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James Cameron: Guest editor

Your MSN Movies editor for the day is James Cameron!

The big JC has invaded MSN Movies because he really likes our site! No, okay, we thought you wouldn’t believe that. He’s launching the Avatar DVD and Blu-Ray and he wants to talk about it. But still he’s our guest editor.

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Jim (we get to call him Jim while he’s working here) is answering the questions you so kindly submitted here.

He’s also talking about the environment, the 3D of Avatar and his ideas on space travel.

So movies are saving the world now…

Big blockbusters like Avatar and this Summer’s Robin Hood are all about making cash. Obscene amounts of cash. Filthy amounts of cash.

But today’s debt and carbon filled world has made the beneficiaries of these money-magnet films think about what to do with the tens and hundreds of millions of dollars they generate.

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Avatar’s James Cameron and Sigourney Weaver were in São Paulo to plant the first tree as part of a global partnership to plant one million trees worldwide – an initiative between Fox and Earth Day Network to promo the Avatar DVD. Cameron planted the pau-brasil – a native Brazilian tree – which is a powerful symbol of recouperation of the forests in that country and a species that is 99% extinct.

Seems he’s not just concerned with Pandora. I guess those people who spotted the subtle environmental message in Avatar were right all along. But it’s not just Avatar.

Untitled Robin Hood Adventure 

Universal has announced the launch of its "Robin Hood: Lionhearts" program, a cause-based initiative designed to reward those who “dedicate their time to changing the world”. The scheme aims embody the legendary Robin Hood message through peer sharing and social networking.

It’s about Lionhearts, defined as “people who make a positive impact in society via their participation in a cause or charity.” Three Lionhearts will win a Grand Award and receive $5,000 each, in addition to $5,000 to share with a cause of their choice. Ten Lionhearts will win a First Award and receive $500 each, in addition to $500 to share with a cause of their choice. Lionhearts will be featured through an online profile along with their chosen cause. Universal is working with not-for-profits United Way, City Year and Robin Hood, to identify Lionhearts in their respective organizations.

You could read into the obvious PR thinking behind this. In both cases, the “cause” publicises the movie heavily. But the benefit on the other side mean this is undoubtedly to be applauded.

It’s only right that when blockbusters are shoving a moral message down our throats, they should promote that message actively in the real world. This particularly applies to those that count their box office take in billions. That means you Avatar.

We’d love to see this sort of charity from every blockbuster. Spidey 4 could fund the protection of rare, urrr, spiders. Or something…

How big was Avatar? THIS Big…

Our infographic shows the biggest movies of 2009/10. The size is directly proportionate to the global box office take.

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Thanks to worldle for helping us conjure this.

Pun-tastic Shrek posters

 

SFA_CHARACTER_DONKEY_banner_fin1 Smpl-150 crp (Large) SFA_CHARACTER_FIONA_fin1-Smpl-150 crp (Large) SFA_CHARACTER_RUMPLE_banner_fin1_simp-150 Crp (Large)

There’s a strong feeling of rolling out Shrek – the reliable green cashcow – for one last flogging this year.

There’s a sense of desperation about these new posters don’t you think? The film’s have been headed progressively downhill since the first one. I’m not sensing a change in the pattern here.

Corey Haim dies

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Corey Haim has died aged 38 in Los Angeles.

The 1980s teen heartthrob, best known for his roles in Lucas and The Lost Boys, died in the early hours of Wednesday at Providence St Joseph Medical Centre in Burbank, Los Angeles County coroner Cheryl MacWillie said.

An autopsy will determine the cause of death and there were no other details, she said.

Police said there was no evidence of foul play.

Haim had flulike symptoms before he died and was getting over-the-counter and prescription medications, police said. The cause of death is unknown.

“He could have succumbed to whatever (illness) he had or it could have been drugs. Who knows?” police sergeant William Mann said. “He has had a drug problem in the past.”

Haim was taken by ambulance to the hospital from an apartment in Los Angeles near Burbank. The enormous complex is known as Oakwood and is popular with young actors, police sergeant Michael Kammert said.

Haim acknowledged his struggle with drug abuse to The Sun in 2004.

“I was working on Lost Boys when I smoked my first joint,” he told the newspaper. “I did cocaine for about a year and a half, then it led to crack.”

