killer into a hero and a single act of kindness ripples across centuries to inspire a revolution in the distant future. Each member of the ensemble appears in multiple roles as the stories move through time.
Friday, February 1, 2013
SILENT HILL REVELATION 3D BLU-RAY FEB 26TH 2013
Plot Summary:Heather Mason (Adelaide Clemens) and her father (Sean Bean) have been on the run, always one step ahead of dangerous forces that she doesn't fully understand. Now on the eve of her 18th birthday, plagued by horrific nightmares and the disappearance of her father, Heather discovers she's not who she thinks she is. The revelation leads her deeper into a demonic world that threatens to trap her forever.

Thursday, January 24, 2013
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 Blu-ray Digital Copy UltraViolet March 2nd 2013
In The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 2, love
for Bella and Edward is not only triumphant--it's a love story for the ages. The
finale in the wildly successful Twilight teen vampire romance saga will
satisfy every passionate fan, and yet is broad enough in its appeal that even
those who think they aren't invested in the Bella-Edward story will be drawn in
as well. Breaking Dawn, Part 2 is breathtakingly beautiful, with
sumptuous cinematography showing off the stark beauty of the Pacific Northwest,
especially in the dead of winter. And speaking of stark beauty, Bella (Kristen
Stewart) is even more ravishing than ever. She awakens at the beginning of
Breaking Dawn, Part 2 as a "newborn" vampire, having been "turned" as
she was dying during the birth of her and Edward's (Robert Pattinson)
half-vampire daughter. Vampire Bella flies through the forests barefoot in a
royal-blue sheath, no hint of post-baby body weighing her or her new superpowers
down. Bella and Edward waste no time making good use of the cozy new cottage in
the woods and its enticing bedroom. "Why do we need a bedroom?" Bella asks
Edward. "We're vampires, we don't sleep." Edward, adoration in his eyes, quickly
shows her the answer.
And their daughter? Well, little baby Renesmee starts out as a slightly creepy computer-generated animation creature, but as she grows--very quickly--into girlhood, she's played with winsome solemnity by young Mackenzie Foy. The girl is "imprinted" at birth to werewolf Jacob (hunky Taylor Lautner, often shirtless), who will from then on be bound to the wolf pack in a deep and special way. Yet Breaking Dawn, Part 2 carries true, operatic-style action as well as the love-triangle drama from earlier films. Because of the birth of the child vampire, the powerful Volturi in Rome are alerted, and, led by Aro (played by Michael Sheen, who appears to be having entirely too much fun), come to the Northwest for a shattering showdown over the fate of the Cullens. The confrontation, as directed by the deft Bill Condon, is intense and creatively choreographed (and fairly violent, given the film's PG-13 rating), with dark, wild music accompanying the Volturi's malevolent intentions and our heroes' fierce devotion to one another. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 2 demonstrates that love and family can surmount nearly every obstacle. And sometimes love can truly be forever. --A.T. Hurley
And their daughter? Well, little baby Renesmee starts out as a slightly creepy computer-generated animation creature, but as she grows--very quickly--into girlhood, she's played with winsome solemnity by young Mackenzie Foy. The girl is "imprinted" at birth to werewolf Jacob (hunky Taylor Lautner, often shirtless), who will from then on be bound to the wolf pack in a deep and special way. Yet Breaking Dawn, Part 2 carries true, operatic-style action as well as the love-triangle drama from earlier films. Because of the birth of the child vampire, the powerful Volturi in Rome are alerted, and, led by Aro (played by Michael Sheen, who appears to be having entirely too much fun), come to the Northwest for a shattering showdown over the fate of the Cullens. The confrontation, as directed by the deft Bill Condon, is intense and creatively choreographed (and fairly violent, given the film's PG-13 rating), with dark, wild music accompanying the Volturi's malevolent intentions and our heroes' fierce devotion to one another. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 2 demonstrates that love and family can surmount nearly every obstacle. And sometimes love can truly be forever. --A.T. Hurley
Product Description
In the final chapter of the Twilight Saga
phenomenon, the birth of Bella and Edward’s child brings conflict between Bella
and her lifelong friend, Jacob, and an all-out war between the Cullens and the
Volturi.
