Magazines and E-zines Movie Reviews


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Family movie reviews for "Magazines and E-zines" sorted by average review score:

Big Machines, Vol. 1
Released in DVD by Starlight Home Enter (11 February, 2003)
MPAA Rating:
Average review score:

Big Machines 1&2 a BIG hit with children....
I ended up scouring the Internet and video shops for the last 6 months trying to find a DVD with construction equipment for my 3 year old son. Finally a DVD that is educational and fun. It has all the elements that my son likes.... heavy equipment!!!! A must for boys.


Big Machines, Vol. 2
Released in DVD by Starlight Home Enter (11 February, 2003)
MPAA Rating:
Average review score:

BIG CONSTRUCTION ------- BIG VALUE
This is another classic from littlehardhats.com. A highly recommended childrens DVD, I have Big Machines 1 & 2 and they are watched every day....only for 1 episode, though....my 4 year old would watch them all day! The educational content is also great.

great value, great price, great product....highly recommended


Death Machines
Released in DVD by Wea Corp (14 May, 2002)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Paul Kyriazi
Average review score:

Fun action!
The story is simple. A yakuza type woman takes control of all the gangland killings in her town using three kung fu killers. But the plot throws so many exploitable characters and situations into it, it plays like a fun mix of "Pulp Fiction" and a Road Runner cartoon.

There are cops, gangsters, karate teachers, lovers, bikers, and bartenders. The action sequences are varied and bizarre like the one where the three killers whip out a karate school full of students. Or when one of the killers fights his way out of a police station. Or the three of them take on bikers in a roadside cafe.

There is a hero. A guy who gets his hand cut off in the karate school and goes after the killers. There is even a psycho style ending. Too bad this obviously lower budget film didn't have any stars in it. If it had Travolta and Willis we could have had "Pulp Fiction" 20 years sooner.


Allied & Axis Tanks
Released in DVD by Questar Inc. (10 July, 2001)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Starring: Great Fighting Machines of WWII
Average review score:

very cool
lots of great info ,and the extra features are awesome ,the one on how to kill a russian tank is great ,original german training film.

Well worth the money
Excellent information I wish there was more combat footage but all in all this disc is A++++++ lots of good information. If you like German Armor this DVD is a must have.


Terminator 3 - Rise of the Machines (Full Screen Edition)
Released in DVD by Warner Home Video (11 November, 2003)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Jonathan Mostow
Starring: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Nick Stahl, and Kristanna Loken
With a reported budget of $172 million, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines starts in high gear and never slows down. The apocalyptic "Judgment Day" of T2 was never prevented, only postponed: John Connor (Nick Stahl, replacing T2's Edward Furlong), now 22 and disconnected from society, is being pursued yet again, this time by the advanced T-X, a sleek "Terminatrix" (coldly expressionless Kristanna Loken) programmed to stop Connor from becoming the savior of humankind. Originally programmed as an assassin, a disadvantaged T-101 cyborg (Arnold Schwarzenegger, bidding fond farewell to his signature role) arrives from the future to join Connor and his old acquaintance Kate (Claire Danes) in thwarting the T-X's relentless pursuit. The plot presents a logical fulfillment of T2 prophesy, disposing of Connor's mother (Linda Hamilton is sorely missed) while computer-driven machines assume control, launching a nuclear nightmare that Connor must survive. With Breakdown and U-571 serving as worthy rehearsals for this cautionary epic of mass destruction, director Jonathan Mostow wisely avoids any stylistic connection to James Cameron's Terminator classics; instead he's crafted a fun, exciting popcorn thriller, humorous and yet still effectively nihilistic, and comparable to Jurassic Park III in returning the Terminator franchise to its potent B-movie roots. --Jeff Shannon
Average review score:

What a turkey....
I'd heard this one was bad, but I wanted to see some explosions and and car chases. If that's all you want, this movie is worth seeing, otherwise, forget it. The script stinks, filled with stupid throwbacks to the previous movies and silly situations. The acting stinks (if anything, Arnold's gotten worse since T2, and he's certainly looking older. Do Terminator's really age?). The characters are inane (who really cares about these versions of the characters). The worst thing is that this movies isn't even bad in a good way. Some movies are so bad you can laugh at them. This one, sorry, it's not even funny. Just kinda dull.

The interesting stuff in this series has already been said. Go watch T2 again. Leave this turkey on the shelf where it belongs.

Cats And Dogs, Living Together
A big summer movie that delivers: high-dollar mayhem with a sense of humor.