Haim said he went into rehabilitation and was put on prescription drugs. He took both stimulants and sedatives such as Valium.

“I started on the downers which were a hell of a lot better than the uppers because I was a nervous wreck,” he said. “But one led to two, two led to four, four led to eight, until at the end it was about 85 a day.”

In 2007, he told ABC’s Nightline that drugs hurt his career.

“I feel like with myself I ruined myself to the point where I wasn’t functional enough to work for anybody, even myself. I wasn’t working,” he said.


 

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The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo: What you need to know

girlwiththe 

A literary phenomenon that has created one of the the great female anti-heroes, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo deserves your attention. If you are not already in love with Lisbeth Salander, believe me, you soon will be.

For the as yet uninitiated still wondering what all the fuss is about, here’s a simple blaggers’ guide to The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo to ensure you won’t be caught short at the water fountain not knowing your Blomkvists from your Bergers. We’re good like that.

· Blomkvist is our male protagonist, a womanising, chain-smoking caffeine fiend – wrongly accused of slander and fighting the good fight to clear his name

· Lisbeth Salander is our female protagonist, a womanising, chain-smoking caffeine fiend – wrongly accused of being mentally incapable. The similarities end there…

· Lisbeth Salander is a hacker of extraordinary skill and ability – she’s a Mac, not a PC

· Millenium is a hard hitting, bad guy exposing magazine feared by soulless money grabbing corporations the world over – and co-owned by Blomkvist

· Henrik Vanger is the aging patriarch of the famous and rich Vanger family who has been haunted for the last 14 years by the mysterious disappearance of his niece – Harriet Vanger. He employs Blomkivist to discover and document his family’s many dark secrets

· Middle aged traditional journo Blomkvist and wild child hacker Salander team up personally and professionally to solve the great Vanger mystery. Opposites really do attract!

· The Vanger Family is a tangled web of Nazi supporters, sadists and emotionally stunted aristocrats. Christmas is a blast…

· Lisbeth is under legal guardianship after being declared mentally incompetent and spending a good proportion of her teenage years in a metal asylum. She DOES NOT like authority

· The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is the first in a three part trilogy – oh yes, there’s more

· The millennium trilogy has sold more than 25 million copies worldwide. The book’s author died under mysterious circumstances and never lived to see the phenomenon his work would become

· Hell hath no fury like a Lisbeth Salander scorned

· The millennium trilogy has been known to cause extreme insomnia, eye strain, paranoia and the desire to thoroughly kick someone’s ass. You have been warned.

Check out the novel on Ciao!

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo hits UK cinemas on 12 March.

Oscars 2010: live!

Weeeeeelcome to the MSN Movies Oscar blog 2010! Avatar vs The Hurt Locker. Cameron vs Bigelow. Bridges vs Firth. Bullock vs Mulligan. Madness vs Sanity. The biggest, shiniest ding-dong on the movie calendar is about to kick off. And we’re stationed in The Groucho club in London, watching it in HD loveliness on Sky Movies Premiere, all ready to serve you a blow-by-blow account of all the action, upsets, tears, speeches, faux pas and air-punches as it unfolds over the early hours. Roll out the red carpet, slide into your tux, pour yourself a cocktail. It’s about to begin…
 
How it ended
Best Picture: The Hurt Locker
Director: Kathryn Bigelow, The Hurt Locker
Actor in a Leading Role: Jeff Bridges, Crazy Heart
Actress in a Leading Role: Sandra Bullock, The Blind Side
Actor in a Supporting Role: Christoph Waltz, Inglourious Basterds
Actress in a Supporting Role: Mo’Nique, Precious
 
 
How it happened
 
1.30am
We’re off! But what’s this? They’re rolling out all the nominees on stage. That’s a nice touch. And there’s Neil Patrick Harris. Wait, really? "What am I doing here?" Good question, Harris. Answer: singing. Oh grief. Let’s hope it’s not another campy sing-a-long-Oscars like last year. Jokes please!   
 
1.40am
Odd couple co-hosts Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin step up. Meryl Streep holds the record for most nominations as an actress, says Martin. "Or as I like to think of it, Most Losses," he adds. Before making a Hitler joke. We’re looking good so far.
 
