Written by Jon Williams
It’s one of
the most-hyped movies of the summer. Finally, after months of excitement and
lead-up, Marvel’s The Guardians of the
Galaxy opens in theaters everywhere on Friday. The powers-that-be behind
the film are so confident in its success, a sequel has already been announced—with
an expected release date of July 28, 2017. And as anyone who has seen the
trailers and TV spots will tell you, it’s for good reason. The movie looks to
be a pure fun, action-packed summer blockbuster.
Of course,
this isn’t Marvel/Disney’s first go-around with bringing a high-powered
superhero ensemble to the big screen. In 2012, The
Avengers took the box office by storm, becoming one of the
highest-grossing films of all time. Of course, that movie dealt with a group of
well-known superheroes; each of the principals ( Iron
Man, Captain
America, Thor,
and the
Incredible Hulk) had at least one standalone movie prior to their
big-screen team-up. The Guardians, on the other hand, are relatively unknown
outside of the comics world. So who are they?
The
Guardians are led by Peter Quill, also known as Star-Lord, played by Chris
Pratt. Quill finds himself in possession of a powerful object that sets him
in the way of the evil Ronan, an alien warlord played by Lee
Pace. In order to protect the galaxy from the chaos planned by Ronan, Quill
teams up with a ragtag group of misfits—the Guardians of the Galaxy.
One of the
most interesting members of the group is Rocket, a wisecracking, genetically
engineered mercenary…raccoon. He provides some comic relief, but is an
essential member of the team as their weapons and tactics expert. He’s voiced
by Bradley
Cooper. Rocket’s sidekick in an anthropomorphic tree named Groot, a
powerful warrior who is nonetheless the most unabashedly good-natured character
on the team. Groot’s voice is provided by Vin
Diesel.
Another
warrior Guardian is Drax the Destroyer. Not a mercenary, Drax joins the team as
a way to seek revenge against Ronan, who was responsible for the death of his
family. This scarred hulk is played by WWE wrestler Dave
Bautista. And rounding out the team is Gamora, played by Zoe
Saldana, familiar to sci-fi fans for her roles in Avatar and the Star Trek
reboots. She plays an assassin trained by Thanos, the shadowy villain
mastermind behind Ronan’s shenanigans.
Of course,
Thanos and Ronan have a team of henchmen as well, made up of characters played
by Michael
Rooker, Djimon
Hounsou, and Karen
Gillan (best known as Amy Pond, companion to Matt Smith’s eleventh Doctor).
Other well-known actors in the star-studded film include Glenn
Close, John
C. Reilly, Benicio
del Toro, Nathan
Fillion, Peter Serafinowicz, and the voices of Josh
Brolin and Rob
Zombie.
With a cast
like that, and all the fun the film is sure to bring, it’s no wonder that
Disney feels good enough to already be thinking ahead to the sequel. The
Guardians of the Galaxy are sure to be the talk of the summer from this point
forward. The soundtrack
is available now, and be sure to have plenty of other superhero films on your
shelves for fans who just can’t get enough.
Three new titles grace this week's DVD listing, with The LEGO Movie leading the way at #3. In music, Weird Al and Jason Mraz staged a fierce battle for the top spot, with Al taking those honors for the first time in his long and storied career. Two new titles top this week's fiction list, with four newcomers overall, while the non-fiction list remains largely the same from last week.
DVD
- Non-Stop
- Lone Survivor
- The LEGO Movie
- Robocop
- Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
- Grand Budapest Hotel
- Ride Along
- 3 Days to Kill
- The Monuments Men
- Under the Skin
CD
- Weird Al Yankovic, Mandatory Fun
- Jason Mraz, Yes!
- Rise Against, The Black Market
- Kidz Bop Kids, Kidz Bop 26
- Frozen Soundtrack
- Sam Smith, In the Lonely Hour
- Ed Sheeran, X
- NOW That's What I Call Music 50
- Trey Songz, Trigga
- Blake Shelton, Based on a True Story...
Fiction
- The Book of Life, Deborah Harkness
- The Heist, Daniel Silva
- Act of War, Brad Thor
- Cut and Thrust, Stuart Woods
- Invisible, James Patterson and David Ellis
- The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt
- The Silkworm, Robert Galbraith
- Top Secret Twenty-One, Janet Evanovich
- Wayfaring Stranger, James Lee Burke
- Mr. Mercedes, Stephen King
Non-Fiction
- Unbroken, Laura Hillenbrand
- America, Dinesh D'Souza
- Blood Feud, Edward Klein
- Hard Choices, Hillary Rodham Clinton
- One Nation, Ben and Candy Carson
- Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Thomas Piketty
- Think Like a Freak, Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
- David and Goliath, Malcolm Gladwell
- I Am Malala, Malala Yousafzai
- Lean In, Sharl Sandberg and Nell Scovell
Written by Jon Williams
It all began
in 1900. That year saw the publication of The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz, a novel intended as a fairy tale for children.