I've heard people complain about the ending but I liked it. Not what I thought was going to happen (it also breaks a Hollywood screenwriting rule by taking the fate of the story away from the protagonist/hero--but, hey, we didn't come to see John Connor, did we? So who is the real hero here?).
It also fun to see winks at the earlier films. Arnold's Terminator showing up at a Chippendale's show, the traumatized psychologist from T2 getting traumatized again, etc.
The Terminatrix is coldly beautiful and I hope they actually make a robot like her someday (just don't give her a gigantic Death Star-sized laser cannon for a right arm and we'll get along fine).
Why wasn't Edward Furlough on board for this? He probably STILL looks like a kid.

The DVD is worth seeing for a scene that should've been in the movie: the hilarious "Sgt. Candy Scene." Why was this cut? It would've provided one of the biggest laughs in the movie, as well as explained a few details for the first two movies. Thank God for DVDs.
For everyone quibbling that this isn't up to the first two movies: "Talk to the hand."

The Big Guy Is Back!
Wow, the big guy is really back, at long last. But this bang-em-up sequel to the sequel was well worth the wait. It is not exactly Academy Award winning stuff, but then again, we are talking about the Terminator here. Sometimes it's a bit hard to find the big guy amid all the pyrotechnics, explosions, and spectacular truck crashes, but Arnold is definitely back! One thing I find amusing, however, is that the basic cybernetic model Arnold plays keeps getting slimmer with each film, but since the original version was likely easier to spot as a machine due to its incredible bulk and muscularity, maybe such a revised this model could blend into human company and pass without being detected. So perhaps the machine makers reconfigured its armature as they went along, explaining AHNOLD's progressively slimmer physique in each film.

Anyway, I defy anyone to show me another 55 year old who is this buffed, this muscular, and this awesome! And in the Terminator movies, what really counts here is the combination of special effects and terrific action sequences, which certainly is where the producers have invested most of the effort, energy, and funding. And while I personally was not as impressed with this effort as I was with the superb production values evident in T-2, there is no doubt that this roller coaster ride of an action flick, which includes an eye-popping and heart-pumping sequence with fire trucks racing through the city streets, will enjoy a wide audience and have a lot of success just based on such pyrotechnics. Yet, having said this, in some ways the only continuity with the first two terminator films is the presence of the big guy himself. In this sense it is less a sequel than it is another episode in the Terminator series, and there is a difference.

The story is set ten years after the closing of the second movie, with John Connor (played here by Nick Stahl) now a young adult living on the margins of society to avoid detection, existing without an apartment, a telephone, or credit cards. He finds himself being hunted by the T-X, the most advanced model of the Terminator series, a prototype designed with cutting-edge capabilities including being disguised as a female. The T-X is superbly underplayed by the fetching Kristana Lokken, being programmed as a murder machine that dispatches anyone it comes across en route to its intended prey, the clever young John Connor. Enter our boy AHNOLD, an obsolete T-101 model originally programmed as a hunter-killer, but now sent back to rescue Conner so he can prevent his murder so he can survive to become the adult who somehow keeps sending Arnold back to rescue him. Got it?

AHNOLD must also save the comely young Kate Brewster, an old friend of John's who The T-101 has been programmed to recognize as an older Conner's future main squeeze. Kate is played well by the ever more attractive Claire Danes, who has a terrific future in the film industry, never mind with young John Connor. So the stage is set for yet another protracted series of uneven battles between the mismatched terminator models, with the T-101 attempting to fend off the T-X while keeping the two youngsters alive in the process. As with the previous movies, there are wonderful one-liners, and some gutter humor that we find ourselves laughing along with despite our better natures. I enjoyed the tongue-in -cheek repartee, which is often witty and funny, and this adds a valuable dimension to this film so often missing from other action-fantasy films. All in all, this is a great evening's entertainment. After all, he told us he'd be back! Enjoy!


