Tag Archives: paramount-home

DVD: The Humor (and Angst) of Peanuts Lives On in Its First Two Films

Charles Schulz’s landmark comic strip Peanuts has occupied a unique niche in American pop culture. It’s part of a medium often aimed at children, and its cast is a group of kids under the age of 10, doing normal child-like activities like playing baseball, going to school, and ice skating. But these kids also talk about Beethoven, theology, and The Brothers Karamazov . They throw around words like “depressed” and “neurotic,” and one of them puts up a “Psychiatric Help” stand instead of selling lemonade. The strip balances hilarity with the fragility of life and the pain of existence, and that balance surfaces in Peanuts’ first two big-screen adventures, A Boy Named Charlie Brown and Snoopy, Come Home (both available this week as a two-disc DVD from CBS Home Entertainment and Paramount Home Entertainment).

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DVD: The Humor (and Angst) of Peanuts Lives On in Its First Two Films

DVD: The Humor (and Angst) of Peanuts Lives On in Its First Two Films

Charles Schulz’s landmark comic strip Peanuts has occupied a unique niche in American pop culture. It’s part of a medium often aimed at children, and its cast is a group of kids under the age of 10, doing normal child-like activities like playing baseball, going to school, and ice skating. But these kids also talk about Beethoven, theology, and The Brothers Karamazov . They throw around words like “depressed” and “neurotic,” and one of them puts up a “Psychiatric Help” stand instead of selling lemonade. The strip balances hilarity with the fragility of life and the pain of existence, and that balance surfaces in Peanuts’ first two big-screen adventures, A Boy Named Charlie Brown and Snoopy, Come Home (both available this week as a two-disc DVD from CBS Home Entertainment and Paramount Home Entertainment).

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DVD: The Humor (and Angst) of Peanuts Lives On in Its First Two Films

The Last Airbender and 5 Other Stinkers That Didn’t Nip Their Child Stars’ Careers in the Bud

If you were worried about the fate of young actor Noah Ringer, who starred in M. Night Shymalan’s cruddy The Last Airbender (out on DVD this week from Paramount Home Entertainment), fear not — he’s already landed a plum role in Jon Favreau’s eagerly anticipated Cowboys & Aliens . Which makes Ringer the latest in a long line of child stars who managed to keep their careers afloat after appearing in a legendary stinker. Ahead, check out five other child star survivors.

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The Last Airbender and 5 Other Stinkers That Didn’t Nip Their Child Stars’ Careers in the Bud