Monday, January 21, 2013
PARKER JAN 25TH 2013
Donald Westlake's pulp hero Parker is once again brought to the big screen in this thriller from director Taylor Hackford (Ray). Jason Statham picks up the Parker mantle from other iconic actors who have played him through the years -- most notably Lee Marvin in Point Blank and Mel Gibson in Payback. Jennifer Lopez, Clifton Collins Jr., Wendell Pierce, and Nick Nolte co-star. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, Rovi
Friday, January 4, 2013
LOOPER Blu-ray
Supposedly in an effort to show skews in the timeline, illustrate alternate
realities, and so on and so forth. Instead of grasping at straws, however,
Writer/Director Rian Johnson's time travel Action flick Looper takes the bull by the
horns and gives audiences a novel, exciting, and well-scripted film that deals
with all sorts of classic and innovative time travel scenarios and paradoxes and
makes them both easy to understand and worthy of thought. Looper is also
visually appealing, well acted, and supported by robust action. The film hits
hard, looks great, and bring a genuine freshness, a real bit of innovation, to
one of fiction's most fascinating storytelling devices. It gets philosophical
and endlessly thought-provoking without coming across as snobbish, too complex,
or in any way losing track of its Action movie origins. Looper is one of
the surprise films of 2012,and never
short on action.
In the year 2044, time travel has yet to be invented. But in 2074, it's very much a reality, and it's brought about a booming underground business for those living thirty years back. The technology -- and the use of it -- has been made instantly illegal in 2074, but like most such laws on the books, only the law-abiding are deterred from engaging in the illegal activity. Criminals make frequent use of the technology to dispose of those who stand in the way of their illegal enterprises. In 2044, young men known as "Loopers" are paid handsomely in pure silver bars to assassinate targets sent backwards in time to them. They dispose of the bodies in a world in which the victim doesn't exist, collect their funds, and await their next target. There's only one catch: Loopers must kill their future selves. They are paid handsomely to do so and are given thirty years from retirement to enjoy their wealth, usually abroad. Joe is one of the best Loopers around. He's professional and efficient, unafraid of carrying out the task, and unworried about his future prospects. When a fellow Looper allows his future-self to run, Joe hides him, temporarily, but turns him in to his boss Abe (Jeff Daniels) in exchange for keeping his stash of silver intact. But when Joe's own future self (Bruce Willis) escapes the younger Joe's murder attempt, both Joe's become targets. Meanwhile, the younger Joe is made aware of a future individual known as "The Rainmaker," a hardened criminal wreaking havoc on future events. Now, Joe must track down the younger Rainmaker while also dealing with his escaped elder self and evading Abe's deadly "Gat Men."
It's truly incredible to watch Looper unfold. There's a mastery of intelligence combined with action that's rarely achieved anymore, particularly in a movie such as this that deals in complex plot details that are handled quite effectively, welcoming viewers rather than alienating them. Looper manages to feel like both an above-the-fray "smart" movie while still appealing to a more base-level craving for well-conceived and strongly executed action segments. This is a rough, violent movie that hits hard, and unapologetically so. It's not quite as gritty as some and it eschews that dreary Blade Runner-styled future world of radical tech meets urban depravity for a more balanced, approachable vision where things have advanced but to neither a shiny and sleek nor overwhelmingly dire state of affairs, painting a sort of early-to-mid 20th century meets a "fading" modern-influenced future physical and social landscape. Yet there's an intelligence to it, a mind exercise that demands audiences not tune out when the bullets are flying. The picture makes absolutely certain to make its violence an extension of the plot while still building its plot around acts of violence. There's a beautiful full-circle nature to the film in that the core story is one shaped by violence but from that comes a complex study of science, psychology, morality, sacrifice, and other scholarly pursuits from which even more action invariably flows. This is a rare picture indeed that caters to multiple audiences and satisfies beyond their core demands, crossing boundaries because of its nearly faultless combination of intelligence and adrenaline-charged violence.