Little did he know then that it would in fact capture the imaginations of
adults and children alike, keeping the Land of Oz and its inhabitants and
visitors alive and growing well over a century later.
Baum himself
was able to capitalize on the success of the novel. Although he did not
originally intend for a series, he wrote the first sequel in 1904. He hoped The
Marvelous Land of Oz would quell the clamor; it did not. When he wrote The
Emerald City of Oz in 1911 (the fifth sequel), he tried to cry off by
claiming that he had lost his ties to Oz and therefore could no longer learn
the stories from there. That didn’t work either. He followed it with The
Patchwork Girl of Oz in 1913, and continued to publish a new Oz story each
year after that.
Baum passed
away in 1919, but as we all know, the story didn’t end there. The movie
adaptation produced in 1939 has come to be even more famous than the novel
that spawned it. Its bold use of new Technicolor technology brought to stunning
life Baum’s fantastic world of Yellow Brick Roads and an Emerald City; paired
with Judy Garland’s singing and performance as Dorothy, it remains a wonder to
behold. The film was so beloved that it inspired adaptations of its own, such
as 1978’s The
Wiz, starring Diana Ross and Michael Jackson, and 2005’s whimsical
version starring the
Muppets. And in 1985, there was a sequel called Return
to Oz that mined some of Baum’s further adventures, and has since
become a cult hit.
Even now, Oz
maintains its grip on the imaginations of a new generation of writers and
filmmakers who continue to tell stories of the magical realm. Witness the
popularity of Gregory Maguire’s 2005 novel Wicked,
which explored the origins and motivations of the Wicked Witch of the West, the
antagonist of Baum’s novel. That itself spun off into three sequel novels and a
wildly popular Broadway
show.
The high
level of interest in all things Wicked
is one factor in the recent Oz revival that has continued to expand the story
of the land and characters created by L. Frank Baum at the dawn of the 20th
century. Last year’s box-office hit Oz
the Great and Powerful tells the tale of how the Wizard himself, played
by James Franco, came to the Land of Oz. This year, the animated film Legends
of Oz: Dorothy’s Return brought the tale forward from Dorothy’s original
visit to the Wizard, bringing her back to face a new threat to the Emerald
City. And a recent novel from Danielle Paige, Dorothy
Must Die, plays with a similar theme: that Dorothy has become a
malevolent ruler over Oz, and must herself be defeated.
Needless to
say, Oz devotees will find no shortage of titles to hold their attention. Search
on our website to find more, and help transport your patrons over the rainbow.
Written by Jon Williams
In case you’ve
missed it—and I’m not sure that’s possible—musical comedian Weird Al Yankovic
has been absolutely killing it over the past week since the release of his
latest album, Mandatory
Fun. To promote it, he released eight music videos in eight days via
various pop-culture-centric websites, beginning with last Monday’s “Tacky” (a
parody of the Pharrell hit “Happy”) and finishing off with today’s
corporate-buzzword-skewering “Mission Statement” (not a straight parody, but
heavily influenced by Crosby, Stills and Nash’s “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes”).
In between
those videos were the grammar lovers’ dream “Word Crimes” (from Robin Thicke’s “Blurred
Lines”), the twisted ode to aluminum “Foil” (from Lorde’s “Royals”), the contractor’s
commercial “Handy” (from Iggy Azalea’s “Fancy”), the honest college fight song “Sports
Song,” a lamentation of “First World Problems,” and a name-dropping “Lame Claim
to Fame.” All eight songs, plus four others (including the staple polka medley),
can be found on the new album. (You can view all these videos at weirdal.com if you missed any of them.)
Yankovic’s
career start came courtesy of the Dr.
Demento radio show, which played his Knack parody “My Balogna” and then had
Al on as a guest to record “Another One Rides the Bus” in 1980. Both songs
appeared on his self-titled debut
album, released in 1983. His real break came with his second album, Weird
Al Yankovic in 3D, which featured “Eat It,” a parody of the
skyrocketing Michael Jackson. Pairing his sharp-witted lyrical stylings with
clever music videos gave him a leg up in MTV’s ‘80s heyday, as did support from
Jackson, whom Weird Al parodied again with 1988’s “Fat” (on the album Even
Worse, both a play on MJ’s Bad).
