It is no secret that I am crazy about Sailor Moon Crystal. The anime earned a 5 out of 5 in my review of VIZ Media‘s Blu-Ray and DVD set of Season One. Now it is Season Two’s turn to head to retail and as we saw in the recently announced One-Punch Man home media releases, there are multiple options available.

Fans can purchase the Limited Edition Blu-Ray and DVD Combo Pack ($79.99), the Standard Edition Blu-Ray and DVD Combo Pack ($69.99), or simply the DVD Set ($39.99). The Limited Edition Blu-Ray and DVD Combo Pack, seen below, contains all 12 episodes of Season Two on both Blu-Ray (in 1080p) and DVD (in 480p) as well as bonus content like clean opening and closing themes, a digital art gallery, and even a special interview with the J-POP group who sang the theme, Momoiro Clover Z. The four discs are packaged in an exclusive chipboard box, stuffed with art cards and a booklet filled with full-color illustrations, episode summaries, and more. Pre-ordering the Limited Edition Combo Pack from RightStuf also scores you an exclusive sun catcher as a gift-with-purchase.

For those who need a refresher, Season Two of Sailor Moon Crystal takes us through the “Black Moon Arc,” where we meet key characters like Chibi-Usa (you may remember her as “Rini” from that dub way back in the day) and Sailor Pluto. The season picks up immediately after the first season, in which a strange, little pink-haired girl crash-lands on Usagi and then proceeds to demand (at gunpoint!) that she surrender the Silver Crystal. I won’t spoil the rest for fans who haven’t watched yet (I am sure there are some of you) but I will say that I am personally excited to own this second season and it is definitely one you should check out.

The Standard DVD Set is available now but the other two, the Limited- and Standard-Edition Blu-ray and DVD Combo Packs, will be released on February 28.

[header image via Sailor Moon News]

Bibliophiles, have we got news for you! Yoshiki Tanaka’s famous science fiction series, Legend of the Galactic Heroes, will soon make its way to North American markets for the very first time. Coming to us by way of Haikasoru (a part of VIZ Media), the first volume, subtitled Dawn, releases March 8 on just about every platform imaginable.

The story is set in the 36th Century, with mankind having colonized all across the galaxy. Out in space, a war is being waged between The Galactic Empire and the Free Planets Alliance. The first volume focuses on the conflict between Reinhard von Lohengramm, an admiral of The Galactic Empire, and Yang Wen-li of the Free Planets Alliance. Reinhard dreams of becoming an supreme but benevolent ruler of the galaxy by overthrowing the powers that be. Meanwhile, Yang’s desire to preserve democracy and defeat the Empire may come at the cost of his ethics.

There will be a print copy (MSRP of US$15.99) of Legend of the Galactic Heroes, Vol. 1: Dawn as well an eBook edition, available from Amazon’s Kindle store, the Apple iBooks store, Barnes and Noble’s Nook Book store, the Kobo eBooks store, and the Google Play store. If you prefer to hear rather than read the story, Simon & Schuster Audio will have an audiobook edition (MSRP of US$23.99) read by Tim Gerard Reynolds.

Yoshiki Tanaka is also known for The Heroic Legend of Arslan, a fantasy novel series that has seen two anime adaptions as well as several video game titles. Perhaps if Legend of the Galactic Heroes sells well, Arslan might see similar treatment. That is just a wish of mine.

Legend of the Galactic Heroes 1

While not the opening salvo of Oscar season, Dallas Buyers Club quickly sets itself up as a forerunner. A stunning performance by Matthew McConaughey–who is barely recognizable as himself –with the equally brilliant Jared Leto, and a quiet, understated, but not to be overlooked, performance by Jennifer Gardner, combined with an almost flawless story of the triumph of human spirit during one of the darker times in recent US history all combine to create a truly remarkable cinematic experience.

Matthew McConaughey stars as Ron Woodroof in Jean-Marc Vallée's fact-based drama, DALLAS BUYERS CLUB, a Focus Features release. Photo Credit: Anne Marie Fox/Focus Features
Matthew McConaughey stars as Ron Woodroof in Jean-Marc Vallée’s fact-based drama, DALLAS BUYERS CLUB, a Focus Features release.
Photo Credit: Anne Marie Fox/Focus Features

Based on the true story of Ron Woodroof (McConaughey), an electrician and a rodeo cowboy in Dallas, Texas–a blue-collar hero who works hard and parties harder–who is diagnosed with AIDS and given one month to live. An opening sequence of bull riding, graphic sex, cocaine use and gambling give, in under five minutes, a whole picture of the man before: a bigoted, addicted, homophobic good ol’ boy, living in a trailer and listening to Willie Nelson.

Everything changes when after Woodroof’s diagnosis. This is 1985—only a few years after HIV/AIDS had stopped being referred to as GRID (Gay-Related Immune Deficiency) and was still considered by most of the country as a homosexual disease—and Woodroof reacts characteristically, shouting at the doctors (Denis O’Hare as Dr. Sevard and Jennifer Garner as Dr. Eve Saks) that he isn’t a ‘motherf*cking faggot.’

The movie then explores how this cowboy with a heart of coal became the runner of one of the largest buyer clubs in the US; a club known for its outrageous risks, and some say, its high cost. Buyer clubs were essentially HIV/AIDS medication co-ops; people diagnosed with the disease—mostly gay men—would buy a membership, and with the money, the clubs would purchase medicine not available in the United States (types of medication range from herbs like milk thistle to experimental treatments like DDC and Compound Q but also antibiotics like clarithromycin) due to restrictions imposed by the FDA—some claim unfair restrictions set by the FDA as a ‘favor’ to Big Pharma in order for their drug, AZT, to be sold. AZT was known to be highly toxic with limited efficacy, and was also the most expensive medication on the market at $10,000 a year for a prescription.

McConaughey’s Woodroof rages against his fate and then digs in, applying his logical mind and burning intensity to solving the problem of how to live with HIV/AIDs. He discovers alternative remedies available across the border in Mexico (namely Peptide-T) and sees not only the possibility of not-dying, but also a money making opportunity. His cowboy persona and clear dislike of the homosexual culture scares off the majority of his potential customer base—loaded down with drugs, and able to offer a management of the disease—and looking at making a possible fortune; Woodroof turns to Rayon (Jared Leto) a fellow AIDS patient of Dr. Eve Saks (Jennifer Garner)–and a transsexual–to help bridge a connection to a gay community in Dallas. The two eventually form the Dallas Buyers Club, which at its height has a reported 7000 members in the Dallas area.

McConaughey lost a reported 50 pounds for this film, and Leto 35. The two are emaciated for most of the movie. That quality—that translucent thinness—that marked so many people in the 80’s and early 90’s haunts the film throughout, not just in McConaughey and Leto but in the men and women who come through the club.  The image of the lesion-covered, skeletal AIDS patient has faded from our social consciousness and The Dallas Buyers Club brings it back, unremorsefully but rarely self-righteously.

Jared Leto as Rayon (L) and Matthew McConaughey (R) as Ron Woodruff in Focus Features Dallas Buyers Club.
Jared Leto as Rayon (L) and Matthew McConaughey (R) as Ron Woodruff in Focus Features Dallas Buyers Club.

McConaughey’s lightning grin and easy charm are all but burnt out in Woodroof; by his lifestyle and the disease—they flash out occasionally, disarmingly, finding you unawares and making you catch your breath—and his journey through Woodroof’s life—from diagnosis to denial to vocal opponent of the FDA’s drug approval practices—is whole and lived in. It is one of McConaughey’s great performances, in a year filled with them, in a movie filled with them.

Leto, who had semi-retired from acting to follow his music career (he and his brother are members of the band 30 Seconds from Mars), came back to Hollywood because of the power and depth of this role. As Woodroof’s partner in the Dallas Buyer’s Club, Rayon, Leto fills the screen with a manic gaiety that only thinly covers the panicked fear—and anger–of a dying man. Though Leto walks dangerously close to a cliché at times, he redeems it with a heartbreaking and sincere understanding of his plight.

Very little is done to soften the lifestyle lived by either man, rather the movie shows them flawed—and somewhat proud of their flaws—fighting only to be seen as not so much dying from a disease, but rather trying to live with it.

Garner gives what would be in any other movie a tour-de-force (if a little underwritten) performance as the quiet, logical doctor assigned to both Rayon and Woodruff, who slowly changes from a doubting-but-following-the-rules doctor of the establishment to fully speaking out against the treatment options for HIV/AIDS patients in the US. However, her performance is so quiet, so soft, that it is easy to overlook it amongst McConaughey’s and Leto’s flamboyant acts.

If some of the other supporting cast seem somewhat one-dimensional, fulfilling predictable plot points routinely; and if the FDA is cast as a the bad guy somewhat against historical record, the movie manages to breeze past these snags, mostly on the strength of its three leads.

Aside from one or two minor finger wagging moments, director Jean Marc Vallee ensures that the film doesn’t preach, and he and cinematographer Yves Belanger create a vivid world of Wranglers and Dodge trucks, queens and cocaine, rodeo and the FDA, culminating in a  well-conceived, crafted and excellently acted film.

Dallas Buyers Club is a Focus Features release, and is rated R by the Motion Picture Association of America for ‘‘pervasive language, some strong sexual content, nudity and drug use.’’  The film opens in select theaters on November 1st and opens wide on November 22nd.

4/5

If you are an old school, intrepid gamer, you rely on demos to help base your opinion on new releases. If you were on the fence with Sleeping Dogs then REST EASY!

Square have just announced that TODAY they will be releasing a demo for the game on all platforms! So go grab it and jump into a mission that takes you through a vibrant marketplace, and a sneak peak at a later level in the story.

For more info on the demo check out

XBOX LIVE MARKETPLACE

PLAYSTATION NETWORK

STEAM MARKETPLACE (Link for the demo is not up on STEAM yet, but I will provide it as soon as it does)

Make sure to check out our REVIEW of Sleeping Dogs while you’re at it!