One Battle After Another

DIGITAL REVIEW:

Warner;
Comedy;
Box Office $71.6 million;
Streaming on HBO Max;
$6.99 VOD, $19.99 Sellthrough, $24.98 DVD, $29.98 Blu-ray, $34.98 UHD;
Rated ‘R’ for pervasive language, violence, sexual content, and drug use.
Stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Benicio del Toro, Regina Hall, Teyana Taylor, Chase Infiniti, Tony Goldwyn, John Hoogenakker, Kevin Tighe, Jim Downey.

In One Battle After Another, Paul Thomas Anderson has crafted a film that feels like a jagged transmission from an immediate future. Anderson, the Studio City, Calif.-born visionary director best known for modern classics like Boogie Nights, Magnolia and There Will Be Blood, has always been a master of immersive worlds, but here he pushes that immersion to its limit. For me, it took a solid 30 minutes or more of deep focus to figure out what was going on, but once the film finds its rhythm, it never lets you up for air. Battle doesn’t offer a traditional “way in”; instead, you are dropped directly into a scene as if the story had been running long before you arrived. It is a frenzied, exhilarating experience as your mind frantically dissects the options and tries to guess what is about to happen next, and that breathless “ride” sensation continues for the full three-hour duration.

The story opens with a prologue set 16 years earlier, tracing the origin of the “French 75,” a radical leftist group led by the fierce “Perfidia Beverly Hills,” a character played by Teyana Taylor. After a raid on a detention center and a botched bank heist, the movement scatters. One member, “Ghetto” Pat Calhoun (Leonardo DiCaprio), vanishes into the shadows of present-day Northern California, reinventing himself as Bob Ferguson: a man trying to raise a daughter while the world he once tried to blow up slowly closes in on him.

This epic was brought to life by Warner Bros. executives Michael De Luca and Pamela Abdy, who handed Anderson an estimated (and staggering) $150 million budget. It remains a rare, almost defiant vote of confidence for a three-hour, ‘R’-rated odyssey that lacks a traditional hook. While the film rights weren’t won in a typical Hollywood bidding war, the project was born from Anderson’s decades-long obsession with the “unfilmable” novelist at the heart of the story.

The film’s eerie foresight is rooted in its source material, Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, which was a massive literary event and a New York Times best-seller upon its release. This is not Anderson’s first time at bat with the author, following 2014’s Inherent Vice, a film that struggled to find an audience. The timing of this latest adaptation is optimal. By updating Pynchon’s Reagan-era warnings for the mid-2020s, Anderson has effectively bridged two eras of national anxiety, proving that the author’s themes are relevant and terrifyingly durable. Pynchon is still alive at 87 as of January 2026, and his notoriously reclusive presence was recently felt with the release of his latest novel, Shadow Ticket, on Oct. 7, 2025. This unconventional mystery, set in the 1930s Great Depression, was his first new book in 12 years and arrived to critical acclaim just as One Battle After Another was becoming a cultural flashpoint. There is a haunting subtext here; by choosing to look back at the economic collapse of the 1930s now, Pynchon may be signaling that history is about to repeat itself, suggesting that the “impossible timing” of this film isn’t a fluke, but a head-on collision with a future he is already beginning to map out in his newer work.

To document a warning of this magnitude, Anderson required a canvas as wide as the history it mirrors, so to capture that sprawling landscape, Anderson used vintage cameras. VistaVision was a high-definition widescreen process created in the 1950s that ran 35mm film horizontally through the camera rather than vertically. This creates a much larger negative area, resulting in a picture with incredible depth, sharp detail, and a “bigness” that digital cameras often struggle to replicate. By using this technology, Anderson gives the modern chaos an organic, timeless grit, making the film feel like a rediscovered classic from a future that hasn’t happened yet. This attention to detail extends to the character names, which deserve recognition as both comical flourishes and sharp narrative shorthand. Names like Perfidia Beverly Hills, Steven J. Lockjaw, and Sergio St. Carlos aren’t just absurd; they are clear signals for what kind of person you’re dealing with. They highlight the cartoonish intensity of American archetypes — the underground icon turned revolutionary, the rigid military zealot, the zen-like karate master — anchoring the film in a hyper-reality where the humor is as pointed as the political critique.

