The summer blockbuster pitting two superheroes against one another makes its debut atop this week's movie listing. Country singer Justin Moore makes the top musical debut, placing his new album at #3. Heavy hitters Sandra Brown, Janet Evanovich, and Lisa Scottoline break onto the fiction list, while comedian Amy Schumer's hilarious new book takes over in non-fiction.
DVD
- Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice
- The Angry Birds Movie
- Mother's Day
- Criminal
- Meet the Blacks
- London Has Fallen
- Demolition
- Miracles from Heaven
- Kung Fu Panda 3
- Zootopia
CD
- Suicide Squad: The Album
- Drake, Views
- Justin Moore, Kinda Don't Care
- Twenty One Pilots, Blurryface
- DJ Khaled, Major Key
- Rae Sremmurd, Sremmlife 2
- Adele, 25
- Rihanna, ANTI
- NOW That's What I Call Music 59
- Hamilton Original Broadway Cast Recording
Fiction
- The Underground Railroad, Colson Whitehead
- Sting, Sandra Brown
- Curious Minds, Janet Evanovich and Phoef Sutton
- The Woman in Cabin 10, Ruth Ware
- Truly Madly Guilty, Liane Moriarty
- Damaged, Lisa Scottoline
- Bullseye, James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge
- Insidious, Catherine Coulter
- All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr
- The Black Widow, Daniel Silva
Non-Fiction
- The Girl with the Lower Back Tattoo, Amy Schumer
- Hillbilly Elegy, J.D. Vance
- Armageddon, Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
- When Breath Becomes Air, Paul Kalanithi
- Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Hamilton: The Revolution, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarter
- Crisis of Character, Gary J. Byrne
- Liars, Glenn Beck
- Hillary's America, Dinesh D'Souza
- White Trash, Nancy Isenberg
Written by Jon Williams
Space.
The final frontier.
These are the voyages of the starship
Enterprise.
Its five-year mission:
To explore strange new worlds.
To seek out new life and new civilizations.
To boldly go where no man has gone before.
Those now-familiar
words were first heard on September 8, 1956, when the very first episode of the
original Star Trek television show
made its debut. In the fifty years since, Star Trek has become a true
touchstone, with phrases like “live long and prosper” and “beam me up, Scotty”
making their way into the cultural lexicon. The show made stars of its primary
cast members (William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, George Takei,
Nichelle Nichols, James Doohan, and Walter Koenig), and has spawned numerous
spinoffs, a movie franchise (including a reboot), and much more.
It seems
hard to believe now, but that first
Star Trek show ran for just three
seasons, as it didn’t become a true hit until it was syndicated and shown in
reruns. At that point, the original 79 episodes just weren’t quite enough, so,
in 1973, the show was revived for an animated
series that brought back all the original actors to voice their roles.
Although it was also short-lived (spanning 22 episodes), it was well-received,
even winning a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children’s Series.
As the
animated series wound down, Star Trek was at something of a crossroads. There
was a demand for more, but it was unclear exactly what form it would take.
Plans went into motion for a new television series, to be titled Phase II, but numerous problems eventually
forced those plans to be scrapped. Instead, encouraged by the success that
science fiction films were finding at the box office, Star Trek producers instead revived earlier plans to bring the
Enterprise crew to the big screen. Those efforts paid off with 1979’s Star
Trek: The Motion Picture, again reuniting all the original cast members
in their familiar roles.
The success
of that movie spawned a franchise that would run for five more films featuring
the beloved original cast. They were: The
Wrath of Khan (1982), The
Search for Spock (1984), The
Voyage Home (1986), The
Final Frontier (1989), and The
Undiscovered Country (1991). It was with this last movie that Captain
Kirk’s iconic line of “where no man
has gone before” was updated to “where no one
has gone before,” eliminating the gender-biased and (in a galaxy filled with
aliens) species-biased language in keeping with the franchise’s ideals of
equality.