Terminator 3 - Rise of the Machines (Widescreen Edition)
Released in DVD by Warner Home Video (11 November, 2003)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Jonathan Mostow
Starring: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Nick Stahl, and Kristanna Loken
With a reported budget of $172 million, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines starts in high gear and never slows down. The apocalyptic "Judgment Day" of T2 was never prevented, only postponed: John Connor (Nick Stahl, replacing T2's Edward Furlong), now 22 and disconnected from society, is being pursued yet again, this time by the advanced T-X, a sleek "Terminatrix" (coldly expressionless Kristanna Loken) programmed to stop Connor from becoming the savior of humankind. Originally programmed as an assassin, a disadvantaged T-101 cyborg (Arnold Schwarzenegger, bidding fond farewell to his signature role) arrives from the future to join Connor and his old acquaintance Kate (Claire Danes) in thwarting the T-X's relentless pursuit. The plot presents a logical fulfillment of T2 prophesy, disposing of Connor's mother (Linda Hamilton is sorely missed) while computer-driven machines assume control, launching a nuclear nightmare that Connor must survive. With Breakdown and U-571 serving as worthy rehearsals for this cautionary epic of mass destruction, director Jonathan Mostow wisely avoids any stylistic connection to James Cameron's Terminator classics; instead he's crafted a fun, exciting popcorn thriller, humorous and yet still effectively nihilistic, and comparable to Jurassic Park III in returning the Terminator franchise to its potent B-movie roots. --Jeff Shannon
Average review score:

What a turkey....
I'd heard this one was bad, but I wanted to see some explosions and and car chases. If that's all you want, this movie is worth seeing, otherwise, forget it. The script stinks, filled with stupid throwbacks to the previous movies and silly situations. The acting stinks (if anything, Arnold's gotten worse since T2, and he's certainly looking older. Do Terminator's really age?). The characters are inane (who really cares about these versions of the characters). The worst thing is that this movies isn't even bad in a good way. Some movies are so bad you can laugh at them. This one, sorry, it's not even funny. Just kinda dull.

The interesting stuff in this series has already been said. Go watch T2 again. Leave this turkey on the shelf where it belongs.

Cats And Dogs, Living Together
A big summer movie that delivers: high-dollar mayhem with a sense of humor.

I've heard people complain about the ending but I liked it. Not what I thought was going to happen (it also breaks a Hollywood screenwriting rule by taking the fate of the story away from the protagonist/hero--but, hey, we didn't come to see John Connor, did we? So who is the real hero here?).
It also fun to see winks at the earlier films. Arnold's Terminator showing up at a Chippendale's show, the traumatized psychologist from T2 getting traumatized again, etc.
The Terminatrix is coldly beautiful and I hope they actually make a robot like her someday (just don't give her a gigantic Death Star-sized laser cannon for a right arm and we'll get along fine).
Why wasn't Edward Furlough on board for this? He probably STILL looks like a kid.

The DVD is worth seeing for a scene that should've been in the movie: the hilarious "Sgt. Candy Scene." Why was this cut? It would've provided one of the biggest laughs in the movie, as well as explained a few details for the first two movies. Thank God for DVDs.
For everyone quibbling that this isn't up to the first two movies: "Talk to the hand."

The Big Guy Is Back!
Wow, the big guy is really back, at long last. But this bang-em-up sequel to the sequel was well worth the wait. It is not exactly Academy Award winning stuff, but then again, we are talking about the Terminator here. Sometimes it's a bit hard to find the big guy amid all the pyrotechnics, explosions, and spectacular truck crashes, but Arnold is definitely back! One thing I find amusing, however, is that the basic cybernetic model Arnold plays keeps getting slimmer with each film, but since the original version was likely easier to spot as a machine due to its incredible bulk and muscularity, maybe such a revised this model could blend into human company and pass without being detected. So perhaps the machine makers reconfigured its armature as they went along, explaining AHNOLD's progressively slimmer physique in each film.

Anyway, I defy anyone to show me another 55 year old who is this buffed, this muscular, and this awesome! And in the Terminator movies, what really counts here is the combination of special effects and terrific action sequences, which certainly is where the producers have invested most of the effort, energy, and funding. And while I personally was not as impressed with this effort as I was with the superb production values evident in T-2, there is no doubt that this roller coaster ride of an action flick, which includes an eye-popping and heart-pumping sequence with fire trucks racing through the city streets, will enjoy a wide audience and have a lot of success just based on such pyrotechnics. Yet, having said this, in some ways the only continuity with the first two terminator films is the presence of the big guy himself. In this sense it is less a sequel than it is another episode in the Terminator series, and there is a difference.

