Los Angeles Times

‘AMERICAN SNIPER’ KEEPS IT SIMPLE

- By Noel Murray calendar@latimes.com

American Sniper Warner Bros., $28.98; Blu-ray, $44.95 Available on VOD on Tuesday

Politics aside, it’s incredible that a director as distinguis­hed as Clint Eastwood — and, let’s face it, as old — could make a movie in the 2010s that earns half a billion dollars at the global box office. Granted, Eastwood’s film won’t appeal to everybody. Screenwrit­er Jason Hall’s adaptation of military sharpshoot­er Chris Kyle’s memoir is ostensibly plotless, stringing together one scene after another of Kyle either in life-or-death combat or dealing with post-traumatic stress back home. This is a movie about sacrifice that laments the after-effects but doesn’t really question the need; nor does it work its hero’s journey into any kind of familiar narrative arc. But Bradley Cooper gives a measured, magnetic performanc­e as Kyle, and Eastwood keeps his visual storytelli­ng as simple as ever, serving the truth of each moment rather than trying to sensationa­lize. The “American Sniper” DVD and Bluray are simple too, tacking on a pair of slight featurette­s.

Girlhood

Strand, $27.99; Blu-ray, $32.99

Céline Sciamma’s French sliceof-life starts small, telling a very particular story about a teenager from the Paris projects who joins a girl gang. Then it gradually builds into a sociologic­al study of crime among inner-city French youth. Sciamma shows a lot of the same sensitivit­y to how adolescent­s interact as in her earlier films “Water Lilies” and “Tomboy,” but she brings more ambition to her storytelli­ng, following her heroine (played by Karidja Touré) as loyalty to her friends changes her life plans. The final third is very different from where the movie begins, which is a rare thing for this kind of realistic drama. The DVD and Bluray add an interview with Touré.

Leviathan Sony Pictures Classics, $30.99; Blu-ray, $34.99 Available on VOD on Tuesday

For the Oscar nominee and Cannes prize winner, writer-director director Andrey Zvyagintse­v (best known for “The Return” and “Elena”) converts the biblical Book of Job into a contempora­ry social satire. Aleksei Serebryako­v stars as Kolya, an unemployed man who challenges his small town’s corrupt bureaucrac­y and keeps ending up worse off every time he tries to do right. Perfectly pitched, darkly funny and strangely universal, it’s a new classic of Russian cinema. The DVD and Blu-ray come suitably loaded, with deleted scenes, featurette­s and a commentary track.

Cymbeline

Lionsgate, $19.98; Blu-ray, $19.99

Art-film stalwart Michael Almereyda makes movies that are hard to pin down: This one-of-akind mix of avant-garde experiment­ation and literary adaptation is his second stab at Shakespear­e. It re-teams the writer-director with his “Hamlet” star Ethan Hawke in a small role as a lecher whose deceptions help set the plot in motion. Ed Harris plays the title character, a drug-dealing bikergang lord struggling to hold on to his empire. Almereyda’s use of Shakespear­e’s language in a modern, pulp setting isn’t as inspired as it is in “Hamlet,” but his fans — and fans of daring American indies — should find a lot here that’s worth their time. The Blu-ray has an Almereyda/Hawke commentary track and featurette­s; the DVD adds only the latter.

And…BeforeMPI, $24.98I Disappear

Boardwalk Empire

The Complete Series

HBO, $199.99; Blu-ray, $239.99

Hot Tub Time Machine 2

Paramount, $29.99; Blu-ray, $39.99

Limelight

Criterion, $29.95; Blu-ray, $39.95

Orange Is the New Black

The Complete Second Season

Lionsgate, $39.98; Blu-ray, $39.97

The Rose

Criterion, $29.95; Blu-ray, $39.95

 ?? Warner Bros. ?? BRADLEY COOPER plays a military sharpshoot­er in “Sniper.”
Warner Bros. BRADLEY COOPER plays a military sharpshoot­er in “Sniper.”

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