That was
when Captain Kirk first spoke those words, but it was not the first time Star
Trek fans had heard them that way. In September of 1987, Star
Trek: The Next Generation premiered on television, set 100 years after
the adventures of the original series and bringing a new cast (Patrick Stewart,
Jonathan Frakes, Brent Spiner, Gates McFadden, LeVar Burton, Michael Dorn,
Marina Sirtis, Denise Crosby, and Wil Wheaton) to the bridge of the Enterprise.
Highly popular, this series ran for seven seasons and made its own eventual
jump to the big screen. 1994’s Generations
bridged the gap, starring the entire Next
Generation cast and featuring several members of the original cast as well,
in a story that saw Patrick Stewart’s Captain Picard team up with William
Shatner’s Captain Kirk. The Next Generation cast then stayed in theaters for
three more movies on their own: First
Contact (1996), Insurrection
(1998), and Nemesis
(2002).
The final
season of The Next Generation aired
in 1994, but that was far from the end of Star Trek on television. Before it
ended, in 1993, Star
Trek: Deep Space Nine featured an ensemble cast as the crew of a space
station in a contested region. Then, beginning in 1995, came Star
Trek: Voyager, which followed a new ship and crew helmed by Kate
Mulgrew’s Captain Janeway, trying to make their way home to Earth after being
stranded on the other side of the galaxy. Like The Next Generation, both of these series ran for seven seasons. In
2001, after Voyager’s conclusion, Star
Trek: Enterprise made its debut, starring Scott Bakula as the captain
of the very first Federation starship to be named Enterprise, in a prequel to
everything that had some before.
And of
course there is the new movie series. In 2009, after a 7-year absence from
theaters following Nemesis, Star Trek returned to the big screen in
a reboot
from J.J. Abrams starring a new cast (Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Karl Urban,
John Cho, Zoe Saldana, Simon Pegg, and the late Anton Yelchin) in the roles of
the original crew, with Leonard Nimoy appearing as an older Spock in a nod to
the alternate timelines the different casts now occupy. That was followed up in
2013 with Star
Trek Into Darkness, and earlier this year with Star
Trek Beyond.
All of this,
and still Star Trek fans have plenty
to look forward to. In addition to a fourth film with the new cast, there is
also a new TV series in the works. Slated to debut in January, Star Trek: Discovery will detail the
adventures of a new ship and crew in the ten years previous to the events of
the original series. And of course, the TV series and movies are just a part of
what the Star Trek franchise has to
offer. SmartBrowse on our website for music scores and audiobooks, and you can
also direct patrons to hoopla digital for Star Trek comics, audiobooks, and other
novelties. Also, keep an eye out for a special Star Trek 50th anniversary flyer along with our September catalog
mailing.
A new outing for perennial favorite Tom Hanks is this week's top movie debut. The soundtrack from the DC Comics hit movie Suicide Squad takes over the music chart. Colson Whitehead jumps up to #1 in fiction, just ahead of the latest thriller from Catherine Coulter, while last week's non-fiction titles just undergo some reordering.
DVD
- Mother's Day
- Criminal
- Meet the Blacks
- A Hologram for the King
- London Has Fallen
- Kung Fu Panda 3
- Miracles from Heaven
- Zootopia
- Allegiant
- Fathers and Daughters
CD
- Suicide Squad: The Album
- Drake, Views
- Skillet, Unleashed
- Blake Shelton, If I'm Honest
- NOW That's What I Call Music 59
- Twenty One Pilots, Blurryface
- DJ Khaled, Major Key
- DJ Snake, Encore
- Rihanna, ANTI
- Adele, 25
Fiction
- The Underground Railroad, Colson Whitehead
- Insidious, Catherine Coulter
- Truly Madly Guilty, Liane Moriarty
- Bullseye, James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge
- Three Sisters, Three Queens, Philippa Gregory
- The Woman in Cabin 10, Ruth Ware
- Sweet Tomorrows, Debbie Macomber
- The Black Widow, Daniel Silva
- All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr
- The Girls, Emma Cline
Non-Fiction
- Hillbilly Elegy, J.D. Vance
- When Breath Becomes Air, Paul Kalanithi
- Armageddon, Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
- Hillary's America, Dinesh D'Souza
- Crisis of Character, Gary J. Byrne
- Liars, Glenn Beck
- Hamilton: The Revolution, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarter
- Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Grit, Angela Duckworth
- American Heiress, Jeffrey Toobin
Written by Jon Williams
Recently, the
play Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
opened at the Palace Theatre in London’s West End to rave reviews. Written by
veteran playwright Jack Thorne based on a story idea he developed with director
John Tiffany as well as Harry Potter creator
and author J.K. Rowling, the play continues Harry’s story starting from the
epilogue of Harry Potter and the Deathly
Hallows, which sees Harry sending his son Albus to Hogwarts School of
Witchcraft and Wizardry for the first time. The plot then follows young Albus
as he struggles to forge his own identity in the wake of his father’s heroic
legacy.
