Monday, May 21, 2018

Paramount Home Media Targets June 12 For The Release Of DVD And Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack Editions Of Sherlock Gnomes


DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
Paramount Home Media announced this past week that director John Stevenson’s animated sequel to Gnomeo & Juliet, Sherlock Gnomes, will be available on June 12 as DVD and Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack selections.

The ARR works out to 81 days and domestic box office receipts currently stand at $41.8 million.

Gnomeo (voiced by James McAvoy) and Juliet (Emily Blunt) team up with the famous Sherlock Gnomes (Johnny Depp) and his sidekick, Gnome Watson (Chiwetel Ejiofor), to solve the mystery of the missing garden gnomes!   

Of course, the evil Moriarty (voiced by Jamie Demetriou) is behind the theft, but in an exciting open sequence this dastardly villain is seemingly crushed to smithereens by a dinosaur skeleton.   But, we soon learn that Moriarty is the master of deception.

Clues must be followed, misunderstandings must be resolved and the garden gnomes must be saved before Moriarty works his evil mischief and crushes them!!!    

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph TribbeyBonus goodies are limited to the Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack SKU.   There is a behind-the-scenes presentation titled “Gnome is Where the Heart Is,” plus three featurettes — “All Roads Lead to Gnome,” “Miss Gnomer” and “Animating Sherlock Gnomes” — the Mary J. Blige music video, “Stronger Than I Ever Was” and animation tutorial title “How to Draw” (Sherlock Gnomes, Watson, the Goons and Moriarty).

In other release news from Paramount Home Media this past week, look to June 19 for the DVD debut of director Armando Iannucci’s The Death of Stalin, a devastatingly funny black comedy about the death of Joseph Stalin in March of 1953.

The ARR for IFC Films theatrical release 102 days and the box office take was $7.8 million.

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
This is the “Cliff Notes” version of the events that occurred in the immediate aftermath of Stalin’s (played by Adrian McLoughlin) sudden death from a cerebral hemorrhage in early March of 1953.   Since he was a dictator, there was no clear line of succession, which means a power vacuum was created … which is precisely what filmmaker Armando Iannucci focuses on (with satirical glee, we might add).

Lavrentiy Beria (Simon Russell Beale), the head of the secret police, immediately begins to plot a rise to power — Beria was even a suspect in “poisoning” Stalin — and his puppet will be Malenkov (Jeffrey Tambor), but Khrushchev (Steve Buscemi) and Molotov (Michael Palin) have plans of their own.   Throw in Stalin’s daughter, Svetlana (Andrea Riseborough) and his crazy son, Vasily (Rupert Friend), and you have plenty of comrades with a lust for power to go around.  Thus begins a Machiavellian dance of power, which history records that Khrushchev won by year-end.

Bonus features include deleted scenes and the behind-the-scenes featurette titled “Directors, Murderers and Comrades … Oh My!”


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