Both the action and thought exercises come together beautifully, but both are worth studying on an individual level. Looper's action takes the complete opposite approach from rubbish like the latest Resident Evil film that just throws bullets and slow-motion photography at the audience in hopes that it'll blind its viewers from the absence of a plot. Looper instead makes its violence brutal and honest, bloody and wrecking on an intimate, not a detached, level. Better, it flows from a plot and is balanced by a purpose. That makes it dramatically satisfying, too, and not simply an exercise in littering the screen with mindless bloodshed. However, it's the more thoughtful Science Fiction plot elements that make Looper shine. On the surface and especially at the beginning, it seems like the "perfect" time travel scenario. Someone from "then" is zapped to the "now;" he or she disappears without a trace from "then" and is disposed of in the "now" world in which that person doesn't even exist. But of course it's not that easy. Through the prism of murder for hire and the promise of a lucrative but relatively brief future comes ideas surrounding not only time travel paradoxes -- which are themselves almost contagiously thought-provoking as they're described and visually and structurally implemented in the film -- but also a host of philosophical, moral, and practical dilemmas that arise from situations depicted in the film. For example, is it "suicide" if one kills a different version of oneself? Looper also deals in more "traditional" time travel quagmires, such as the "value" of murder with the benefit of foresight and the possibility of skewing a timeline for better (and sometimes for worse) in the name of "saving" what remains only a possible future line, even with confirmation of it. Looper does the time travel thing as well as any film before it, and mixes it in with a very good story, robust action, great acting, and strong technical merits.
Lastly, Looper is well-acted and sturdily staged. Bruce Willis and Joseph Gordon-Levitt are convincingly similar from a physical standpoint -- at least within the film's flow and thanks to some movie magic -- and adequately dissimilar where it really counts, internally and separated by both time and experience, the sources from which the film derives much of its drama. Gordon-Levitt is particularly strong as the drug-addicted, hard-lined killer who dances around the boundaries of his profession but never crosses an uncrossable line. He's tough and plays the part with almost menacing, piercing eyes, a very different type of character than his sort of more buoyant and boyish hero in the excellent Premium Rush. Willis, on the other hand, looks like he just walked off the set of Pulp Fiction; he wears a similarly colored jacket and takes on a recognizable no-nonsense attitude as he maneuvers through the times and timelines his character inhabits. Writer/Director Rian Johnson approaches the material thoughtfully, directing with a straightforward, simple approach that only emphasizes the story and visuals, not dominate them. He tells a story rather than define it, and the sum total is a picture that absorbs its audience rather detachedly show it what's happening. Altogether, it's easy to see why it's one of the year's best films.

Looper's 1080p high definition presentation will withstand the test of time. Sony's latest visual treat for the eyes satisfies in nearly every regard. The film-like textures are consistent and accurate. Light grain hovers over the image, and details are consistently pure and true to the medium. Facial textures are faultless, clothing lines splendid, and even minute qualities on close-ups of vegetation are often striking. Colors are equally satisfying, displaying nuanced precision and seamless balance across the entire spectrum. Bright green leaves, country tans, worn down urban grays, and splashes of neon all look fantastic throughout the film and under any lighting condition. Black levels can go a bit pale, but generally there's no perceptible problem with shadow detail. Skin textures, however, appear true throughout. The transfer exhibits no perceptible problems with banding, blockiness, edge enhancement, or other unnecessary or unwanted visual anomalies. This is another accurate, highly satisfying transfer from Blu-ray's best studio.