Published in
book form, the play’s script has already sold well over three million copies,
fanning the flames of a Potter fever that never went entirely dormant. However,
if you didn’t already have copies of the movies on your shelves, you (and your
patrons) have been out of luck for quite some time. Until now, that is!
Starting today, all eight Harry Potter
movies are available for pre-order in a 2-disc Special Edition format on both
DVD and Blu-ray. These new editions will release on October 4, just in time for
the lead-up to Fantastic Beasts and Where
to Find Them, the spin-off movie coming to theaters on November 18.
As hard as
it may be to believe, the Harry Potter
craze has been ongoing for nearly twenty years. It was June of 1997 when the
first book, Harry Potter and the
Philosopher’s Stone was published in the U.K. It came to the U.S. over a
year later, in September of 1998, as Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. The next two books, Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and Harry
Potter and Prisoner of Azkaban, were both published in the U.S. in
1999. With the fourth book, Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which came out in July of 2000, the
publication schedule was finally standardized internationally. From there, it
was three years until the next book, Harry
Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. The sixth book, Harry
Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, came in 2005. The events of that
novel whipped fans into a frenzy, which paid off when Harry
Potter and the Deathly Hallows came out in 2007, one of the biggest
publishing events of all time.
It was after
Goblet of Fire, with the books’ plots
growing in complexity and length to match the increasing maturity of their
protagonists and readers, that the time in between their publication increased.
However, this is also when the movie series began. In 2001, Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone was released into theaters, starring Daniel
Radcliffe in the title role, with Emma
Watson and Rupert
Grint as his faithful friends, Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley. That film,
along with the
second, was directed by Chris
Columbus; he stepped down for the third
film in favor of Alfonso
Cuaron. Mike
Newell took over for Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and then David
Yates stepped in to direct the final four films: Order
of the Phoenix, Half-Blood
Prince, and Deathly
Hallows, which was split into two installments in order to maintain all
the action and drama of the final book.
It’s at the
end of that book that Harry Potter and
the Cursed Child picks up, carrying the story into a new generation of
witches and wizards as it adds to the lore for a new generation of fans. Make
sure you have all the magic on your shelves for patrons who can’t get enough of
all things Potter. You can use the
links above to find the audiobooks and new Special Edition DVDs and Blu-rays, and
don’t forget to SmartBrowse ‘Harry Potter’ on our website to find the movie
scores and a wealth of other supplemental material.
Beloved director Garry Marshall's final feature, Mother's Day, takes over this week's movie listing less than a month after his passing. Four new albums make the music chart, headlined by the star-studded effort from DJ Khaled, who nudges Drake from his long-held spot at #1. It's an even bigger week for new titles in fiction with five, including the latest entry in Oprah's book club, Colson Whitehead's The Underground Railroad. In non-fiction, new titles from Glenn Beck and Jeffrey Toobin make their debuts.
DVD
- Mother's Day
- Criminal
- Meet the Blacks
- London Has Fallen
- Kung Fu Panda 3
- Miracles from Heaven
- The Trust
- Allegiant
- Zootopia
- My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2
CD
- DJ Khaled, Major Key
- Drake, Views
- Twenty One Pilots, Blurryface
- Jake Owen, American Love
- Rihanna, ANTI
- Fantasia, The Definition Of...