1,45am
Hey, there’s Woody Harrelson, nominated for The Messenger. "He’s so high…" whispers Baldwins. M&B don 3D specs to mock Jim Cameron – about his former marriage to Kathryn Bigelow! Also: exciting possibility that George Clooney is hammered! Alsoalso: second Nazi joke in five minutes! Best Oscars ever already?
 
1.45am
Oh dear, oh dear! Clooney definitely off the chart. Amazing.
 
1.47am
Still struggling gamely with the English language, Penelope Cruz presents Best Supporting Actor. Will Christoph waltz away with it (sorry) for his awesome Basterds turn as The Jew Hunter? He better had…
 
1.50am
He does.
 
1.51am
Waltz takes Best Supporting Actor. But can he claim Best Beard, too? He faces stiff competition from Antonio Banderas, who’s glued a dead animal to his chin. Lustrous.
 
1,58am
D’oh! Cameron Diaz fluffs her autocue. And makes co-presenting comedy legend Steve Carell look like a circus midget. Best Animation is next up… And surely, surely, it will be Up. (Although in any other year, Coraline should win.)
 
2am
Of course, it’s Up. And Pixar’s heartbreaking movie still has a Best Picture nom in the hat. Nice short speech. Well done that man. 
 
2.01am
Jennifer’s Body star Amanda Seyfried steps on stage wearing a dress that’s as big as the stage itself. Miley Cyrus g-g-g-gets her lines wrong. Love it.
 
2.05am
Wow. Someone called "T-Bone" just won an Oscar. What’s happening to this world? Acceptance speech as Crazy Heart walks away with Best Song: "I love you more than rainbows, baby." Entire Oscar audience is nearly sick in their own shoes. 
 
2.14am
Looking’ guuuud… Robert Downey Jr (weird shades, blue bow tie, um…) and Tiny Fey (nice dress, big hair) present Best Original Screenplay. For our money, it’s Basterds versus Hurt Locker. Which means The Messenger will probably win.
 
2.16am
Boom! The Hurt Locker wins. Although scripter Mark Boal’s neatly trimmed chin-rug fails to provide any contest in tonight’s Best Beard melee.
 
2:20am
Jeez… Is that Molly Ringwald?? My word, it really is. Which means it’s time for a John Hughes eugoogly. Great movies. Great man.
 
2.23am
Wow… Hughes alumnus pay homage. Everyone looks old. Except Macauley Culkin, who appears to be aging backwards, Benjamin Button-stylee. Suddenly feels like it’s been a long time since someone’s cracked a joke. Where’s Steve Martin gone?
 
2.37am
Hotties du jour Carey Mulligan and Zoe Saldana are on stage. It can mean only one thing: some awards no one really cares about. Best Animated Short, Best Documentary Short, Best Live Action Short… Director of the latter narrowly avoids crying. Hang on! There’s Clooney, finally regaining consciousness… 
 
2.42am
This is more like it… Ben Stiller presents Best Makeup dressed as a Na’vi. Points out the irony that Avatar wasn’t nominated. "After I announce the winner I will stand as far away as possible so as not to demean their moment of triumph." And the winner is… Star Trek.  
 
2.51am
Best Beard wannabe Jake Gyllenhaal and this writer’s future wife Rachel McAdams present Best Adapted Screenplay. And the winner is… Oh, here we go. First award of the night for Precious. And some tears. From a man. "This is for precious boys and girls everywhere…" gasps the writer, thanking everyone as if he’s just found the cure for AIDS.
 
2.52am
"I wrote that speech for him," deadpans Martin. Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant.  
 
2.55am
Lovely shoutout for legends Lauren Bacall and Roger Corman. EVeryone stands and applauds. Except Penelope Cruz. Who just looks confused. Probably because the video montage wasn’t subtitled.
 
3am
Right. Let’s do this. Best Supporting Actress. Mustmustmust go to Mo’Nique for her incredible performance as a monster-mother in Precious. It’s the only award that film deserves to win tonight – and boy, does Mo’Nique deserve it. And the winner is…
 
3.02am
MO’NIQUE! Even better, she gets through her speech without having a good cry. Cut to Gabby Sidibe, who looks distracted and peckish.
 
