Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 12:24 am
Maid in Manhattan it only had a trailer which showed that there were deleted scenes. 
Disney, DVD, and Beyond Forums
https://dvdizzy.com/forum/
Well that does make me happy. But I assumed that there were only 5 more movies left on the slate: Cinderella, Lady and the Tramp, The Little Mermaid, The Jungle Book, and 101 Dalmatians.DisneyFan 2000 wrote:You'll be happy to hear it is...Lazario wrote:Pinocchio (why the hell isn't this on the slate for a Platinum Edition?)
I forgot about that when I had my short list of movies that I think deserve Masterpiece Editions. This is right at the TOP of that list for me, this is one of my all-time favorite Disney movies!! Animated or live-action.n69n wrote:THE RESCUERS!
Disney recently added 4 more (Sleeping Beauty, Fantasia (+2000), Peter Pan and Pinnochio).Lazario wrote:Well that does make me happy. But I assumed that there were only 5 more movies left on the slate: Cinderella, Lady and the Tramp, The Little Mermaid, The Jungle Book, and 101 Dalmatians.
From one of UD's very own pages http://www.ultimatedisney.com/releasetypes.html: (scroll down to Platinum)Lazario wrote:Crap. This is good news. I'm not sure I understand why Peter Pan is being added to that list since it already got a special edition. Sure maybe they were like, a new release would be approapriate since the current DVD is out of print. Same thing with Sleeping Beauty. I can't believe I hadn't heard this news before. Does everyone know this?
And to add to the list of DVDs that should get better treatment:The Platinum Collection was originally comprised of Disney's 10 best-selling home video titles: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King, Aladdin, Bambi, The Jungle Book, Cinderella, The Little Mermaid, Lady and the Tramp and 101 Dalmatians. In May of 2003, Disney announced they would be adding Pinocchio, Fantasia, Peter Pan, and Sleeping Beauty to the Platinum Collection for a total of 14 titles. The Platinum Edition releases are even superior to their Collector's Edition releases for new movies, devoted to the ultimate video and audio, and a plethora of extras.
The Criterion version is a lot better than the $6.99 version.Escapay wrote:Charade - even though I'd love to own the $39.95 Criterion version, my cheap $6.99 Madacy version is fine for now, but I'd like Universal to give it its own release, not tacked on to the remake, The Truth About Charlie.
I should point out that Peter Pan's special edition was little more than a solid 1 disc set, so a 2 disc set via the Platinum Collection would be a good idea, especially considering there is stuff that could make it Disney's DVD release out there (promotional TV shows including one like One Hour in Wonderland, trailers, abandonded concepts etc). It is a bit silly if Sleeping Beauty has been added to the Collection if it already has a 2 disc set, but it seems reasonable if Disney has the intention of keeping all their fairy tale films in the same production line, which is a theory for it being there, despite the idea of it being a good seller.Lazario wrote:Crap. This is good news. I'm not sure I understand why Peter Pan is being added to that list since it already got a special edition. Sure maybe they were like, a new release would be approapriate since the current DVD is out of print. Same thing with Sleeping Beauty. I can't believe I hadn't heard this news before. Does everyone know this?
The holiday shopping season is shaping up to be one hell of a wallet-buster. Along with all of the requisite big summer guns, Warner Home Video will debut brand new two-disc special editions of Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Forever and Batman & Robin. Due on October 18th, each set will feature a new digitally remastered anamorphic transfer of the movie. Bonus features are set to include director commentaries by Tim Burton and old "nail in the coffin" Joel Schumacher, new documentaries, making-of featurettes galore, cast and crew interviews and nine music videos from Prince, Seal and the Smashing Pumpkins. You'll be able to pick up the Dark Knight individually, or collected in the Batman: The Motion Picture Anthology 1989-1997 box set.
I sort of said that too. But it's now out of print, so it would be cool if it resurfaced in the same basic edition just with the Platinum Edition heading on it. That way, maybe I could actually own it someday. Plus you watch, there most likely is still something yet that they could add to the package.Wonderlicious wrote:It is a bit silly if Sleeping Beauty has been added to the Collection if it already has a 2 disc set, but it seems reasonable if Disney has the intention of keeping all their fairy tale films in the same production line, which is a theory for it being there, despite the idea of it being a good seller.
Paramount is issuing another edition of Airplane: Don't Call Me Shirley Collector's Edition sometime in the late quarter (September-November). They're doing the same thing with Clueless and Tommy Boy - reissuing some of their older titles as Special Collector's Editions.Gregorian Chant wrote:I wish they would put out the movie Airplane with some decent extras. That would be worth re-buying.
I would love it if J.K. Rowling agrees to do an audio commentary for any of the Harry Potter films, she could tell what she liked and what she didn't like what made it into the film, etc.. From her interviews, she's really articulate, funny, and well-spoken - she'd be the perfect candidate for one. Or if not a commentary, at least an in-depth interview just with her about her feelings about the movie. Or a director/screenwriter's commentary - Columbus did one for Mrs. Doubtfire, and I can't see why he wouldn't want to do one for SS.Disneykid wrote:The Harry Potter series
The extended version of Chamber of Secrets that aired on ABC is excellent and is a better representation of the book than the theatrical cut. I want to see full extended editions for Sorcerer's Stone and Prisoner of Azkaban, especially since WB was stingy enough to leave off most of their deleted scenes in the supplements section (SS had at least 20 minutes cut, and PoA had about ten minutes cut. SS's DVD only has seven minutes of footage and PoA's only has five). Speaking of which, all three films need the in-depth treatment they deserve - commentary tracks, documentaries, galleries, special effects tests etc. I mean, come on, movies that have grossed a quarter of what each film has have received better DVD treatment.
Tommy Boy?!! Jesus Christ, what exactly about that film screams "great" or "funny"? Tommy Boy is horrible. The only thing Paramount forgot to put on the original DVD was a featurette with Roger Ebert about how Gene Siskel walked out of the screening before it was finished and how he envied his partner in thumbs for it, which includes a clip of Siskel & Ebert on their "At the Movies" show discussing it. MGM did that for their special edition of David Lynch's abysmal Blue Velvet.azul017 wrote:Paramount is issuing another edition of Airplane: Don't Call Me Shirley Collector's Edition sometime in the late quarter (September-November). They're doing the same thing with Clueless and Tommy Boy - reissuing some of their older titles as Special Collector's Editions.