
Mr. Magoo: The Television Collection (1960–1977)
It’s the gift you didn’t even know you needed—a box set of Mr. Magoo’s zany, dumb luck escapades that spans 17 years, three shows, and a made-for-TV movie. Magoo fans will be psyched to find all 26 episodes of The Mister Magoo Show, the TV movie Uncle Sam Magoo, 26 episodes of The Famous Adventures of Mister Magoo, and 16 episodes of What’s New Mister Magoo? (Girlfriends of Magoo fans, on the other hand, will be less enthused.)
Category: "Blu-Ray"
Mr. Magoo: The Television Collection (1960–1977)
Justified: The Complete Second Season

Justified: The Complete Second Season
Better the devil you know, as the saying goes. After taking down the Crowder crime family in season one, U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens (Timothy Olyphant) takes on the even-badder Bennett family in season two. The three-disc set includes the full season, along with outtakes, behind-the-scenes featurettes, and, on the Blu-ray version, an exclusive roundtable discussion.
Blue Velvet
Cue midlife crisis: It’s been 25 years since this surreal David Lynch mystery was released. Kyle MacLachlan starred as a college kid who finds a severed ear, decides to investigate, and gets sucked into an affair with a lounge singer who’s being tortured by a sexually depraved villain (a scenery-chomping Dennis Hopper, who’s never been more fun to watch, except in Speed)—you know, just your average feel-good Lynch film. The anniversary-edition Blu-ray comes with Master Audio 5.1, 50 minutes of deleted scenes, and a few outtakes.
Colombiana

Colombiana
This underappreciated action flick stars the delicious Zoë Saldana as Cataleya, a sexy assassin seeking revenge on the mobster who murdered her parents. And of course the only thing better than watching a catsuitclad Saldana pick off bad guys is watching her do it in high-definition clarity. The bonus featurettes on the Blu-ray disc include “Cataleya’s Journey,” “Assassins,” “Training a Killer,” and “Take the Ride.”
Smallville: The Complete Series

Smallville: The Complete Series
It takes a certain type of show to attract both swooning teenyboppers and rabid fanboys—which explains why this Teen of Steel show became the longest running sci-fi series in North America. This comprehensive set is a hefty beast, thanks to ten years’ worth of episodes and 28 hours of bonus content. Some of the coolest extras include a never-before-seen Superboy pilot from 1961, footage of the 2010 Comic-Con panel, the Aquaman pilot, a Daily Planet edition highlighting key story lines, and an episode guide with storyboards and sketches.