- Hillary Scott & the Scott Family, Love Remains
- Adele, 25
- Blake Shelton, If I'm Honest
- Hamilton Original Broadway Cast Soundtrack
Fiction
- Bullseye, James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge
- Sweet Tomorrows, Debbie Macomber
- Truly Madly Guilty, Liane Moriarty
- The Underground Railroad, Colson Whitehead
- The Black Widow, Daniel Silva
- The Woman in Cabin 10, Ruth Ware
- The Girls, Emma Cline
- Smooth Operator, Stuart Woods and Parnell Hall
- Dark Carousel, Christine Feehan
- All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr
Non-Fiction
- Hillary's America, Dinesh D'Souza
- Liars, Glenn Beck
- Crisis of Character, Gary J. Byrne
- Armageddon, Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
- Hamilton: The Revolution, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarter
- Hillbilly Elegy, J.D. Vance
- When Breath Becomes Air, Paul Kalanithi
- Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- American Heiress, Jeffrey Toobin
- Grit, Angela Duckworth
The star-studded thriller Criminal debuts at the top of this week's movie listing, joined down the list by fellow newcomer I Am Wrath, starring John Travolta. Gucci Mane's new disc lands at #2 on the music chart, with Drake standing strong at #1. The new novel of suspense from author Liane Moriarty takes over the fiction list, while J.D. Vance's Hillbilly Elegy is the week's only debut in non-fiction.
DVD
- Criminal
- London Has Fallen
- Miracles from Heaven
- Kung Fu Panda 3
- Allegiant
- My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2
- Zootopia
- I Am Wrath
- Deadpool
- Whiskey Tango Foxtrot
CD
- Drake, Views
- Gucci Mane, Everybody Looking
- Twenty One Pilots, Blurryface
- Rihanna, ANTI
- Sia, This Is Acting
- Adele, 25
- Hamilton Original Broadway Cast Soundtrack
- Beyonce, Lemonade
- Meghan Trainor, Thank You
- Ariana Grande, Dangerous Woman
Fiction
- Truly Madly Guilty, Liane Moriarty
- The Black Widow, Daniel Silva
- The Girls, Emma Cline
- The Woman in Cabin 10, Ruth Ware
- First Comes Love, Emily Giffin
- The Nightingale, Kristin Hannah
- All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr
- Heroes of the Frontier, Dave Eggers
- Magic, Danielle Steel
- End of Watch, Stephen King
Non-Fiction
- Crisis of Character, Gary J. Byrne
- Hillary's America, Dinesh D'Souza
- Armageddon, Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
- Hamilton: The Revolution, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarter
- When Breath Becomes Air, Paul Kalanithi
- Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Bill O'Reilly's Legends and Lies: The Patriots, David Fisher
- Grit, Angela Duckworth
- Hillbilly Elegy, J.D. Vance
- White Trash, Nancy Isenberg
Written by Jon Williams
The eyes of
the world will turn to Brazil tonight as the opening ceremonies for the 2016
Summer Olympic Games take place there. There has already been plenty of talk
leading up to this year’s games due to the less than ideal conditions in Rio,
but for the next two weeks, the drama will hopefully be confined to the
exploits of the athletes and teams as they compete for the gold in a myriad of
events.
With all the
excitement they generate, it’s no surprise that the Olympic Games are a much-explored
subject in popular culture, with tales both true and fictional. On the true
side, perhaps the most famous is Chariots
of Fire, the 1981 film that won the Academy Award for Best Picture,
telling the story of two runners in the 1924 Olympics in Paris. The iconic,
inspirational musical
score by Vangelis is nearly as well known as the movie itself. Running is
actually one of the most frequent Olympic topics; in the late ‘90s, two
different movies ( Prefontaine
and Without
Limits) explore the distance running career and tragically short life
of 1972 Olympian Steve Prefontaine.
