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Top 10 DVDs and CDs of 2007

Our movie, TV, and music critics pick the best DVDs and CDs of the past year. Also: the top high-def and surround-music discs.

February 2008

Top 10 DVDs and CDs of 2007
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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

Top 10 DVDs and CDs of 2007 NEXT: Blu-ray, HD DVD, surround-music winners
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