The story is set ten years after the closing of the second movie, with John Connor (played here by Nick Stahl) now a young adult living on the margins of society to avoid detection, existing without an apartment, a telephone, or credit cards. He finds himself being hunted by the T-X, the most advanced model of the Terminator series, a prototype designed with cutting-edge capabilities including being disguised as a female. The T-X is superbly underplayed by the fetching Kristana Lokken, being programmed as a murder machine that dispatches anyone it comes across en route to its intended prey, the clever young John Connor. Enter our boy AHNOLD, an obsolete T-101 model originally programmed as a hunter-killer, but now sent back to rescue Conner so he can prevent his murder so he can survive to become the adult who somehow keeps sending Arnold back to rescue him. Got it?

AHNOLD must also save the comely young Kate Brewster, an old friend of John's who The T-101 has been programmed to recognize as an older Conner's future main squeeze. Kate is played well by the ever more attractive Claire Danes, who has a terrific future in the film industry, never mind with young John Connor. So the stage is set for yet another protracted series of uneven battles between the mismatched terminator models, with the T-101 attempting to fend off the T-X while keeping the two youngsters alive in the process. As with the previous movies, there are wonderful one-liners, and some gutter humor that we find ourselves laughing along with despite our better natures. I enjoyed the tongue-in -cheek repartee, which is often witty and funny, and this adds a valuable dimension to this film so often missing from other action-fantasy films. All in all, this is a great evening's entertainment. After all, he told us he'd be back! Enjoy!


Terminator 3 - Rise of the Machines
Released in Theatrical Release by (02 July, 2003)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Jonathan Mostow
Starring: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Nick Stahl, and Kristanna Loken
With a reported budget of $172 million, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines starts in high gear and never slows down. The apocalyptic "Judgment Day" of T2 was never prevented, only postponed: John Connor (Nick Stahl, replacing T2's Edward Furlong), now 22 and disconnected from society, is being pursued yet again, this time by the advanced T-X, a sleek "Terminatrix" (coldly expressionless Kristanna Loken) programmed to stop Connor from becoming the savior of humankind. Originally programmed as an assassin, a disadvantaged T-101 cyborg (Arnold Schwarzenegger, bidding fond farewell to his signature role) arrives from the future to join Connor and his old acquaintance Kate (Claire Danes) in thwarting the T-X's relentless pursuit. The plot presents a logical fulfillment of T2 prophesy, disposing of Connor's mother (Linda Hamilton is sorely missed) while computer-driven machines assume control, launching a nuclear nightmare that Connor must survive. With Breakdown and U-571 serving as worthy rehearsals for this cautionary epic of mass destruction, director Jonathan Mostow wisely avoids any stylistic connection to James Cameron's Terminator classics; instead he's crafted a fun, exciting popcorn thriller, humorous and yet still effectively nihilistic, and comparable to Jurassic Park III in returning the Terminator franchise to its potent B-movie roots. --Jeff Shannon
Average review score:

What a turkey....
I'd heard this one was bad, but I wanted to see some explosions and and car chases. If that's all you want, this movie is worth seeing, otherwise, forget it. The script stinks, filled with stupid throwbacks to the previous movies and silly situations. The acting stinks (if anything, Arnold's gotten worse since T2, and he's certainly looking older. Do Terminator's really age?). The characters are inane (who really cares about these versions of the characters). The worst thing is that this movies isn't even bad in a good way. Some movies are so bad you can laugh at them. This one, sorry, it's not even funny. Just kinda dull.

The interesting stuff in this series has already been said. Go watch T2 again. Leave this turkey on the shelf where it belongs.

Cats And Dogs, Living Together
A big summer movie that delivers: high-dollar mayhem with a sense of humor.

I've heard people complain about the ending but I liked it. Not what I thought was going to happen (it also breaks a Hollywood screenwriting rule by taking the fate of the story away from the protagonist/hero--but, hey, we didn't come to see John Connor, did we? So who is the real hero here?).
It also fun to see winks at the earlier films. Arnold's Terminator showing up at a Chippendale's show, the traumatized psychologist from T2 getting traumatized again, etc.
The Terminatrix is coldly beautiful and I hope they actually make a robot like her someday (just don't give her a gigantic Death Star-sized laser cannon for a right arm and we'll get along fine).
Why wasn't Edward Furlough on board for this? He probably STILL looks like a kid.

The DVD is worth seeing for a scene that should've been in the movie: the hilarious "Sgt. Candy Scene." Why was this cut? It would've provided one of the biggest laughs in the movie, as well as explained a few details for the first two movies. Thank God for DVDs.
For everyone quibbling that this isn't up to the first two movies: "Talk to the hand."

