Former pros from Latin America help make an "amateur" soccer team unstoppable.
A growing number of educators face a hard truth: not every kid is college material.
A Florida man sues his girlfriend-for dumping him.
The best thing about this collection is the unrated version of the pretty-damned-good summer blockbuster — because something didn't feel right about a Die Hard movie in which "Yipee-ki-yay, motherfucker" was trimmed to keep it a kid-friendly PG-13. This Live Free or Die Hard plays lighter and looser than its theatrical counterpart (which is also present here); John McClane is no longer some sanitized, homogenized version of his former shambling self. Far as big, sweaty booms go, the fourth Die Hard is the only one that matters after the original. Bruce Willis says as much, over and over, in his interview with Kevin Smith that's a nifty bonus among so-so extras that include a lengthy making-of doc and — why? — a music video. — Robert Wilonsky
Manufactured Landscapes(Zeitgeist)The opening scene of this maddeningly uneven documentary is a tracking shot inside a Chinese factory that stretches on and on like the Star Destroyer in Star Wars, and then on and on like that ship in Spaceballs, and even farther until your mind drifts and you wonder about lunch and then you come back and the camera is still making its way through that goddamned factory. Huge-scale industrial scenes are the muse of photographer Edward Burtynsky, and the film is wonderful when it serves as a cinematic exploration of his images — rivers dyed orange, stripped mountains, and landfills that are all so beautiful and frightful. They need no explanation — but you'll get one anyway, and that's where things fall apart. Landscapes strives to serve more inconvenient truths (witness Al Gore in the special features), but Burtynsky's images deserve more complex consideration. Try it with the sound off. — Jordan Harper