The film’s profound accuracy likely stems from the unique collaboration between Anderson and Pynchon. It is widely believed that the two share a direct line of communication. Buzz suggests the author didn’t just give his blessing but actively participated, possibly even consulting on the script to help translate his 1980s paranoia into the 2026 landscape. This likely participation explains why the dialogue feels so authentically Pynchonian while remaining so sharp in its engagement with current events.

Battle delivers an essence of our “sensory whiteout” present-day political landscape, presenting a “fascist police state” that critics on both sides have claimed as a mirror to their own anxieties. Anderson remains remarkably neutral, mocking the left’s obsession with purity tests — as seen when a revolutionary on a payphone scolds Bob for not “studying the text” while his life is in danger — just as sharply as he skewers the hypocritical “racial purity” of the right-wing elite. However, viewers should be warned: This is a relentlessly violent film. The brutality on screen is often as raw as the narrative, and for many, the core message may be better served by returning to the source book, where Pynchon’s prose allows for a more contemplative digestion of these heavy themes. Simultaneously, some softened edges ground this thriller in the intimate, messy bond between a father and his daughter, where Anderson creates something explosive and deeply human.

DiCaprio delivers a stellar lead performance, with supreme comedic range, as Bob, a perpetually stoned, bathrobe-clad “degenerate” who navigates his paranoid existence with a roach clip or beer constantly in hand. He looks more like a suburban casualty than a former revolutionary, yet beneath the suds and clouds of smoke, DiCaprio keeps Bob sharp, portraying a father whose bumbling exterior masks a desperate, protective instinct. While DiCaprio provides the comedy pulse, Sean Penn is its terrifying, indelible engine. As Colonel Steven J. Lockjaw, Penn marvelously plays a sandblasted officer whose psychosexual obsession with the woman he’s hunting — Perfidia — drives the plot into dark territory. He seeks to join the “Christmas Adventurers Club,” a fictional white supremacist secret society of billionaires that feels uncomfortably close to real-world headlines. Penn brings a relentless, almost supernatural energy to the character; no matter the wreckage or the odds, Lockjaw simply never dies.

Opposite this darkness is Taylor, who makes a superstar turn as Perfidia. A former choreographer for Beyoncé, Taylor brings a “badass” energy to the screen that suggests she could easily anchor a major superhero franchise, yet she grounds the character in the grit of a woman who has sacrificed everything for a cause. Or did she? Anderson leaves us with a lingering, uncomfortable doubt: After her proximity to Penn’s Lockjaw, the film makes us wonder if her fire for the resistance was extinguished or merely traded for a different kind of survival. Another discovery of the film, however, is Chase Infiniti as Bob’s daughter, Willa. In her film debut, Infiniti acts as the story’s moral anchor and heart. The entire movie eventually revolves around her; she is the prize everyone is trying to get, whether to protect or destroy. Her performance is quiet and resolute, holding its own against heavyweights like Benicio Del Toro, who plays Sergio St. Carlos, Willa’s karate sensei. Del Toro is the film’s “soulful counterweight” — cool, collected and slightly tipsy — operating a modern-day underground railroad with a nonchalant grace. He is essentially a “Latino Harriet Tubman,” echoing the heroic 19th-century abolitionist who led others to safety through a secret network of safe houses; here, Del Toro provides that same sanctuary, offering Bob weapons, coverage and wisdom without ever breaking his nonchalant vibe.

Everything culminates in a finale shot in the desert over rolling hills — a one-of-a-kind car chase dubbed the “River of Hills.” Unlike the typical curves or lane-passing of standard action cinema, the undulating landscape here acts as a character in its own right, with cars vanishing and reappearing over steep, vertical peaks. The nail-biting cinematography, paired with a Jonny Greenwood score that ramps up the heart rate like a metronome of suspense, creates hairy tension. The sequence might even turn road topography into a metaphor for the blind dips of our American future.

Ultimately, One Battle After Another will be remembered as the definitive, prescient document of the mid-2020s. It captures the specific vibration of a nation holding its breath, waiting for a storm that is already here. It suggests that while the names of the “battles” change and the actors on the stage rotate, the fundamental struggle to remain human in an inhumane system is eternal. In a filmscape of disposable blockbusters, Anderson has delivered a rare, heavy artifact: a film that is more than a movie; it is an urgent, unflinching statement about the state of America today — a warning and a brilliant work of art all at once.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

The film is now available for streaming on HBO Max, and for digital purchase or rental. It arrives on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD disc Jan. 20 without bonus materials. Some supplements are being prepared for a 4K Steelbook slated for March.

The Phoenician Scheme

4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAY REVIEW:

Universal;
Comedy;
Box Office $19.56 million;
$27.99 DVD, $35.99 Blu-ray, $43.99 UHD BD;
Rated ‘PG-13’ for violent content, bloody images, some sexual material, nude images, and smoking throughout.
Stars Benicio del Toro, Mia Threapleton, Michael Cera, Riz Ahmed, Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Mathieu Amalric, Richard Ayoade, Jeffrey Wright, Scarlett Johansson, Benedict Cumberbatch, Rupert Friend, Hope Davis.

Director Wes Anderson’s latest farce is a fun romp involving an unscrupulous industrialist trying to reconnect with his daughter while bilking investors into supporting an elaborate construction project in the Middle East.

Set in 1950, the film stars Benicio del Toro as rogue industrialist Zsa-Zsa Korda, whose past work as an arms dealer has aligned the world’s powers against him. Though he has a habit of surviving constant assassination attempts, he gets a glimpse of heaven with each attack, and senses his unworthiness. He hopes to secure his legacy by rebuilding the infrastructure of the kingdom of Phoenicia, while also reconnecting with his daughter (Mia Threapleton), a nun who is skeptical of his motives.

Funding for his project is threatened by a conspiracy to drive up the cost of building materials, which sends Zsa-Zsa on a tour to convince his business partners to cover the gap rather than back out, which leads to some hilarious vignettes.

The production design again finds Anderson indulging in his diorama approach to filmmaking, using simplistic sets and camera framing to put more emphasis on the absurdity of the situations the characters find themselves in. And the film is populated with a vast array of great, quirky characters who fit nicely into Anderson’s canon.

Home entertainment extras, which are available on both the film’s disc and digital versions, include four short featurettes under the “Behind The Phoenician Scheme” banner, providing a total of about 15 minutes of limited but effective behind-the-scenes footage.

These include the seven-and-a-half-minute “The Cast,” which profiles the film’s various characters; the minute-and-a-half “The Airplane,” which delves into filming the airplane sequences; the two-minute “Marseille Bob’s,” a look at the nightclub sequence; and the four-minute “Zsa-Zsa’s World,” an examination of the main character.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

Writer Taylor Sheridan’s ‘American Frontier Trilogy’ Headed to Blu-ray Oct. 18

Three action films written by Taylor Sheridan (the writer behind TV’s “Yellowstone”) will be available in one collection in the American Frontier Trilogy, which arrives on Blu-ray plus digital Oct. 18 from Lionsgate.

In this trilogy of films written by Sheridan, an idealistic FBI agent teams up with a shady consultant to bust a drug lord (Sicario), a rookie FBI agent and a game tracker work to solve a girl’s murder on a remote reservation (Wind River), and a desperate father decides to rob the bank that’s trying to take his family’s land (Hell or High Water).

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

Stars in the $19.99 three-film collection include Academy Award nominee Jeremy Renner (The Hurt Locker, Avengers: Endgame), Academy Award winner Jeff Bridges (The Big Lebowski, Crazy Heart), Academy Award  nominee Josh Brolin (Dune, Avengers: Endgame), Golden Globe Winner Emily Blunt (Edge of Tomorrow, The Devil Wears Prada, The Adjustment Bureau), Academy Award winner Benicio Del Toro (Traffic, The Usual Suspects, Guardians of the Galaxy), Primetime Emmy Award nominee Elizabeth Olsen (“Avengers” franchise, “WandaVision”), Chris Pine (“Star Trek” franchise, Wonder Woman, A Wrinkle in Time) and Ben Foster (3:10 to Yuma, The Messenger).

The French Dispatch

BLU-RAY REVIEW:

Disney/Searchlight;
Comedy;
Box Office $16.05 million;
$19.99 DVD, $29.99 Blu-ray;
Rated ‘R’ for graphic nudity, some sexual references and language.
Stars Benicio del Toro, Adrien Brody, Tilda Swinton, Léa Seydoux, Frances McDormand, Timothée Chalamet, Lyna Khoudri, Jeffrey Wright, Bill Murray, Owen Wilson, Christoph Waltz, Edward Norton, Jason Schwartzman, Anjelica Huston.

Writer-director Wes Anderson’s penchant for quirky storytelling is on full display in The French Dispatch, an ode to journalism and the eclectic practitioners of the profession.

The film is an anthology structured like the format of a magazine, in this case a journal for the fictional French town of Ennui. The magazine, called The French Dispatch, is the local arm of a newspaper in Kansas. The vignettes shown in the film represent the final issue of the magazine, which is shut down upon the sudden death of its editor (Bill Murray), whose life story is presented through his obituary.

The tribute issue begins with a roving reporter (Owen Wilson) giving a brief recap of the history of Ennui, where little has changed culturally in 200 years.

The main story concerns an artist (Benicio del Toro) sentenced to prison for murder, whose paintings are inspired by a guard (Léa Seydoux) with whom he has fallen in love. His work catches the eye of a corrupt art dealer (Adrien Brody), while the tale is recounted by an indulgent lecturer for the gallery that ended up with the prisoner’s work.

Next up is the story of a student protest whose leader (Timothée Chalamet) inspires the writer of the piece (Frances McDormand) to break her objective coverage of the situation and help him write his manifesto while they enjoy a love affair.

The final segment involves a food journalist (Jeffrey Wright) whose examination of a new type of cuisine specially designed for police officers is interrupted when the town’s criminal syndicates kidnap the son of the police commissioner.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

The sketches are infused with Anderson’s usual eccentricities, such as varying aspect ratios, an intermixing of color and black-and-white, charming personalities, sharp wit, spitfire dialogue, rapid editing, and the precise framing of each scene with imagery evocative of a snapshot.

The set designs and visual style make the film seem like somewhat of a spiritual cousin to The Grand Budapest Hotel.

The Blu-ray doesn’t include any bonus materials, but since it’s a Wes Anderson movie there’ll probably be a Criterion Collection release in a few years offering a smattering of supplements.

Disney Sets Home Release Dates for Artsy Comedy ‘The French Dispatch’

Disney has announced home release dates for Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch, an homage to literary journalism, French culture and classic cinema.

The film, from Searchlight Pictures, will be released through digital retailers on Dec. 14, followed two weeks later by its release on DVD and Blu-ray Disc (on Dec. 28).

The French Dispatch brings to life a collection of stories from the final issue of an American magazine published in the fictional 20th-century French city of Ennui-sur-Blasé. The cast includes Benicio Del Toro, Adrien Brody, Tilda Swinton, Léa Seydoux, Frances McDormand, Timothée Chalamet, Lyna Khoudri, Jeffrey Wright, Mathieu Amalric, Stephen Park, Bill Murray and Owen Wilson.

The film has been praised by critics for its exquisite visuals, captivating performances and unique artistry.

Animated ‘The Little Prince’ Heading to Disc Feb. 9 From Paramount

The animated adaptation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s classic story The Little Prince arrives on Blu-ray and DVD Feb. 9 from Paramount Home Entertainment.

Featuring a voice cast including Jeff Bridges, Rachel McAdams, Marion Cotillard, James Franco, Benicio Del Toro, Ricky Gervais, Albert Brooks, Paul Rudd, Mackenzie Foy and Paul Giamatti, the film debuted on Netflix in 2016.

From the director of Kung Fu Panda comes this re-imagined take on the story. At its heart is “The Little Girl” (Foy), prepared by her mother (McAdams) for the very grown-up real-world. After her eccentric, kind-hearted neighbor “The Aviator” (Bridges) introduces her to an extraordinary world where anything is possible, she learns of “The Little Prince” (Riley Osborne). And so begins a magical and emotional journey.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

Special features include a 25-minute featurette on the making of the film, as well as a music video for the song “Turnaround” by Camille. The Blu-ray additionally includes access to a digital copy of the film.

Dora and the Lost City of Gold

BLU-RAY REVIEW: 

Paramount;
Family Adventure;
Box Office $60.48 million;
$25.99 DVD, $31.99 Blu-ray;
Rated ‘PG’ for action and some impolite humor.
Stars Isabela Moner, Eugenio Derbez, Michael Peña, Eva Longoria, Jeff Wahlberg, Nicholas Coombe, Madeleine Madden, Temuera Morrison, Adriana Barraza, Benicio del Toro, Danny Trejo.

It would be easy to assume that a movie based on Nickelodeon’s long-running animated “Dora the Explorer” TV series might be just another sappy, dumbed-down diversion aimed at kids. But in the hands of director James Bobin, Dora and the Lost City of Gold turns out to be a charming, fun adventure that all ages can enjoy, not just fans of the TV series.

Bobin, who has already demonstrated his deft touch with similar material as director of the two most recent “Muppets” movies, and screenwriters Nicholas Stoller and Matthew Robinson bring a slightly subversive sensibility that honors the concept while poking fun at it at the same time.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

The cartoon, of course, dealt with the adventures of 7-year-old Dora, her monkey sidekick, Boots, and her cousin, Diego, as they talk and sing to the audience to solve puzzles and learn new facts about the world. And the movie jumps right in with a live-action version of the “Dora” theme that sets up the movie as providing more of the same. But it turns out Dora and Diego are just imaginative youngsters who live in the South American jungle with Dora’s parents (Michael Peña and Eva Longoria), a pair of professors researching ancient civilizations.

After Diego moves away to Los Angeles with his parents, Dora is left to explore on her own, and the movie cuts to 10 years later, with the 16-year-old Dora (Isabela Moner) running through the jungle as if nothing has changed (though, in a bit of meta-humor, she now live-streams her adventures as a means of talking to her audience). As her parents prepare to embark on a search for a lost city, Dora is sent to live with Diego in L.A., much to her chagrin.

Having spent 10 years in the city, Diego is now a more-or-less normal kid trying to survive high school, while Dora continues to be Dora.

The movie mines Dora’s fish-out-of-water adjustments to high school for some good laughs, as she is basically the cartoon character dropped into the real world. The tone brings to mind The Brady Bunch Movie in the way the humor stems from the juxtaposition of the central characters living in their own little world for regular reality to react to.

Things take a turn, however, as Dora, Diego and some of their fellow high schoolers are kidnapped by mercenaries who want to find the same city of gold that Dora’s parents are seeking, putting Dora back in her element and turning the tables on the students who were making fun of her for survivalist skills.

The kids quickly escape into the jungle and set off to find the legendary city and Dora’s parents on their own, pursued by the bad guys, who are aided by Swiper the Fox, lest any of his fans worry he would be left out of the action.

From here the film takes on the vibe of a junior “Indiana Jones” adventure, while also taking some cues from Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, in terms of putting the ensemble into unusual situations.

In addition to the opening sequence, the film’s most direct nod to the cartoon version comes in the form of a clever sequence in which the characters are exposed to jungle spores that make them hallucinate an animated world. The making of this playful scene is the subject of a four-minute featurette on the Blu-ray.

The behind-the-scenes material is pretty standard as far as these things go, with plenty of interviews from the cast and filmmakers. The nine-minute “All About Dora” features the talented Moner offering her insights on playing the character as a teenager. “Can You Say Pelicula?” is a four-and-a-half-minute examination of some of the stunts as well as the comedic sensibilities of Eugenio Derbez. A four-minute “Dora’s Jungle House” video offers a lot of details about Dora’s parents’ house that aren’t readily apparent from the movie.

The latter should please fans looking to live in this world a bit more, as will more than 13 minutes of deleted scenes, extended sequences and alternate takes.

The Blu-ray also includes an amusing two-minute blooper reel.

Star Wars: Episode VIII — The Last Jedi

BLU-RAY REVIEW:

Street 3/27/18;
Disney/Lucasfilm;
Sci-Fi;
Box Office $619.6 million;
$29.99 DVD, $39.99 Blu-ray, $39.99 UHD BD;
Rated ‘PG-13’ for sequences of sci-fi action and violence.
Stars Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Andy Serkis, Lupita Nyong’o, Domhnall Gleeson, Anthony Daniels, Gwendoline Christie, Kelly Marie Tran, Laura Dern, Benicio del Toro.

Writer-director Rian Johnson’s The Last Jedi is perhaps the most complex, thought-provoking “Star Wars” film to date in the way it asks its audience to reflect on their relationship with the franchise (a challenge many fans, it seems, were not up to). The result is a spectacularly entertaining film that deftly mixes thrills, nostalgia, emotion and humor.

The follow-up to 2015’s The Force Awakens, and the eighth of the numbered “Skywalker Saga” films in the “Star Wars” canon, answers some questions director J.J. Abrams left open in the previous film, while leaving more for Abrams to wrap up in the concluding chapter of this sequel trilogy that thus far represents the cornerstone of Disney’s cinematic plans for the franchise since acquiring Lucasfilm in 2012.

Picking up where Force Awakens left off, General Leia (the late Carrie Fisher, in her final film performance) and her Resistance fighters are on the run from the First Order, which is on the verge of seizing military control of the galaxy. Meanwhile, Jedi wannabe Rey (Daisy Ridley) has located the self-exiled Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill), and works to convince him to join the fight, all while the villainous Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) hopes to turn her to his side.

Last Jedi is an improvement upon Force Awakens in many ways simply by not following so closely to the template of an earlier film (the 1977 original, in the case of Force Awakens), and not getting bogged down with trying to address every nagging plot thread from earlier films. (Seriously, to hear some fans tell it, they wouldn’t be satisfied unless Rey spent two hours sitting at a computer reading exposition about every new character from space-Wikipedia and narrating fan fiction.)

That isn’t to say the film pushes aside all tropes and familiarity. There are several plot points that echo previous installments, most notably Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, in keeping with the grand “Star Wars” tradition of intergalactic history playing out in cycles and new characters encountering situations similar to their predecessors, and having opportunities to make different choices. Indeed, Johnson at many points plays off the audience’s familiarity with these archetypes to purposely subvert their expectations, both for dramatic effect and as a bulwark against the franchise becoming stale. This is in many ways a film for the “Star Wars” fan who is willing to grow along with the franchise.

That’s not to say it’s a perfect film — some of the jokes and subplots have been criticized for straying too far from the formula. And certainly, the “Star Wars” films could benefit from a stricter storytelling structure that is rumored to be less of a priority at Lucasfilm than it is at fellow Disney company Marvel Studios. But for the most part, the film works exactly as it was intended to do.

Last Jedi is, at its core, a rumination on the nature of hero worship, and in forcing the characters to confront their preconceptions about the people and places they encounter, it also asks “Star Wars” fandom to make the same considerations. The film even gets meta at times, almost directly addressing the idea of obsessing over fan theories while also reminding us about the larger-than-life nature of the characters that made us want to experience their adventures in the first place.

The presentation offered by this absolutely loaded Blu-ray is a visual treat that preserves the big-screen splendor of the film’s gorgeous location photography and visual effects, including several scenes that are all-time franchise highlights.

The centerpiece of the extras is the 95-minute behind-the-scenes documentary The Director and the Jedi, an often-candid look at Johnson’s journey to bring the film to life, from the announcement of his involvement to the final photograph of the cast and crew.

For all that detractors may complain about their own vision for “Star Wars” not aligning with Disney’s, it’s clear that Johnson himself is a fan with a firm grasp of the franchise’s mythology.

There’s even more to learn in another 50-minutes of making-of featurettes, each dealing with specific scenes or concepts, such as an examination of the nature of the Force and looks at creating various battles. An especially fun one offers Andy Serkis’ on-set performance as Supreme Leader Snoke in his performance-capture suit before any of the character CGI is applied, and he’s just as menacing with little dots pasted to his face.

The Blu-ray also includes 14 deleted scenes running more than 24 minutes. While most of these are wise cuts (an extended chase sequence on the casino planet really tests one’s patience), many offer some fun moments of story and character.

Johnson provides an optional commentary on the deleted scenes, as well as for the film as a whole. It’s a solo commentary, and he and talks openly about recording it before the movie even hit theaters, which leads to some interesting passages where he ponders about how the audience will react to certain things, leaving viewers with their hindsight to fill in the rest. It’s an informative track, but also raises a few questions about just when these commentaries should be recorded.

For movies that even offer a home video commentary, they tend to be recorded just before the film’s theatrical release, likely due to scheduling concerns and possibly the idea that the filmmakers are better able to recollect certain details when it hasn’t been that long since the film wrapped. On the other hand, this might have been a good opportunity to get a few people involved with the production to record one after seeing the fan reaction and focusing it more on analysis and response. Perhaps taking such a tact is liable to raise more issues, and simply carrying on with the confidence of having created a good film is the more appropriate way to go, but it might have led to a damn interesting commentary track.

Speaking of damn interesting — and perhaps a bit of it’s about damn time — the digital version of the film offered through the Movies Anywhere service includes a score-only version of the film that puts composer John Williams’ excellent music front and center. The soundtrack version is available exclusively to Movies Anywhere accounts linked to an affiliated retailer where the film was purchased, or by redeeming the digital copy code included with the disc.

It’s a nice gesture that hopefully paves the way for music-only versions of the rest of the “Star Wars” films.

From Around the Web