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Gift Guide 2021: Best of Blu-ray, 4K UHD and DVD movies

Here’s a selection of top gift ideas for the DVD, Blu-ray and 4K UHD-loving, cinema connoisseurs in the family.

Middle-Earth: The Ultimate Collector’s Edition (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, 2,290 minutes, Rated: PG-13 and R, 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $249.99) — Filmmaker Peter Jackson’s grand gift of his Academy Award-winning adaptation of author J.R.R. Tolkien’s seminal work arrives to fans with this 31-disc, ultra-high definition collection packed with extras and goodies.

First and most importantly, the films included are both the theatrical and coveted extended versions in Blu-ray and 4K of “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” (2012); “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” (2013); “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies” (2014); “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring” (2001); “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” (2002); and “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” (2003).

Covering the adventures of hobbit Bilbo Baggins and his nephew Frodo, the films take viewers deep into Middle-earth as humans, elves, hobbits and more battle the return of the Dark Lord Sauron as he attempts to rebuild his empire before Frodo and buddy Samwise Gamgee can destroy Sauron’s ring in the fires of Mount Doom.

Thanks to the 2160p resolution, high dynamic range, color enhancements and Dolby Atmos sound mixes, the results are breathtaking with numerous reasons to stop the films and enjoy their exquisite New Zealand landscapes, costuming and massive battle scenes.

An all-star cast brings the saga to life, including Ian McKellen as the wizard Gandalf; Elijah Wood as Frodo Baggins; Sean Astin as Samwise Gamgee; Orlando Bloom as Legolas; Martin Freeman and Ian Holm as Bilbo Baggins; Cate Blanchett as Lady Galadriel; Christopher Lee as the wizard Saruman; and Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn (the heir to Gondor), just to name a few.   

Suffice it to report, this is a set of films to embrace and pass on to generations.

Best extras: The film collection comes packaged in a gorgeous multi-brick-sized (7 inches tall by 11 inches wide), magnetically connected puzzle-box slipcase container that can be fully opened to display the film artwork collages almost 2 feet across or folded into a bulky container (7 inches tall by 6 inches wide).

Besides the discs, all housed in a cardboard slipcase and plastic clamshell, the package includes a 64-page, soft-cover mini-booklet (7 inches by 6 inches) focusing on costuming through sketches, photos and production notes of the main characters.

Also, owners get seven stylish trading-card-shaped art cards showcasing some of the key locations throughout Middle-earth including The Shire, Lake-Town, Erebor, Anduin, Rohan, Minas Tirith and Rivendell.

Most viewers will feel satisfied with the saturation of extras that first and foremost offer a total of 15 optional commentary tracks and a new bonus disc that includes a 27-minute-long rare Cannes presentation reel (teasing the incomplete films in May of 2001); and an over 90-minute, Zoom-style reunion with most of the cast and Mr. Jackson covering “The Lord of the Rings” film series and hosted by Stephen Colbert.

However, despite the innovative and attractive packaging, once again, and much to my chagrin, Warner Bros. has not put forth the one set “to rule them all” on the discs.

Hours of extras are missing that were found in the Blu-ray sets of “The Lord of the Rings” extended film trilogy from 2011 and “The Hobbit” extended film trilogy released in 2015.

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Columbia Classics Collection: Volume 2 (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, not rated to R, 815 minutes, 1.85:1 to 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $164.99) One of the oldest of Hollywood’s revered movie studios taps into its vast archive to deliver a select group of six films representing some of its finest work over its more than 80 years of production history.

Remastered from original camera negatives or digital intermediates to the 4K format, the set features:

• Otto Preminger’s 1959 black-and-white courtroom drama “Anatomy of a Murder” starring James Stewart and George C. Scott.

• Carol Reed’s multiple Academy Award-winning 1968 musical “Oliver” starring Oliver Reed and Jack Wild.

• Martin Scorsese’s 1976 seminal drama “Taxi Driver” starring Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster.

• Ivan Reitman’s 1981 screwball comedy “Stripes” with Bill Murray and Harold Ramis.

• Ang Lee’s 1995 multiple Academy Award-nominated period romantic comedy based on Jane Austen’s novel “Sense and Sensibility” starring Emma Thompson (Academy Award winner for Best Adapted Screenplay), Kate Winslet and Alan Rickman.

And, the weakest of the bunch:

• David Fincher’s 2010 biographical drama “The Social Network” starring Jessie Eisenberg as Facebook’s co-founder and resident megalomaniac Mark Zuckerberg.

Suffice it to report, the collection makes a great gift for any cinephile in the family.

