S&V's Top 10 DVDs of 2007
1. Pan's Labyrinth (Platinum Series; New Line, 2 discs).
• Guillermo del Toro's astonishing tragic fantasy becomes one of the best DVD sets to date, with images of stunning color and detail, immersive DTS-ES 6.1 sound, and cool extras, including an interactive DVD-ROM screenplay. — Sol Louis Siegel
• Simply a feast of exotic, well-reproduced imagery and ambitious sound design from beginning to end. One of the most beautiful films I saw last year. — Marc Horowitz
• The best, most vivid theatrical movie of 2006 lights up home theater screens. This powerful DVD set comes with an exhaustive commentary by a brilliant director. — Ken Korman
2. Breathless (The Criterion Collection, 2 discs). This dazzling transfer is worthy of such a highly venerated, groundbreaking film. As are the excellent extras, including interviews with Jean-Luc Godard, Jean-Paul Belmondo, and Jean Seberg, as well as two video essays, an 80-minute documentary, a Godard short, and an 80-page booklet containing François Truffaut's original film treatment and Godard's scenario. — Brandon Grafius
TIE:
3. Planet Earth (BBC/Warner, 5 discs). Our home — like you've never seen it before. The visuals in this TV documentary series are absolutely stunning. The DVD set comes with a 150-minute companion documentary, Planet Earth: The Future, and 2 hours of behind-the-scenes footage. — Brandon Grafius
3. Ratatouille (Disney/Pixar). With its latest creation, Pixar takes animation to a new level. And here, the picture and sound, digitally transferred directly to the DVD, both have amazing resolution. — Rad Bennett
4. Twin Peaks: Definitive Gold Box Edition (Paramount, 10 discs). All of David Lynch's TV masterpiece in one set — and the auteur finally shows up to talk about it, too. — Ken Korman
5. Heroes: Season 1 (Universal, 7 discs). TV as it should be — with engaging characters, a smart and original story, and impressive special effects — on the DVD set it deserves. Smooth, film-like images with warm colors and very deep blacks are ably supported by crisp, clear 5.1 sound and hours of entertaining and informative extras. — Josef Krebs
6. The War (PBS; 6 discs). Although Ken Burns uses a combination of black-and-white photos, archival footage, and recently filmed interviews for his rhapsodic reconstruction of the American experience of World War II, the overall picture quality of this TV series is excellent. A year was spent on recreating the sounds of battles, and the result is machine-gun fire and explosions that are far more convincing than those in most major movies. — Rad Bennett
7. Army of Shadows (The Criterion Collection, 2 discs). Jean-Pierre Melville's strong, somber drama of the French Resistance has finely detailed images and is fleshed out with terrific extras on both the film's making and the story's historical background. — Sol Louis Siegel
8. Not Just the Best of the Larry Sanders Show (Sony; 4 discs). Helping to illuminate the 23 episodes that star Garry Shandling chose for the set is one of the best collections of extras ever presented on DVD. That's a total of 8 hours of extras, including a feature-length making-of documentary, copious interviews, deleted scenes, commentaries, and footage of Shandling dropping in on guest stars. — Marc Horowitz
9. Lost: Season 3 — The Unexplored Experience (Touchstone; 7 discs). Still the benchmark for writing, acting, and directing for a network TV drama — not to mention its visuals and sound — Lost delivers on every front here, including one of the best season-ending cliffhanger twists ever. This DVD set does it all justice: images filled with lush green jungles, a sound mix that surrounds you with the buzz of nature and the echoing of voices in underground chambers, and an extras cavalcade that others should use as a blueprint. — Mike Mettler
10. 300 (Special Edition; Warner, 2 discs). In brutal scenes depicting the standoff at Thermopylae, every bit of blood, sweat, grit, and grime is reproduced vividly in this A-plus transfer. Equally conveying the heat of battle is the thunderous soundtrack. — Rad Bennett
Individual ballots for DVDs
Rad Bennett
Brandon Grafius
Marc Horowitz
Ken Korman
Josef Krebs
Mike Mettler
Mel Neuhaus
Sol Louis Siegel
S&V's Top 10 CDs of 2007
1. Bruce Springsteen: Magic (Columbia).
• The Boss's best since Born in the U.S.A. is a fiery, heartfelt set of rockers. There was probably blood on his Telecaster. — Jeff Perlah
• River-style energy meets Tom Joad worldview on an album that may be his best in decades. — Brett Milano
• His best since The River. And if you don't get the Iraq War subtext, you're not paying attention. — Steve Simels
2. Radiohead: In Rainbows (radiohead.com). You get what you pay for — and whatever you decide will be worth every cent, as Thom Yorke and crew continue in their ever-surprising, ever-expansive way. As they say: no static at all. — Billy Altman
3. Porcupine Tree: Fear of a Blank Planet (Atlantic). Aims to be a modern progressive-rock masterpiece. Damn near succeeds. — Brett Milano
4. Arcade Fire: Neon Bible (Merge). At last, an indie-rock band that paints on a large canvas with unapologetic ambition. — Parke Puterbaugh
5. Amy Winehouse: Back to Black (Universal Republic). It's too bad that her trainwreck of a personal life has at least temporarily derailed what started out as a pretty cool musical retro-ride. — Billy Altman
6. The Hives: The Black and White Album (A&M/Octone). Garage rock from a place (Sweden) that obviously has high-end garages. — Steve Simels
7. Sloan: Never Hear the End of It (Yep Roc). For those who just can't get enough of Side 2 of Abbey Road, here's a string of 30 (count 'em!) irresistible pop pearls. — Andrew Nash
8. The White Stripes: Icky Thump (Third Man/Warner Bros.). The power of two: Jack and Meg create the hardest-stomping and most mystical Zeppelin set in years. — Mike Mettler
9. Foo Fighters: Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace (RCA). For those who continue to rock, we salute you. — Parke Puterbaugh
10. Tori Amos: American Doll Posse (Epic). A 23-room dollhouse full of alter egos: her richest songwriting since Under the Pink. — Andrew Nash
Individual ballots for CDs
Billy Altman
Mike Mettler
Brett Milano
Andrew Nash
Rob O'Connor
Jeff Perlah
Parke Puterbaugh
Ken Richardson
Steve Simels