New home entertainment digital releases
Category: Blu-ray's and DVD'sCategory: Television and Streaming
For viewers who enjoy watching their movies without commercials, digital codes are the way to go. There are three new digital code releases for home viewing.
Kinds of Kindness
This show follows a man who tries to take control of his own life, a policeman whose wife returned after being missing at sea but is not the same as she was before, and a woman who wants to find a specific person with special abilities to be a spiritual leader.
This release comes with several bonus features including deleted scenes. The film is rated R.
The Sixth Sense (4K)
“I see dead people.” Fans of this 1999 thriller starring Bruce Willis and Haley Joel Osment know this phrase like the back of their hand. Willis is a child psychologist who is helping a young boy who says he has interactions with dead people. I won’t spoil the ending for those who have not seen this film. I’ll just say when the movie came out in 1999, audiences were shocked.
The film was nominated for six Academy Awards. It is rated PG-13.
Signs (4K)
In 2002 Mel Gibson starred in this story of a farmer who finds mysterious crop circles in the fields. Who made them? What do they mean? Check out the film for all the answers. It was nominated for several different awards in Science Fiction and Fantasy.
The movie is rated PG-13.
The Sixth Sense and Signs, are available for the first time ever in stunning 4K UHD digital now, and 4K UHD Blu-ray disc on October 22.
All images courtesy supplied.
About the Author
Francine Brokaw has been covering all aspects of the entertainment industry for over 30 years. She also writes about products and travel. She has been published in national and international newspapers and magazines as well as Internet websites. She has written her own book, Beyond the Red Carpet The World of Entertainment Journalists, is the entertainment correspondent for Good Day Orange County, and has her own TV show, Beyond the Red Carpet, on Village Television in Orange County. She is a longstanding member of the Television Critics Association and is accredited by the MPAA.