In a career
that now spans more than thirty years, Yankovic has had to evolve, as he did
with 1992’s Off
the Deep End, with both the lead single (“Smells Like Nirvana”) and the
album cover playing on Nirvana and the breakout of grunge music. He gave the
songs on that album more of a satirical edge, which has carried through to his
music today. Mandatory Fun is Al’s
fourteenth album…and probably his last, although he’s not retiring. With the
prominence of video sharing sites like YouTube and the rise of digital music,
he plans to do future distribution via those means, so as to be more even timelier
with his work.
And that’s
not all from the world of Weird Al. Yesterday also marked the 25th anniversary
of his film UHF, in which his
character takes over a defunct TV station and creates zany programming that
makes it wildly popular. Although neither the film nor its soundtrack is
currently available, Al said in a recent Newsweek interview that there are
commemoration plans he’s “not at liberty to talk about right now” for later in
the year. Will it be a Blu-ray release? Maybe a sequel announcement? We’ll just
have to wait and see.
In the
meantime, Weird Al’s popularity has risen to all-time heights—there’s a good
chance Mandatory Fun will top
Billboard’s chart this week, which would be a first in Al’s career, his
previous best being 2011’s Alpocalypse,
which made it to #9. So make sure you have the new album on your shelf, and
SmartBrowse ‘Weird Al Yankovic’ on our website for even more by this hilarious
(and Grammy-winning!) artist.
Lone Survivor hangs onto the top DVD spot this week, as most of the popular titles stick around. In music, the Frozen soundtrack makes a run back toward the top of the chart, but is thwarted by newcomer Sia. Three new titles top this week's fiction list (and four overall), including the Stephen Colbert-endorsed California. In non-fiction, Laura Hillenbrand's Unbroken jumps back to the top following the passing of Louis Zamperini, whose fascinating story is chronicled in the book.
DVD
- Lone Survivor
- Non-Stop
- Robocop
- Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
- 3 Days to Kill
- Ride Along
- The Monuments Men
- Endless Love
- Son of God
- Her
CD
- Sia, 1000 Forms of Fear
- Frozen Soundtrack
- Sam Smith, In the Lonely Hour
- Trey Songz, Trigga
- Ed Sheeran, X
- Judas Priest, Redeemer of Souls
- NOW That's What I Call Music 50
- Dirty Heads, Sound of Change
- Miranda Lambert, Platinum
- Lana Del Rey, Ultraviolence
Fiction
- Act of War, Brad Thor
- Power Play, Catherine Coulter
- California, Edan Lepucki
- Invisible, James Patterson and David Ellis
- The Silkworm, Robert Galbraith
- Top Secret Twenty-One, Janet Evanovich
- The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt
- Mr. Mercedes, Stephen King
- Written in My Own Heart's Blood, Diana Gabaldon
- Landline, Rainbow Rowell
Non-Fiction
- Unbroken, Laura Hillenbrand
- America, Dinesh D'Souza
- Blood Feud, Edward Klein
- Hard Choices, Hillary Rodham Clinton
- One Nation, Ben and Candy Carson
- Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Thomas Piketty
- David and Goliath, Malcolm Gladwell
- Think Like a Freak, Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
- I Am Malala, Malala Yousafzai
- Flash Boys, Michael Lewis
Written by Jon Williams
Last week,
country music superstar Garth Brooks held a press conference in Nashville to
announce his return to the music scene following thirteen years of semi-retirement.
Although he was vague on details at the time, news came down yesterday that his
upcoming world tour will kick off in Chicago on September 4. And that’s not all—there
is new music in the offing as well. A new single from the hitmaker is expected
within the next two months, with a full album of new material coming in
November. Given the amount of material compiled during his time off, Brooks
says it may turn out to be a double album.
His road to
becoming a music legend began when he burst onto the scene with his self-titled
debut album in 1989. Garth
Brooks contained the hits “Much Too Young” and “If Tomorrow Never
Comes,” which became his first #1 single. The album closed with a little ballad
called “The Dance,” one of his best-loved songs and Brooks’s personal favorite
from his own catalog—although he promises a track on the upcoming album that
rivals it for that distinction.
He continued
his breakthrough by following his debut up quickly with No Fences (currently unavailable) in 1990. With smashes like “The
Thunder Rolls” and “Friends in Low Places,” it is his bestselling album to
date. Honors for second best go to 1991’s Ropin’
the Wind, which made history by debuting atop the pop charts, the first
time a country album had achieved this feat. The album’s pop credentials were
boosted by a cover of Billy Joel’s “Shameless.”
By this
point, Brooks was bona fide country sensation, and the rest of the ‘90s was
spent consolidating his position with hit singles and strong albums. The
anthemic “We Shall Be Free” propelled The
Chase in 1992, while “Standing Outside the Fire” and “The Red Strokes
did the same for 1993’s In
Pieces. He followed that with Fresh
Horses (containing “The Beaches of Cheyenne”) in 1995 and his seventh
album, Sevens,
in 1997.
In 1999,
Brooks, who despite being firmly rooted in country music was influenced in his
youth by a number of rock acts, attempted an ill-fated side trip into the mainstream
pop world. For a movie project in which he would play a rock star, he released
the album In the Life of Chris Gaines
(unavailable). Because it came out before the movie, there was some confusion
as to exactly what Brooks was doing; although the album went multiplatinum and
placed a single (“Lost in You”) at #5 on the pop charts, it was deemed a
failure, and the project was shelved, with the movie never being filmed.
Following
this “fiasco,” Brooks announced his retirement from recording and touring in
2000. One final album, Scarecrow,
was released in 2001. And that has been it…until now. With the news that Garth is
getting back in the saddle, though, his music is sure to be in demand. Be sure
you have all these classic albums on your shelves, and rest assured that we’ll
bring you the information on his forthcoming release as soon as it becomes
available.
The action is heating up along with the weather, as the top four flicks on this week's movie list all belong to the action genre, including two newcomers. Trey Songz nudges Ed Sheeran from music's top spot in a week that sees five debuts. It was a rare static week for fiction, with the latest from Dean Koontz the only new title making it. It's a similar story in non-fiction, which sees a number of great titles reappear from past week, but no first-time appearances.
DVD
- Lone Survivor
- Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
- Robocop
- 3 Days to Kill
- Ride Along
- The Monuments Men
- Joe
- Endless Love
- Non-Stop
- Her
CD
- Trey Songz, Trigga
- Ed Sheeran, X
- Sam Smith, In the Lonely Hour
- Seether, Isolate and Medicate
- Frozen Soundtrack
- Magic!, Don't Kill the Magic
- Miranda Lambert, Platinum
- Lana Del Rey, Ultraviolence
- Robin Thicke, Paula
- Colt Ford, Thanks for Listening
Fiction
- Invisible, James Patterson and David Ellis
- The Silkworm, Robert Galbraith
- Top Secret Twenty-One, Janet Evanovich
- Mr. Mercedes, Stephen King
- The City, Dean Koontz
- The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt
- Written in My Own Heart's Blood, Diana Gabaldon
- All Fall Down, Jennifer Weiner
- All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr
- The Vacationers, Emma Straub
Non-Fiction
- Blood Feud, Edward Klein
- Hard Choices, Hillary Rodham Clinton
- Unbroken, Laura Hillenbrand
- One Nation, Ben and Candy Carson
- Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Thomas Piketty
- Think Like a Freak, Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
- I Am Malala, Malala Yousafzai
- Flash Boys, Michael Lewis
- David and Goliath, Malcolm Gladwell
- Lean In, Shery Sandberg and Nell Scovell
The week of Independence Day saw very little movement on the DVD list, with the Nic Cage drama Joe and the Elizabeth Banks comedy Walk of Shame being the only new titles. The music chart has four debut titles, including the latest from Ed Sheeran coming in at #1. The latest James Patterson wrests the top fiction spot away from a group of heavyweights, while in non-fiction a new political tome from Edward Klein debuts at #2.
DVD
- Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
- 3 Days to Kill
- Ride Along
- The Monuments Men
- Joe
- Non-Stop
- Her
- That Awkward Moment
- The Nut Job
- Walk of Shame
CD
- Ed Sheeran, X
- Sam Smith, In the Lonely Hour
- G-Eazy, These Things Happen
- Lana Del Rey, Ultraviolence
- Frozen Soundtrack
- Mastodon, Once More 'Round the Sun
- Phish, Fuego
- Miranda Lambert, Platinum
- Linkin Park, The Hunting Party
- NOW That's What I Call Music 50
Fiction
- Invisible, James Patterson and David Ellis
- Top Secret Twenty-One, Janet Evanovich
- The Silkworm, Robert Galbraith
- Mr. Mercedes, Stephen King
- Written in My Own Heart's Blood, Diana Gabaldon
- The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt
- All Fall Down, Jennifer Weiner
- All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr
- Cop Town, Karin Slaughter
- The Vacationers, Emma Straub
Non-Fiction
- Hard Choices, Hillary Rodham Clinton
- Blood Feud, Edward Klein
- One Nation, Ben and Candy Carson
- Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Thomas Piketty
- Unbroken, Laura Hillenbrand
- Think Like a Freak, Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
- I Am Malala, Malala Yousafzai
- Romanov Sisters, Henen Rappaport
- The Closer, Mariano Rivera and Wayne Coffey
- Carsick, John Waters
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