'The Da Vinci Code' and 'John Tucker Must Die' among new DVD releases
<$> “The Da Vinci Code”
The literary sensation makes a safe, unimaginative leap to the big screen in the hands of director Ron Howard, who keeps the action in fairly close sync to Dan Brown’s best-seller. That, and Tom Hanks, were good enough to elevate the film to blockbuster status, with $750 million at the box office worldwide. Hanks stars as an American symbologist who teams with a French police cryptographer (Audrey Tautou) to solve a 2,000-year-old riddle about Christ’s status as a husband and father. The two-disc set has a chat with author Brown and a huge range of featurettes including segments on Hanks and Tautou’s characters, the supporting cast led by Ian McKellen, Paul Bettany, Alfred Molina and Jean Reno, and the filmmakers’ experiences shooting around the Mona Lisa at the Louvre. DVD set, $29.96. (Sony)“John Tucker Must Die”
<$>Jesse Metcalfe, who plays Eva Longoria’s boy-toy on “Desperate Housewives,” stars as a high-school cad whose three vengeful girlfriends (Ashanti, Arielle Kebbel and Sophia Bush) team with a newcomer (Brittany Snow) to give him a taste of his own medicine. The DVD has the theatrical cut and an extended version of the teen comedy, along with deleted scenes accompanied by commentary from director Betty Thomas. She also joins her editor for commentary on the full movie. The disc also has a handful of behind-the-scenes featurettes. DVD, $29.98. (20th Century Fox)“Accepted”<$>
When all the colleges of your choice turn you down, there’s only one thing to do: Start your own institution of higher learning, then get down to some serious partying. Justin Long stars as a teen rejected by real campuses, who concocts a fake tech school that winds up becoming a haven for freaks, geeks, wackos and other “Animal House”-style misfits. Along with deleted scenes and outtakes, the DVD offers making-of and cast featurettes, a couple of music videos, and commentary featuring Long, director Steve Pink and such co-stars as Lewis Black, who plays the fake college’s burned-out dean. DVD, $29.98. (Universal)“King Kong: Deluxe Extended Edition”
<$>Already topping three hours when it swung into theaters last year, Peter Jackson’s update of the great-ape saga runs 13 minutes longer in this extended edition, a three-disc set that also packs 38 minutes of deleted scenes. The new footage incorporated into the extended edition is more of the same, mostly extra moments with dinosaurs, giant bugs and other creatures Naomi Watts, Jack Black, Adrien Brody and their fellow adventurers discover on Kong’s island hideaway. The theatrical release could have stood some cutting to begin with, so this longer version is for hardcore fans only. Jackson provides commentary, and the set is loaded with documentary segments. The set also comes in a “Limited Edition” package that includes a King Kong figurine. “Deluxe Edition” DVD set, $34.98; “Limited Edition” DVD set, $79.98. (Universal)“The Paul Newman Collection”<$>
Seven Newman films from the 1950s, ‘60s and ‘70s make their DVD debuts, led by the Rocky Graziano boxing saga “Somebody Up There Likes Me,” the legal melodrama “The Young Philadelphians,” the private-eye flick “Harper” and its sequel “The Drowning Pool.” The seven-disc set also features the espionage thriller “The Mackintosh Man,” the Billy the Kid Western “The Left Handed Gun” and the cowboy comedy “Pocket Money.” Newman offers commentary on “Somebody Up There Likes Me,” and the other DVDs include a range of commentary and featurettes. “Harper” also is available separately, while the other six films come only in the boxed set. DVD set, $59.92; “Harper” DVD, $19.97. (Warner Bros.)“Forbidden Planet”
<$>The 1950s sci-fi classic that introduced Robby the Robot comes to DVD in a variety of formats to mark its 50th anniversary. An outer-space take on Shakespeare’s “The Tempest,” the film stars Leslie Nielsen as leader of a team of astronauts investigating the fate of a planetary colony where only a mysterious doctor (Walter Pidgeon) and his daughter (Anne Francis) have survived. The two-disc DVD set and high-definition HD DVD version have deleted scenes and long-lost footage of early special-effects shots, along with documentaries on the film, Robby the Robot and 1950s science fiction. A “Collector’s Edition” DVD release has the two-disc set, a Robby the Robot action figure and reproductions of original lobby cards in a lunchbox-size metal case. Two-disc set, $26.99; “Collector’s Edition,” $59.92; HD DVD, $28.99. (Warner Bros.)
“NCIS: The Complete Second Season” — Year two’s 23 episodes in a six-disc set. $64.99. (Paramount)
“Reba: The Complete Fourth Season” — A three-disc set with 22 episodes. $29.98. (20th Century Fox)
“Family Guy: Volume Four” <$>— Fourteen episodes in a three-disc set. $39.98. (20th Century Fox)
“Columbo: The Complete Sixth & Seventh Seasons” — The final two seasons, with eight episodes on three discs. $39.98. (Universal)
“Home Improvement: The Complete Fifth Season” <$>— A three-disc set with 26 episodes. $39.99. (Disney)
“The Golden Girls: The Complete Sixth Season” <$>— Three discs with 26 episodes. $39.99 (Disney)
“Northern Exposure: The Complete Fifth Season” — A five-disc set with 24 episodes. $59.98. (Universal)
“Adventures of Superman: The Complete Fifth and Sixth Seasons” —<$> The final 26 episodes on five discs. $39.98. (Warner Bros.)
“Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman” — A six-disc set with the last 22 episodes. $59.98. (Warner Bros.)
“That Girl: Season Two” — Thirty episodes in a four-disc set. $39.98. (Shout)
“Lassie” — A fine, family-friendly update about the resourceful collie, who runs away from her new two-legged keepers to return to her best friend, a young boy forced to give up the beloved canine. DVD, $28.95. (Genius)
“Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man” <$>— U2, Nick Cave, Rufus Wainwright, Beth Orton and others sing the praises of brooding poet, musician and songwriter Cohen in this documentary featuring a tribute concert and interview segments. DVD, $27.98. (Lionsgate)
“Joyeux Noel (Merry Christmas)” <$>— Nominated for best foreign-language film at the 2005 Academy Awards, this moving drama traces a Christmas respite from combat among German, French and Scottish troops in the trenches of World War I. DVD, $26.96. (Sony)
“49 Up” — Director Michael Apted continues the “Seven Up” documentary series that chronicles the lives of Brits first interviewed at age 7 in 1964. Apted has returned for an update every seven years, the latest installment catching the group at age 49. DVD, $29.95. (First Run)