Best extras: Each film has an abundance of featurettes and commentary tracks highlighted by a new 4K, 45-minute retrospective on “Stripes” starring Mr. Murray and Mr. Reitman; a 41-minute Tribeca Film Festival 40th anniversary session on “Taxi Driver” with key cast and Mr. Scorsese; a new 28-minute 4K, 25th anniversary reunion with cast and crew for “Sense and Sensibility”; and a new optional commentary track with film historian Foster Hirsch for “Anatomy of a Murder.”

And, just to show the breadth of Columbia‘s work, the studio tosses in a bonus Blu-ray disc offering more than three hours from its short films library.

The collection includes the Three Stooges 1936 classic “Disorder in the Court,” the 1955 cartoon “Stage Door Magoo” starring the voice of Jim Backus as Mr. Magoo and the 2017 toon “Puppy! A Hotel Transylvania Short” directed by Genndy Tartakovsky.

Viewers find all of the entertainment in a burgundy cardboard package (almost a foot long, 7 inches tall and 2.5 inches wide) that opens through a pair of winged panels outward to reveal three films encased on each panel and also showcases the familiar lady of Columbia Pictures holding her torch.

Behind the lady is a slot containing an over 80-glossy-page hardback book offering essays and images about the films as well as the restoration process.

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Mad Max Anthology (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, Rated PG-13 to R, 415 minutes, 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $89.99) — Filmmaker George Miller’s acclaimed post-apocalyptic universe highlighting the four punishing adventures of premiere survivor Max Rockatansky arrives on a four-disc UHD set perfect for movie-lovers looking for a jolt of high-octane, vehicular action.

Viewers can now appreciate the best available digital resolution for “Mad Max” (1979), “Mad Max The Road Warrior” (1981), “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome” (1985) and “Mad Max Fury Road” (2015).

Of course, Mel Gibson helped define his career as Max and starred in the first three films while Tom Hardy took over the lead in the fourth, arguably the most eye-popping of the bunch.

Most notable for cinephiles the new UHD presentations for “Mad Max The Road Warrior” and “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome” are derived from meticulous scans of the original camera negatives.

Best extras: Well, the good news is the films look great and maintain their grizzled visual style, always looking like a dust storm was kicked up in a home entertainment room, while the included digital codes offer an easy way to add the classics to a streaming library.

Unfortunately, all of the extras available on previous releases over the years are missing with the collection only offering extras on “The Road Warrior.”

Specifically, viewers get an optional commentary track with Mr. Miller and cinematographer Dean Semler, an introduction to the movie by venerable film historian Leonard Maltin and a new 50-minute documentary on the making of the film.

Audrey Hepburn: 7-Movie Collection (Paramount Home Entertainment, Rated G to PG, 940 minutes, 1.85:1 to 2.20:1 aspect ratio, $55.99) — Viewers can appreciate the life of Academy Award-winning actress, fashion icon and humanitarian Audrey Hepburn in this eight-disc Blu-ray set.

Highlights of the set include … let’s get serious, all of the works of this actress’ career are pretty much highlights.

Lucky gift receivers get the romantic comedy based on Truman Capote’s novella “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” with George Peppard (1961); the legendary musical adaptation of “Pygmalion,” “My Fair Lady” with Rex Harrison (1964); the musical romantic comedy “Funny Face” with Fred Astaire (1957); a Cinderella tale reimagined in “Sabrina” with Humphrey Bogart and William Holden (1954); another rom-com in “Paris When It Sizzles” reuniting her with Holden (1964); King Video’s monstrous adaptation of “War and Peace (1956); and, of course, her Academy Award-winning performance in “Roman Holiday” with Gregory Peck (1953).

Hepburn’s charm, infectious style and stage presence made her one of the most well-known actresses of the era, and the set delivers a high definition smorgasbord of nearly all of her best moments on screen.

Best extras: Paramount basically rereleases in a sturdy clamshell case all of the previous Blu-ray discs of these movies (including the two-disc “My Fair Lady” set) sans the debut of “Paris When It Sizzles” to the format.

That effort also equals an overly generous supply of previously released bonus content found on the discs.

Specifically, that’s hours and hours of features that range from an optional commentary track with producer Richard Shepherd on “Breakfast at Tiffany’s”; an hourlong documentary on the making of “My Fair Lady” with a focus on Hepburn and Holden during their Paramount years (30 minutes each); a remembrance of the actress from her son Sean (12 minutes); and multiple featurettes spread out across the discs covering her influence on fashion and style.

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, Rated G, 100 minutes, 1.85:1 aspect ratio, $41.99) — The 1971 musical fantasy that adapted Roald Dahl’s classic children’s novel to the big screen debuts in UHD to offer a magical evening of entertainment for the entire family.

Gene Wilder, in arguably the finest performance of his career, starred as the eccentric candymaking tycoon Willy Wonka.

When he allows five lucky children who find golden tickets  hidden within special Wonka Bars to visit his factory and learn some of its secrets, the wild adventure turns into one of the most fun and twisted series of morality lessons ever presented on screen.