3.08am
Some two hours into the ceremony, Avatar bags its first Oscar: Best Art Direction. They’ve broken the seal…
 
3.10am
Sarah Jessica Parker (spray-painted orange) and Tom Ford (beard: disappointing) present Best Costume Design to The Young Victoria. "Well, I already have two of these," sighs recipient Sandy Powell. Snipers on the balcony take aim. Hopefully.
 
3.20am
Well, they were always going to be shoehorned in somehow. Taylor Lautner and K-Stew intro an actually-quite-disturbing montage of Hollywood;s greatest horrors. R-Pattz must be gelling his hair backstage. Or desperately trying to grow a beard in time for next year’s ceremony. 
 
3.24am
Morgan Freeman tries to explain to everyone what sound editing means. Nobody really understands what he’s on about. But he does have a very soothing voice. Avatar and The Hurt Locker are nominated. And the winner is…
 
3.28am
The Hurt Locker. Whose sound editor has lady’s hair. Hurriedly on to Sound Mixing now (Freeman doesn’t even bother explaining), but that goes to The Hurt Locker too. It is agreed, then, that The Hurt Locker has very good sound. And its sound editor has very silly hair.
 
3.37am
"Please welcome my longtime dear friend, and by that I mean, I’ve never met her, Sandra Bullock!" Martin sends on the Best Actress nominee to present Best Cinematography to… Avatar. Jim Cameron’s groundbreaking sci-fi stunner is building momentum ahead of the Best Picture and Best Director showdown. 
 
3.38am
Truly alarming cut to Avatar stars CCH Pounder and Stephen Lang sat next to each other. She’s literally twice the size of him!
 
3.42pm
Dead-people montage: Crazy Swayze, Brittany Murphy, Jack Cardiff, Horton Foote, Natascha Richarson, Budd Schulberg… Jacko? Karl Malden probably gets the biggest hand. James Taylor plays them out. Impossible not to think of Funny People.
 
3.52am
Sam Worthington! Stop! Chewing! Gum! Honestly… Slouching next to an immaculate J-Lo, the Avatar and Terminator star helps intro Best Score. By "helps", we mean slouches next to J-Lo chewing gum. Up wins.
 
3.53am
Clooney hammered again. Or at the very least pretending to be. Which is good enough for us.
 
3,54am
Hurt Locker 3-2 Avatar, as we go into the Best Visual Effects smackdown, presented by lady-faves Gerard Butler and Bradley Cooper.
 
3.56am
Make that 3-3. Avatar scoops up another one for its boundary-busting 3D magic. 
 
4.01am
Matt Damon.
 
4.05am
YES! The Cove, that incredible documentary about the Japanese’s horrific treatment of dolphins, wins Best Doc. If you haven’t seen it, go out right now and buy it. Or wait till the shops are open. Whatever. Just buy it.
 
4.10am
Hurt Locker beats Avatar to Best Editing. But it’s all just build-up… We’re betting Hurt Locker to take Best Director and Avatar to take Best Picture.  
 
4.17am
Best Foreign Film. Basically, it’s Un Prophete (that;s "A Prophet" if you don’t speak French) versus The White Ribbon…
 
4.18am
Only it’s not! First proper upset of the night as The Secret Of Their Eyes gives Prophet and White Ribbon a good slap in face and scampers off with the Oscar. Critics everywhere nervously start googling so they can pretend they’ve seen it.
 
4.25am
Kim Basinger (Bridges). Vera Farminga (Clooney),. Julianne Moore (Firth). Tim Robbins (Freeman). Colin Farrell (Renner) Stars take the stage to pay lovely tribute to each of the Best Actor nominees…
 
4.31am
"Being a friend is getting the other a cup of coffee. Can you do that for me, Ted?" Robbins recalls how he knew than he and Morgan Freeman would be friends for life. Colin Farrell reveals he spooned with Hurt Locker star Jeremy Renner when they made SWAT. 
  
4.32am
And the Best Actor is….
 
4.33am
Jeff Bridges! Finally, in his fifth swing at Best Actor, the Dude abides. Emotional speech about his parents and his family. Then gives fellow Oscar-winner T-Bone a shout-out, too. Well, how could he not?
 
4.44am
It’s Best Actress O’Clock… Forest Whitaker, Michael Sheen, Peter Sarsgaard, Oprah Winfrey, and Stanley Tucci butter up the leading ladies. Can Sandra Bullock snatch it? Her real challengers are Meryl Streep (taking it in her stride) and Carey Mulligan (looking visible nervous). Unless they give it to Big Ol’ Gabby Sidibe. In which case, this blog is over. Over!
 
4.48am
And the Best Actress is…
 
4.50am
Gabby Sidi… Nah. It’s Sandy Bullock! Doffing a graceful cap to her challengers (including "my lover, Meryl Streep!"), the star of Miss Congeniality lifts an unlikely Academy Award. We love her. Not least because she just told everyone that George Clooney chucked her in a swimming pool once. Well done, Sandy. 
 
4.51am
Bullock also just became the first actress to win Worst Actress at the Razzies and Best Actress at the Oscars in the same year. Dominance.
 
4.55am
The winner…
 
4.55am
of Best Director…
 
4.55am
is…
 
4.56am
…the first woman ever to win Best Director. Congratulations, Kathryn Bigelow. Ex-husband James Cameron gives her some warm applause. Now his hopes hang on Best Picture. 
 
4.57am
And here comes Tom Hanks…
 
4.58am
TO ANNOUNCE THAT THE HURT LOCKER IS HAS ALSO WON BEST PICTURE!
 
5am
James Cameron looks stunned. So do the Hurt Locker producers. Bigelow can hardly talk. Hanks barely let the Best Director cheers fade before announcing Hurt Lockers’ incredible double-win. Suddenly, it’s all over. The Hurt Locker rules! Cameron is left with nothing but a few technical awards. (Oh, and billions of dollars.)
 

Bafta awards 2010: Live

MSN Movies is here to guide you through the awards-dishing glamour-fest of the Bafta awards 2010.

Stay with us throughout the evening from 9pm for live updates and commentary. Sigh… if only Stephen Fry was still presenting.

9pm Nice atmosphere on the red carpet and it’s not raining. Mickey Rourke is bright orange. James Cameron is all smiles. Vanessa Redgrave is getting the fellowship.

Jonathan Ross claims to be a 3d rendering conjured up by James Cameron. Hilarious Ross, really.

Nice montage of the year’s flicks that included The Hangover, The Road and The Informant! Ended nicely on Up. We do that bit so much better than the Oscars.

9.13 Moon SO needs to win this Best British newcomer award. And yup it does. Maybe we’ll be seeing presenter Colin Firth again later. TEARS ON THE FIRST AWARD as director Duncan Jones cracks up. Blimey!

Avatar wins best SFX. "That was a surprise wasn’t it!" says Woss, fittingly.

Best supporting actor goes, inevitably, to Christophe Waltz for Inglourious Basterds. He’s won every award so far this year. The Oscar is his. He gives a nice speech about being a "supported" actor and gushes about QT.

I’m a fan of the Bafta format: we scroll through scenes from the Best Picture nominees across the course of the evening. This look at An Education is making me think perhaps just enough of the British academy voters might have gone for it. Might it stand up to the might of Avatar? I hope so, personally.

Prince William looks bored by the best hair and make-up category. I know how he feels.

Matt Dillon presents Best Supporting Actress. Mo’Nique – the crowd favourite – wins. Director Lee Daniels (he who "polarised America") accepts.

9.40 – Fish Tank wins Best British Film. I was holding out hope for In The Loop but Fish Tank is by far the better awards material. It’s out on DVD now and well worth picking up.

"Erotically charged" vampire actor Robert Pattinson presents Best Original Screenplay. The Hurt Locker wins it and we catch our first sight of director Kathryn Bigelow sitting a comfortable distance away from her ex-husband James Cameron.

The Orange Rising Star award goes to "erotically charged" Twilight actress Kristen Stewart. She gives thanks to the "attentive" twilight fans, perhaps hinting that she’s done with the attention of the twi-hards.

Pete Docter – the director of Up and a particularly nice chap if I do say so myself – accepts the most obvious award of the evening. Good on him.

"Language is no barrier to great storytelling" says a lovely-looking Carey Mulligan as she presents Best Film not in the English language. A Prophet wins.

10.20 Clive Owen presents Best Director. Bigelow vs. Cameron in the battle of the exes… Kathryn Bigelow! Straight to a shot of ex-hubby Jim Cameron clapping. Did she just mouth the words "oh well" in Cameron’s direction?

BEST ACTOR – COLIN FIRTH for A Single Man. "I thought I couldn’t possibly do this until a man came to repair my fridge. I would like to thank the fridge guy."

BEST ACTRESS – MICKEY ROURKE CAN’T READ THE AUTOCUE! Easily the best moment of the night so far as he squints his way through and tells them to slow it down. CAREY MULLIGAN wins.

BEST FILM – Dustin Hoffman can’t read the autocue either. He’s making it up. THE HURT LOCKER!! Jim Cameron isn’t smiling this time. He’s mentally folding up his acceptance speech. Well done Kathryn Bigelow. "This is beyond our wildest imagination thank you!"

Prince William shows up in a horrid double-breasted suit to take the reins of Bafta from the ill Richard Attenborough. Uma Thurman gives the gushy speech before presenting the fellowship to Vanessa Redgrave. I’m surprised she doesn’t have it already. "You’ve done me in," says an overwhelmed Redgrave who gives a touching speech. She blows us all a kiss and it’s good night Bafta. The story tomorrow? "Avatar beaten by Cameron’s ex!"

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A letter from Parker Selfridge – Pandora Resources Development Administration

avatra

Greetings earthlings!

Ha! Sorry I always wanted to say that! I guess spending all this time on an alien world is bringing out my nerdy side.

So things have been going well up here. Business is good. We’ve run into a few problems with the local life forms. But I don’t see it being too much of an issue.

In fact I’ve been meaning to talk to you about that. I’ve heard a few whispers that our little unobtanium mining operation is getting a little unpopular back there on earth. Seems that the locals (na’avi, or something?) have been becoming quite the flavour of the month.

I mean, what the hell!? I’m on the frontier here people! I’m busting my ass to provide us with a little mineral that can SAVE OUR ENTIRE SPECIES and you’re all worrying about these oversize blue things and their precious tree!

Sorry. Lost my rag there.

I was sent here to do a job, okay? I’m just doing what I have to do to get paid. I got Sigourney Weaver giving me the beatdown every day as it is. Last thing I need is all this bad press.

Listen guys, if it wasn’t for the fact that these aliens are blue, sort of attractive and remind us of The Lost Boys from Peter Pan, we’d have kicked them out of their goddamn treehouse YEARS ago. What if they were a species of evil gigantic bugs like the ones out of Starship Troopers?! You wouldn’t have cared so much if we’d kicked THOSE aliens out of their local habitat…

Besides, it’s a big planet with lots of trees. All we need is for them to vacate this specific area. Hell, we can move them back to the states and they can have the big Cedar outside my mom’s. I just need them to move. Is it so big a deal? Really!?

I can see why this happened. What with all their “I have a cool spear and a ponytail that I stick in my dragon’s ear!” stuff, these blue things are a PR nightmare. The only thing I got going for me is that they’re pretty irritating with their holier-than-thou mumbo jumbo about being “at one with the planet” and so on. I mean how full of themselves can one species get?! Yeah so they sleep in giant leaves. You wouldn’t want to have a beer with one would you! Give me a human any day of the week, warts and all.

All I ask is that we look at the situation objectively. We need the unobtanium, so let’s just give the giant smirfs a little nudge and get the hell out of there.

Ah crap, Sigourney Weaver’s back again. I gotta go.

Later,

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Movie on the move

I took a step forwards into the digital age this morning.

I watched a movie on the way to work. It’s now easy to download a flick onto your i-pod or whatever pocket-candy you’ve chosen.

What did I watch? Couples Retreat, which was just made available in the I-tunes store.

couples

I know, I know… it’s hardly a challenging work of cinema to spark the brain-matter. But this is my commute. It’s something lightweight to take my mind off the freezing cold, shoving crowds and depressing train delays that form the South West London transport experience every day. A movie that is essentially a Carribean holiday with a few Vince Vaughn one-liners thrown is just about perfect.

And it was surprisingly fun. I was even able to watch as I tramped my way through the 15-minute walk to my local train station. A traffic accident waiting to happen? I probably was. But I could do that walk blindfolded. Watching the unhappy couples arrive in paradise was a happy distraction from frozen London.

You may be proud of your giant DVD collection just now. But as digital copies like this become more and more accessible and easy-to-watch, you’ll be tempted to go digital and save some space, just like you did with the CDs.