More
recently, the movie Race
depicts the struggles Jesse Owens faced in his quest to become a track and
field legend, particularly with the 1936 Olympics being held in Germany under
the rule of Hitler. Some footage of Owens is on display in Leni
Riefenstahl’s Olympia, a
groundbreaking documentary of those same Games by a problematic figure. The
1936 Olympics are also the topic of the 2013 bestseller by Daniel James Brown, The
Boys in the Boat, a rousing story of that year’s U.S. rowing team.
Likewise, Unbroken
by Laura Hillenbrand (made into a 2014
movie) tells the tale of 1936 Olympian Louis Zamperini and his incredible
later exploits during World War II.
As much as
the Olympics are about triumph, too often they are also marred by tragedy. One Day in September (currently
unavailable) won the 2000 Academy Award for Best Documentary for its look at
the murder of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Games. The aftermath of that
event was portrayed in 2005’s Munich,
in which Eric Bana plays a Mossad agent assigned with tracking down the
perpetrators. Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill are reportedly putting together
a movie that centers on the 1996 Olympic bombing in Atlanta (a Games that, on
the flip side, also provided such uplifting moments as Muhammad Ali lighting
the torch and Kerri Strug sticking the landing that won gold for the women’s
gymnastics team).
Thankfully,
the Olympics have far more often inspired lighter fare. Just released on DVD
and Blu-ray, The
Bronze follows a former bronze-winning Olympic gymnast as she
reluctantly coaches an up-and-coming phenom. Strangely, though, for most
Olympics-related comedies, you have to turn to the Winter Games, which has
inspired such movies as The
Cutting Edge , Blades
of Glory, and the mother of them all, Cool
Runnings, about the fabled Jamaican bobsled team. And of course, we can’t
mention Winter Olympics-related movies without listing Miracle,
the story of the 1980 “Miracle on Ice” U.S. hockey team that defeated the
heavily favored Soviet team en route to an unlikely gold medal.
With the
competition getting into full swing first thing tomorrow morning, appetite for
all things Games-related is sure to be high. The titles listed here just
scratch the surface of all the great Olympics titles available, so be sure to
check out the
collection on our website for more. You can also point them toward our
selections of movies
and audiobooks on our
digital platform, hoopla digital.
The original My Big Fat Greek Wedding was one of the biggest comedy hits of all time, and now its sequel is one of our hot summer movies. The new disc from Christian rockers Needtobreathe is the top debut in music, but it can't top the juggernaut that is Drake. Ruth Ware's The Woman in Cabin 10 is the new must-have thriller, while a new round of political books make the list in non-fiction.
DVD
- London Has Fallen
- Allegiant
- My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2
- Miracles from Heaven
- Kung Fu Panda 3
- Zootopia
- The Perfect Match
- Whiskey Tango Foxtrot
- Midnight Special
- Deadpool
CD
- Drake, Views
- Needtobreathe, Hard Love
- Twenty One Pilots, Blurryface
- Rihanna, ANTI
- Hamilton Original Broadway Cast Soundtrack
- Adele, 25
- Beyonce, Lemonade
- Kidz Bop Kids, Kidz Bop 32
- ScHoolboy Q, Blank Face
- Sia, This Is Acting
Fiction
- The Black Widow, Daniel Silva
- The Girls, Emma Cline
- First Comes Love, Emily Giffin
- The Woman in Cabin 10, Ruth Ware
- Magic, Danielle Steel
- The Nightingale, Kristin Hannah
- The Games, James Patterson and Mark Sullivan
- All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr
- End of Watch, Stephen King
- Before the Fall, Noah Hawley
Non-Fiction
- Crisis of Character, Gary J. Byrne
- Hillary's America, Dinesh D'Souza
- Hamilton: The Revolution, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarter
- Armageddon, Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
- When Breath Becomes Air, Paul Kalanithi
- Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Bill O'Reilly's Legends and Lies: The Patriots, David Fisher
- Grit, Angela Duckworth
- Freedom, Jaycee Dugard
- White Trash, Nancy Isenberg
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