Not only is the film remembered for Wilder’s performance, the Oompa Loompas and the hit song “The Candy Man,” but the eclectic group of children who included Charlie Bucket (Peter Ostrum), Veruca Salt (Julie Dawn Cole), Violet Beauregarde (Denise Nickerson), Mike Teevee (Paris Themmen) and Augustus Gloop (Michael Böllner).

The 4K, screen-filling presentation does not disappoint with a tasty collection of saturated colors especially present in Wonka’s wild realms stuffed with every sort of candy-fied hues.

Best extras: Viewers will find a complete set of goodies culled from the 2011, 40th anniversary, high definition release and found on the included Blu-ray version of the film.

They range from an optional commentary track with the Wonka kids (also on the 4K disc); a 30-minute production documentary with the director and most of the key cast and crew; and four karaoke-style singalongs.

Apocalypse Now: 40th Anniversary Steelbook Edition (Lionsgate Home Entertainment, Rated R, 196 minutes, 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $27.99) — One of the most revered war dramas in the history of cinema returns to the UHD format encased in illustrated steel as a Best Buy exclusive and sure to make a perfect gift for lovers of this classic film.

Cinema auteur Francis Ford Coppola gives viewers the expansive final cut of his Academy Award-winning movie from 1979 offering a smothering and explosive tale set during the Vietnam War.

Amid the violence and camaraderie of warfare, burned-out U.S. Army Capt. Benjamin Willard (Martin Sheen) is sent on a mission to terminate the life of rogue U.S. Army Special Forces Col. Walter E. Kurtz (Marlon Brando), stuck in the jungles of Cambodia and fighting his own vicious war with the enemy by using a fiercely loyal platoon of soldiers.

Epic scenes in the production (reference the helicopter attack set to Richard Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries”) are brought to eye-popping life, thanks to the UHD definition remaster from the original negative.

Equally impressive, the film offers a cavalcade of stars including Robert Duvall as Lt. Col. William Kilgore, Laurence Fishburne as Gunner’s Mate 3rd Class Tyrone Miller, Dennis Hopper as an American photojournalist, Harrison Ford as Col. G. Lucas and Scott Glenn as Capt. Richard M. Colby.

Best extras: The one piece of bonus content on either of the 4K or Blu-ray disc is an introduction to the film by Mr. Ford Coppola.

The extra is really the slipcover and metal case that features a fiery red-and-orange, hellish color scheme with new artwork from Ken Taylor.

The slipcover offers a close-up of Willard’s face with a silhouetted soldier in front of him.

Remove the cover to get on the front a profile of Willard smoking a cigarette while on the back a menacing face of Kurtz with a pair of soldiers silhouetted in the foreground.

The interior of the case offers a group of helicopters flying in the jungle and past the setting sun.

This latest release is certainly a worthy gift for any Steelbook collector in the family, although the lack of digital goodies (abundantly available on previous releases) is disappointing.

Note: Gift givers looking for other ideas to complement the “Apocalypse Now” bounty should consider a couple of other newly arrived war dramas presented in the UHD format.

First, the Mel Gibson-directed Hacksaw Ridge: Steelbook Edition (Lionsgate Home Entertainment, 139 minutes, $27.99) stars Andrew Garfield as World War II field medic and conscientious objector Desmond Doss who earned the Congressional Medal of Honor for single-handedly saving 75 men during the Allies’ attempts to secure Okinawa Island in the famous 1945 battle.

The metal case boasts new artwork from artist Krzysztof Domaradzki and includes the 4K and Blu-ray versions of the film in the two-disc set.

Next, the meticulously restored World War II action blockbuster from 1961 “The Guns of Navarone” (Sony Picture Home Entertainment, 161 minutes, $30.99) starred Gregory Peck, David Niven and Anthony Quinn as a specialized team of Allied soldiers on a dangerous to infiltrate a Nazi-occupied fortress and disable two long-range field guns to help rescue thousands of trapped British soldiers.

The two-disc set offers a 4K and Blu-ray disc and a bunch of extras including two optional commentary tracks and a look at the restoration process.

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The Ultimate Richard Pryor Collection: Uncensored (Time Life, not rated, 1,584 minutes, 1.33:1, 1.78:1 and 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $99.99) — One of the greatest comedians in the history of the galaxy gets celebrated through a 13-disc DVD set covering his theatrically released concerts and appearances on television shows.

For those uninitiated, Richard Pryor helped set the bar for dissecting social and cultural taboos as well as the complexity of race relations through his innovative style of raw and edgy humor.

The discs first include his four full-length filmed concerts — “Live & Smokin” (1971), “Live in Concert” (1979), “Live on the Sunset Strip” (1982) and “Here and Now” (1983) — and they pretty much offer a template for any stand-up comedian to succeed and provide more than enough testaments to his brilliance.

