Tom Norton
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HE 2007
Tom Norton May 10, 2007 0 comments

Optoma is not showing at the Home Entertainment show, but two days before the show they demonstrated two new 1080p DLP projectors for the press at DataVision, the company's dealer in midtown Manhattan.

HE 2007
Tom Norton May 10, 2007 0 comments

Though they are not at HE 2007, Pioneer announced several new products in New York before the show officially begins Friday.

HE 2007
Tom Norton May 09, 2007 0 comments

Kuro is a Japanese word meaning deep, black, and penetrating. And on the tenth anniversary of its entry into the plasma display business, Pioneer announced the culmination of its Project Kuro to the assembled consumer electronics press in New York.

HE 2007
Tom Norton May 09, 2007 0 comments

Pioneer BDP-94HD Blu-ray Player

HE 2007
Tom Norton May 09, 2007 4 comments

Pioneer VSX-94TXH

Blu-ray Movie Reviews
Tom Norton Apr 30, 2007 1 comments

Between "message" pictures, a little sunshine, and a long-frustrated bandwagon for director Martin Scorsese, Dreamgirls was not nominated this year for a Best Picture Oscar. But it was, nevertheless, one of the best movies of 2006, and one of the most highly anticipated video releases of 2007. The Blu-ray discs are reviewed here. An HD DVD version, with identical contents, is also available, as well as two standard definition DVD sets.

Blu-ray Movie Reviews
Tom Norton Apr 09, 2007 0 comments

Thanks to two remarkable films, I've learned more about penguins in the past few weeks than I ever thought I needed to know. The first, March of the Penguins was a surprising hit when it played theatrically in 2005, winning an Oscar that year as the best documentary feature. The second, Happy Feet (review following), won an Oscar as the best animated feature of 2006.

Blu-ray Movie Reviews
Tom Norton Apr 09, 2007 2 comments

With its computer animated video and up-to-the-minute audio mix, Happy Feet is far more dazzling technically than March of the Penguins. Here we have the same sort of penguins as before, but with a smaller species thrown into the story as well. The life-cycle/survival situation here is the same, but in this film it's a backdrop for the plot. The penguins here are a lot more communicative. They talk, sing, and dance almost constantly. Or rather, Mumble, our hapless hero, dances. While the other penguins sing, he can't warble a single tuneful note. But he's Gotta Dance.

Blu-ray Movie Reviews
Tom Norton Apr 09, 2007 1 comments

I'm not sure how you write a screenplay designed to show the origins if the CIA and its operations up to and including the Bay of Pigs fiasco in 1961. But I'm reasonably certain that no one in Hollywood has an inside track to the straight story, despite research into volumes full of speculation and unverifiable leaks. The true history of the CIA and the details of its operation are not exactly found in the public library or on the Internet, and for good reasons.

Blu-ray Movie Reviews
Tom Norton Apr 09, 2007 1 comments

A Scanner Darkly may be animated, but take that R rating seriously. This is not a film for the kids. There isn't a furry animal in sight, and certainly no talking penguins.

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