The Big Guy Is Back!
Wow, the big guy is really back, at long last. But this bang-em-up sequel to the sequel was well worth the wait. It is not exactly Academy Award winning stuff, but then again, we are talking about the Terminator here. Sometimes it's a bit hard to find the big guy amid all the pyrotechnics, explosions, and spectacular truck crashes, but Arnold is definitely back! One thing I find amusing, however, is that the basic cybernetic model Arnold plays keeps getting slimmer with each film, but since the original version was likely easier to spot as a machine due to its incredible bulk and muscularity, maybe such a revised this model could blend into human company and pass without being detected. So perhaps the machine makers reconfigured its armature as they went along, explaining AHNOLD's progressively slimmer physique in each film.

Anyway, I defy anyone to show me another 55 year old who is this buffed, this muscular, and this awesome! And in the Terminator movies, what really counts here is the combination of special effects and terrific action sequences, which certainly is where the producers have invested most of the effort, energy, and funding. And while I personally was not as impressed with this effort as I was with the superb production values evident in T-2, there is no doubt that this roller coaster ride of an action flick, which includes an eye-popping and heart-pumping sequence with fire trucks racing through the city streets, will enjoy a wide audience and have a lot of success just based on such pyrotechnics. Yet, having said this, in some ways the only continuity with the first two terminator films is the presence of the big guy himself. In this sense it is less a sequel than it is another episode in the Terminator series, and there is a difference.

The story is set ten years after the closing of the second movie, with John Connor (played here by Nick Stahl) now a young adult living on the margins of society to avoid detection, existing without an apartment, a telephone, or credit cards. He finds himself being hunted by the T-X, the most advanced model of the Terminator series, a prototype designed with cutting-edge capabilities including being disguised as a female. The T-X is superbly underplayed by the fetching Kristana Lokken, being programmed as a murder machine that dispatches anyone it comes across en route to its intended prey, the clever young John Connor. Enter our boy AHNOLD, an obsolete T-101 model originally programmed as a hunter-killer, but now sent back to rescue Conner so he can prevent his murder so he can survive to become the adult who somehow keeps sending Arnold back to rescue him. Got it?

AHNOLD must also save the comely young Kate Brewster, an old friend of John's who The T-101 has been programmed to recognize as an older Conner's future main squeeze. Kate is played well by the ever more attractive Claire Danes, who has a terrific future in the film industry, never mind with young John Connor. So the stage is set for yet another protracted series of uneven battles between the mismatched terminator models, with the T-101 attempting to fend off the T-X while keeping the two youngsters alive in the process. As with the previous movies, there are wonderful one-liners, and some gutter humor that we find ourselves laughing along with despite our better natures. I enjoyed the tongue-in -cheek repartee, which is often witty and funny, and this adds a valuable dimension to this film so often missing from other action-fantasy films. All in all, this is a great evening's entertainment. After all, he told us he'd be back! Enjoy!


America's Greatest Roller Coaster Thrills: The Ultimate Scream Machines
Released in DVD by Goldhil Home Media (01 June, 2000)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Taking full advantage of the DVD format, this installment of the Roller Coaster Thrills series offers viewers a choice of two camera angles for each of the 20 rides captured on this disc. Anticipate the fear of that initial heart-stopping plunge with a first-person perspective, or face backward and watch the reactions of the riders--either way, it's a great ride. The virtual tour across U.S. theme parks includes old-fashioned woodies, dual-track looping coasters, and colossal steel mega-coasters with 300-foot drops. Many of the featured coasters were built in 1999 and show off the latest advances in roller coaster engineering; in fact, one launched coaster has apparently garnered interest from NASA engineers for the speed of its propulsion (0 to 60 mph in under 3 seconds). The disc is also packed with special features: amusement park histories, interviews with roller coaster designers, behind-the-scenes insights from director Ned Rodgers and director of photography Dave Cutler, plus Dolby Digital and DTS surround sound, and bonus footage of the first combination roller coaster and water ride. --Larisa Lomacky Moore
Average review score:

america's greatest rollercoaster thrills the ultimate scream
I wish they would of stuck to the previous format, with the front seat ride feature. I wish I wouldn't of bought it, but i'll keep it. John H

This Is the Best Coaster DVD ever
I found this dvd the best rollercoaster movie I have ever seen.It has lots of features. 3 diffrent angle views. Lots of good coasters. Hulk, Dueling Dragons, Raging Bull, Viper (SFGAm), Medusa, Superman the Escape, Riddlers Revenge, Jokers Jinxs, Volcaneo the blast Coaster, Magnum XL 200, Coney Islands Cyclone, Ghostrider, Desparado, Great Bear. Just to name a few. I would recommend buying this if you really love coasters.

