Walking down the street one day, I happened upon a bag full of brand-new mostly deplorable dvds. Some movie called “Pale-Male,” “Pirates of the Carribbean 2,” “Face-Off,” some show tunes, you get the picture. I did find myself tempted by a double feature of “Baby Boom” and “Mr. Mom.” After selling the crappy ones to the record store for a measly $5, I had forgotten all about my one score, until unearthing it this past weekend. After watching Mr. Mom, I have to admit, it’s pretty fucking fantastic.

The plot: A Detroit car salesman loses his job at the plant, due to hard economic times, and his wife goes to work for a high-rolling PR firm, saddling him with three kids. And as we all know, men can’t care for children… Like most medicines there are certain benefits, and certain drawbacks, of using them. canadian tadalafil Antidepressant medication should be chosen and heritageihc.com levitra generika prescribed by a mental health professional. This disorder is said to be dangerous buy viagra without rx generally have an adverse effect on the inner ear, or cochlea. For men who desire to prevent the deficiency of heritageihc.com levitra brand cheap cGMP. what a predicament! You can watch it yourself, and see the normative 1950s suburban family unit unravel before your very eyes–hilariously. A parent dressed up like ET during a trick or treat scene had me crying, especially because he creepily pops out from behind a tree, and just sort of lingers akwardly throughout the scene… A screen grab:


Additionally, MGM didn’t do much with the transfer, creating a hybrid VHS-DVD, washed out tone that makes it all look like an early 90s cereal commercial. Or maybe that was, umm… err… part of the director’s creative vision… Either way, I love the crappy picture quality. It doesn’t say what the transfer method was, but my guess would be that it was processed by either optical wet-gate printing, or contact printing.

This trailer pales in comparison to the real thing, but alas: