New on home video - This week's DVD releases
Tuesday, August 29, 2006 "The Sentinel": Here's hoping the Secret Service keeps closer tabs on its business and agents than is depicted in this assassination thriller, which features one of the most preposterous illicit love affairs ever. Michael Douglas stars as a veteran agent who's carrying on with a certain prominent Washington lady and ends up on the run as key suspect in a plot to kill the president. Kiefer Sutherland, Eva Longoria and Kim Basinger co-star. The DVD includes deleted scenes and an alternate ending that adds a silly coda to the romance in which Douglas' character has been involved. Director Clark Johnson and screenwriter George Nolfi offer commentary. DVD, $29.98. (20th Century Fox) "Take the Lead": It's feel-good time on the dance floor as Antonio Banderas plays a hoofing instructor who's hired by a high-school principal (Alfre Woodard) to teach ballroom moves to the toughest inner-city teens on her watch. Inspired by the grade-school dance programs depicted in the documentary "Mad Hot Ballroom," the slick flick plays out with sugary predictability and piles on showy formal dance steps crossed with hip-hop moves to enliven the action. The DVD has deleted footage and dance featurettes. DVD, $28.98. (New Line) "Friends With Money": In real life, we're betting former "Friends" darling Jennifer Aniston has more money than Frances McDormand, Catherine Keener and Joan Cusack combined. But in this sharply written comic drama, Aniston's the odd friend out, playing an irresolute woman who's given up teaching and cleans people's houses for a living in between hanging with her three well-to-do pals (McDormand, Keener and Cusack). The DVD has a making-of featurette and a segment on its premiere at last winter's Sundance Film Festival, where it was the opening-night movie. Writer-director Nicole Holofcener and producer Anthony Bregman team for commentary. DVD, $28.95. (Sony) "Akeelah and the Bee": Hollywood loves a good spelling bee. After the crowd-pleasing documentary "Spellbound" and the tepid drama "Bee Season" comes this solidly engaging tale of an inner-city girl (Keke Palmer in a terrific performance) whose innate ability to spell puts her on a fast-track to regional spelling bees and then the national championship. The movie's a reunion for "What's Love Got to Do With It" stars Laurence Fishburne, who plays Palmer's spelling mentor, and Angela Bassett, who plays the girl's skeptical mother. Along with deleted scenes, the DVD has three featurettes, a gag reel and a music video featuring Palmer. DVD, $28.98. (Lionsgate) "The Lord of the Rings": The filmmakers are not quite done wringing money out of Middle-earth. Peter Jackson's blockbuster trilogy "The Fellowship of the Ring," "The Two Towers" and "The Return of the King" are back in slim two-disc editions that include both the theatrical versions and the extended cuts, which add between 30 and 50 minutes of extra footage. Both versions of each film are crammed onto double-sided discs, the movies accompanied by a second DVD containing feature-length behind-the-scenes documentaries. The all-new documentaries are different from the DVD extras that came with the original two-disc theatrical versions and the four-disc extended-edition packages, but the new sets lack the copious background materials and commentaries of those earlier releases. DVD sets, $28.98 each. (New Line) — Associated Press Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.