How to Spend $20

By Eric Hughes

March 16, 2010

Lycanthropes with Killer Abs: America's next top selling workout video.

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Welcome to How to Spend $20, BOP's look at the latest Blu-ray discs and DVDs to hit stores nationwide. This week: Bryan Cranston sells meth, Taylor Lautner takes off his shirt and a Disney Princess kisses a frog.

Pick of the Week



For people who want an education in hardcore drugs: Breaking Bad: Second Season

After a truncated first season, AMC's Breaking Bad stormed back with a meticulously polished 13-episode second season that left me feeling oh-so-thankful for giving the show a fighting chance after harboring ho-hum feelings about the seven episodes that preceded it. Not that Breaking Bad's freshman year was bad; in fact, the opposite is closer to the truth. It's just that it mostly goes the way you'd expect it to and I felt other dramas like Mad Men or Sons of Anarchy were more deserving of my face time. Also, having lost nearly half of its debut season to that pesky writers' strike, giving up before Vince Gilligan et al. had the opportunity to tell more of their story wouldn't have felt right.

Though season one was certainly no cakewalk, the stakes were arguably raised big time in season two for Walter White, who still figures his best chance at providing for his family after he's dead and buried is to cook and sell meth with his former chem student, Jesse Pinkman. Besides the dealers and other shady characters he encounters in his ruthless effort to make a profit, his pregnant wife, Skyler, knows something's up; she just hasn't figured it out yet. His brother-in-law, who is employed by the DEA, is hot on his trail, too. And this time around, he may have come across hard evidence that could bring Walt down for good.

Bob Odenkirk's Breaking Bad debut as criminal lawyer Saul Goodman is a pleasant surprise. His funny, albeit sleazy character (who appears in just a few episodes) provides the proper comic relief to the show's harsh tone. And Bryan Cranston is perfect as the show's lead character. He can keep on winning those Emmys for Lead Actor in a Drama; I have absolutely no problem with it.

Disc includes: Audio commentaries, deleted scenes, Inside Breaking Bad featurette, season 1 recap, "Negro y Azul" music video, Better Call Saul commercial, 11 behind-the-scenes featurette, Cop Talk with Dean Norris featurette, gag reel, Watt's Warning featurette, 6 Breaking Bad Webisodes, season 3 sneak peek, Vince Gilligan's photo gallery

For people who like watching werewolves and vampires do battle: The Twilight Saga: New Moon (available March 20th)

Ladies, hold your panties. In a few short days, The Twilight Saga's second chapter, New Moon, can be yours. This is because unlike most DVDs, New Moon bypasses the traditional Tuesday release date for a March 20th midnight release party. Even though there are probably solid marketing reasons behind the move, I'll go ahead and assume that Summit Entertainment wanted to do everything in its power to ensure that Team Jacob members devoted their weekends to one thing: fast-forwards and rewinds to the parts where Taylor Lautner shows off his magnificent abs.

Having said that, you're probably expecting me to be yet another BOP contributor who has little to nothing pleasant to say about The Twilight Saga. This isn't true. Instead, I've read the entire book series and even saw the first adaptation in theaters. I skipped New Moon, however, because it happens to be my least favorite of the series.




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No, Stephenie Meyer isn't Shakespeare. Or Russo or King or – eek! – Picoult. In fact, her writing is incredibly primitive and just plain awful. Unlike other readers, who without hesitation paste selections of Meyer's books as their Facebook statuses and consider her to be as wise as English philosopher Thomas Hobbes, I responded to Meyer's story and not much else. That, I feel, she can craft decently, and is the reason I made it through the books.

For people living under a rock, New Moon takes place almost entirely in Edward's absence. That's because he flees to Europe after his brother, Jasper, attempts to kill Bella Swan when she cuts herself in a house full of vampires. Alone in Forks, Bella mostly spends her days crying and being pursued by Jacob, a part-time family friend, part-time werewolf.

Disc includes: Audio commentary, six-part documentary, rehearsal footage with Muse, three music videos (Death Cab for Cutie, Anya Marina, Mute Math)


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