Looper wastes no time demonstrating its startling audio proficiency. Sony's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack is a dazzling achievement of sound engineering. The track plays with a big, aggressive stature. It offers a very convincing and sonically colorful and robust sound effects, presenting a wide array of elements maneuvering through the stage with high proficiency. Future vehicles and aircraft zip and whir from one speaker to the next. Exterior ambience is beautifully structured, whether city atmospherics or light background din around the film's many countryside settings. Music plays with natural placement and balance; there's a true, accurate feel and tremendous clarity throughout the film, save for deliberately mushy background club dance beats that offer overly zealous bass in an effort to accurately reproduce the environment. Gunfire is strikingly realistic throughout. Whether a single shot in a confined space that's apt to stun listeners as it does characters in the film or a series of shots from "blunderbuss" shotguns to the large-caliber revolvers used by the "Gat Men," the film's gunfire is amongst the most potent, dizzyingly accurate, and sonically pleasurable of any Blu-ray release. Dialogue is handled with great clarity and attention to detail. In short, this is another striking, high-end soundtrack from Sony.by mark liebman
In the year 2044, time travel has yet to be invented. But in 2074, it's very much a reality, and it's brought about a booming underground business for those living thirty years back. The technology -- and the use of it -- has been made instantly illegal in 2074, but like most such laws on the books, only the law-abiding are deterred from engaging in the illegal activity. Criminals make frequent use of the technology to dispose of those who stand in the way of their illegal enterprises. In 2044, young men known as "Loopers" are paid handsomely in pure silver bars to assassinate targets sent backwards in time to them. They dispose of the bodies in a world in which the victim doesn't exist, collect their funds, and await their next target. There's only one catch: Loopers must kill their future selves. They are paid handsomely to do so and are given thirty years from retirement to enjoy their wealth, usually abroad. Joe is one of the best Loopers around. He's professional and efficient, unafraid of carrying out the task, and unworried about his future prospects. When a fellow Looper allows his future-self to run, Joe hides him, temporarily, but turns him in to his boss Abe (Jeff Daniels) in exchange for keeping his stash of silver intact. But when Joe's own future self (Bruce Willis) escapes the younger Joe's murder attempt, both Joe's become targets. Meanwhile, the younger Joe is made aware of a future individual known as "The Rainmaker," a hardened criminal wreaking havoc on future events. Now, Joe must track down the younger Rainmaker while also dealing with his escaped elder self and evading Abe's deadly "Gat Men."
It's truly incredible to watch Looper unfold. There's a mastery of intelligence combined with action that's rarely achieved anymore, particularly in a movie such as this that deals in complex plot details that are handled quite effectively, welcoming viewers rather than alienating them. Looper manages to feel like both an above-the-fray "smart" movie while still appealing to a more base-level craving for well-conceived and strongly executed action segments. This is a rough, violent movie that hits hard, and unapologetically so. It's not quite as gritty as some and it eschews that dreary Blade Runner-styled future world of radical tech meets urban depravity for a more balanced, approachable vision where things have advanced but to neither a shiny and sleek nor overwhelmingly dire state of affairs, painting a sort of early-to-mid 20th century meets a "fading" modern-influenced future physical and social landscape. Yet there's an intelligence to it, a mind exercise that demands audiences not tune out when the bullets are flying. The picture makes absolutely certain to make its violence an extension of the plot while still building its plot around acts of violence. There's a beautiful full-circle nature to the film in that the core story is one shaped by violence but from that comes a complex study of science, psychology, morality, sacrifice, and other scholarly pursuits from which even more action invariably flows. This is a rare picture indeed that caters to multiple audiences and satisfies beyond their core demands, crossing boundaries because of its nearly faultless combination of intelligence and adrenaline-charged violence.