Sounds yight
This video will be my first ever so I'll automatically will think its the bst out there. In the last few years I've loved rollercaster thrills so much I visited all of the theme parks in Texas. I've loved them but I'd like to see more. This summer Im going to Florida so I want to see the rollercoasters from there also. I think it sounds great, Im getting mine tomorrow ad Im excited about it a lot. One word of advice for all of ya'll chickens out therethat don't like rollercoasters, live a little!!!


America's Greatest Roller Coaster Thrills: The Ultimate Scream Machines - DTS
Released in DVD by Goldhil Home Media (01 June, 2000)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Taking full advantage of the DVD format, this installment of the Roller Coaster Thrills series offers viewers a choice of two camera angles for each of the 20 rides captured on this disc. Anticipate the fear of that initial heart-stopping plunge with a first-person perspective, or face backward and watch the reactions of the riders--either way, it's a great ride. The virtual tour across U.S. theme parks includes old-fashioned woodies, dual-track looping coasters, and colossal steel mega-coasters with 300-foot drops. Many of the featured coasters were built in 1999 and show off the latest advances in roller coaster engineering; in fact, one launched coaster has apparently garnered interest from NASA engineers for the speed of its propulsion (0 to 60 mph in under 3 seconds). The disc is also packed with special features: amusement park histories, interviews with roller coaster designers, behind-the-scenes insights from director Ned Rodgers and director of photography Dave Cutler, plus Dolby Digital and DTS surround sound, and bonus footage of the first combination roller coaster and water ride. --Larisa Lomacky Moore
Average review score:

america's greatest rollercoaster thrills the ultimate scream
I wish they would of stuck to the previous format, with the front seat ride feature. I wish I wouldn't of bought it, but i'll keep it. John H

This Is the Best Coaster DVD ever
I found this dvd the best rollercoaster movie I have ever seen.It has lots of features. 3 diffrent angle views. Lots of good coasters. Hulk, Dueling Dragons, Raging Bull, Viper (SFGAm), Medusa, Superman the Escape, Riddlers Revenge, Jokers Jinxs, Volcaneo the blast Coaster, Magnum XL 200, Coney Islands Cyclone, Ghostrider, Desparado, Great Bear. Just to name a few. I would recommend buying this if you really love coasters.

Sounds yight
This video will be my first ever so I'll automatically will think its the bst out there. In the last few years I've loved rollercaster thrills so much I visited all of the theme parks in Texas. I've loved them but I'd like to see more. This summer Im going to Florida so I want to see the rollercoasters from there also. I think it sounds great, Im getting mine tomorrow ad Im excited about it a lot. One word of advice for all of ya'll chickens out therethat don't like rollercoasters, live a little!!!


Planes, Trains & Machines Collection
Released in DVD by Simitar Video (21 March, 2000)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Average review score:

Fighter Jets and Attack Aircraft
I have purchased this DVD video and conclude that it is anexercise in frustration to load (install) or run. Is it because it isold single layer DVD format or what, somebody clue me in. I ... conclude that the quality is comensurate with the price. I do not recommend this product. If I am in error I am open for e-mail at imak@jps.net.

A good begining
If you do not know alot about air warfare or of modern aircraft in general then this DVD is an excellent starting point. It explains everything in a simple and informative manner. However if you are up on all the comings and goings of modern aircraft then the info will be nothing new. The footage is good, but a little grainy and not up to the quality of DVD. The biggest pain is the way they present the show. I think they were trying to be fancy and show off the interactive features of DVD's. But to stop watching one part to jump to a different section gets annoying. It would have been better to just put it together as one streamlined show. But as it is pretty cheap I think it is worth the cash.

Like a big book on fighter jets
The DVD has nice videos of the different American and Europian jets but the sound did not have any window rattling screams of the jet engines that I was expecting in DVD. Also very limited footage on the damage caused by the weapons. The footage was exactly the same as we saw on TV during the Gulf War, they could have cleaned up the images first (gotten rid of vertical roll, noise, poor contrast). The HIS channel has better footage and for screams from the engines I recommend Air Force 1 and Top Gun. Some of the American planes discussed are F-111, F117, F15, F22 and F23, A10. The HIS channel devotes an hour to each plane so it's easy to get spoiled. I would not have bought this DVD based on what I know now.


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