Both the action and thought exercises come together beautifully, but both are worth studying on an individual level. Looper's action takes the complete opposite approach from rubbish like the latest Resident Evil film that just throws bullets and slow-motion photography at the audience in hopes that it'll blind its viewers from the absence of a plot. Looper instead makes its violence brutal and honest, bloody and wrecking on an intimate, not a detached, level. Better, it flows from a plot and is balanced by a purpose. That makes it dramatically satisfying, too, and not simply an exercise in littering the screen with mindless bloodshed. However, it's the more thoughtful Science Fiction plot elements that make Looper shine. On the surface and especially at the beginning, it seems like the "perfect" time travel scenario. Someone from "then" is zapped to the "now;" he or she disappears without a trace from "then" and is disposed of in the "now" world in which that person doesn't even exist. But of course it's not that easy. Through the prism of murder for hire and the promise of a lucrative but relatively brief future comes ideas surrounding not only time travel paradoxes -- which are themselves almost contagiously thought-provoking as they're described and visually and structurally implemented in the film -- but also a host of philosophical, moral, and practical dilemmas that arise from situations depicted in the film. For example, is it "suicide" if one kills a different version of oneself? Looper also deals in more "traditional" time travel quagmires, such as the "value" of murder with the benefit of foresight and the possibility of skewing a timeline for better (and sometimes for worse) in the name of "saving" what remains only a possible future line, even with confirmation of it. Looper does the time travel thing as well as any film before it, and mixes it in with a very good story, robust action, great acting, and strong technical merits.
Lastly, Looper is well-acted and sturdily staged. Bruce Willis and Joseph Gordon-Levitt are convincingly similar from a physical standpoint -- at least within the film's flow and thanks to some movie magic -- and adequately dissimilar where it really counts, internally and separated by both time and experience, the sources from which the film derives much of its drama. Gordon-Levitt is particularly strong as the drug-addicted, hard-lined killer who dances around the boundaries of his profession but never crosses an uncrossable line. He's tough and plays the part with almost menacing, piercing eyes, a very different type of character than his sort of more buoyant and boyish hero in the excellent Premium Rush. Willis, on the other hand, looks like he just walked off the set of Pulp Fiction; he wears a similarly colored jacket and takes on a recognizable no-nonsense attitude as he maneuvers through the times and timelines his character inhabits. Writer/Director Rian Johnson approaches the material thoughtfully, directing with a straightforward, simple approach that only emphasizes the story and visuals, not dominate them. He tells a story rather than define it, and the sum total is a picture that absorbs its audience rather detachedly show it what's happening. Altogether, it's easy to see why it's one of the year's best films.
Looper Blu-ray, Video Quality
Looper's 1080p high definition presentation will withstand the test of time. Sony's latest visual treat for the eyes satisfies in nearly every regard. The film-like textures are consistent and accurate. Light grain hovers over the image, and details are consistently pure and true to the medium. Facial textures are faultless, clothing lines splendid, and even minute qualities on close-ups of vegetation are often striking. Colors are equally satisfying, displaying nuanced precision and seamless balance across the entire spectrum. Bright green leaves, country tans, worn down urban grays, and splashes of neon all look fantastic throughout the film and under any lighting condition. Black levels can go a bit pale, but generally there's no perceptible problem with shadow detail. Skin textures, however, appear true throughout. The transfer exhibits no perceptible problems with banding, blockiness, edge enhancement, or other unnecessary or unwanted visual anomalies. This is another accurate, highly satisfying transfer from Blu-ray's best studio.
Looper Blu-ray, Audio Quality
Looper wastes no time demonstrating its startling audio proficiency. Sony's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack is a dazzling achievement of sound engineering. The track plays with a big, aggressive stature. It offers a very convincing and sonically colorful and robust sound effects, presenting a wide array of elements maneuvering through the stage with high proficiency. Future vehicles and aircraft zip and whir from one speaker to the next. Exterior ambience is beautifully structured, whether city atmospherics or light background din around the film's many countryside settings. Music plays with natural placement and balance; there's a true, accurate feel and tremendous clarity throughout the film, save for deliberately mushy background club dance beats that offer overly zealous bass in an effort to accurately reproduce the environment. Gunfire is strikingly realistic throughout. Whether a single shot in a confined space that's apt to stun listeners as it does characters in the film or a series of shots from "blunderbuss" shotguns to the large-caliber revolvers used by the "Gat Men," the film's gunfire is amongst the most potent, dizzyingly accurate, and sonically pleasurable of any Blu-ray release. Dialogue is handled with great clarity and attention to detail. In short, this is another striking, high-end soundtrack from Sony.by mark liebman
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