Next, viewers get “Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling,” a semi-autobiographical film covering many moments from the comedian’s life that were actually written, produced and directed by Pryor.

On the television front, let’s start with his 1977 NBC-TV special and the only four episodes in existence of the controversial “The Richard Pryor Show.” It featured Robin Williams, Sandra Bernhard and even a skit where Pryor played a bartender in the “Star Wars” cantina bar.

Also, the set contains five episodes of his second, ill-fated, TV series “Pryor’s Place.” The Saturday morning show ran for one season in 1984 and included famous guests such as Sammy Davis Jr., Willie Nelson and Lily Tomlin.

Additionally, and most fun for me, are seven of his appearances on talk shows hosted by Johnny Carson, Merv Griffin and Dick Cavett. These are pure gems and complete episodes to boot.

Finish off your immersion in the world of the comic-turned-legend with two documentaries “Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic” and “I am Richard Pryor” (2019).

Expect big, gut-busting laughs from the set tailored mainly for only the maturest of gift receivers.

Best extras: Spread out on the discs are current interviews with the likes of his wife Jennifer Lee Pryor, Mel Brooks, Whoopi Goldberg and Miss Tomlin as well as raw footage from his final stand-up appearances at the Comedy Store and footage from his first film “Uncle Tom’s Fairy Tales.”

Owners also get a slick 40-page, full-color booklet filled with collages of his life and words, from his scribbled notes for set lists to his arrest record and loaded with personal quotes from Pryor.

Of course, the only miscue from Time Life is making viewers watch all of the madness in a woefully antiquated DVD format and not at the very least in high definition.

Dune: Special Edition (Arrow Video, Rated PG-13, 137 minutes, 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $49.95) — Back in 1984, director David Lynch accepted the impossible task of bringing Frank Herbert’s seminal science-fiction opus to the big screen.

His smothering and murky screenplay, twinned with opulent visual effects and production design, debuts in the 4K format, meticulously remastered from the 35mm camera negative.

The dry adaptation took viewers to a universe mired by a cutthroat geopolitical climate ruled by the control of a hallucinogenic drug called Spice.

Paul Atreides (Kyle MacLachlan), heir to the House of Atreides, must battle rivals House of Harkonnen to become the “chosen” one and lead a group of warriors on the coveted desert spice planet Arakkis against the galactic emperor to free their world.

The film will probably be most remembered not as a “Star Wars” for adults but for its cavalcade of pop culture stars, including Patrick Stewart (“Star Trek”) as warrior Gurney Halleck; Brad Dourif (“Chucky”) as Piter De Vries, the Harkonnen Mentat, a human computer; Virginia Madsen (“Candyman”) as Princess Irulan; Max von Sydow (“Flash Gordon”) as Doctor Kynes; Kenneth McMillan (“Salem’s Lot”) as the disgusting Baron Vladimir Harkonnen; and Sting, the famed lead singer of The Police, as Baron Vladimir Harkonnen’s nephew Feyd-Rautha.

However, the clean, crisp and faithful visuals and colors will not disappoint and bundled with a vast collection of extras make the perfect gift for those fans of Mr. Lynch and his complex translation.

Best extras: Overwhelming would be an understatement as Arrow Video completely deconstructs the film: first with a pair of optional commentary tracks with film historian Paul M. Sammon and “The Projection Booth” podcaster Mike White, then followed up with a 40-minute, vintage, 2003 documentary on the production.

Also, on the 4K disc are featurettes on the special effects, costuming, miniature models as well as deleted scenes.

Next, go to a Blu-ray bonus disc to first watch a thoroughly entertaining, 22-minute look at the marketing of the “Dune” action figure and toy lines explored by toy expert Brian Stillman.

Also, viewers get current interviews with make-up artist Giannetto de Rossi, special make-up effects artist Christopher Tucker, production coordinator Golda Offenheim and actor Paul Smith (Baron Harkonnen’s older nephew Rabban).

The cardboard slipcase also contains a 60-page, color, bound, heavy paper stock book with five essays on the film (three new); definitions of key terminology in the “Dune” universe; and a double-sided, fold-out poster (16 inches by 20 inches) with new artwork from Daniel Taylor.

And, the plastic slipcase holding the discs also contains six, full-color, double-sided, postcard-sized reproductions of theater lobby cards.

A Clockwork Orange (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, Rated R, 138 minutes, 1.66:1 aspect ratio, $33.99) — Legendary director Stanley Kubrick brought Anthony Burgess 1962 dystopian crime novel to shocking life on the big screen back in 1971.

Now, even more visceral in a new release in the UHD format, the story finds Alex DeLarge (Malcolm McDowell in the role of a lifetime), leader of an ultra-brutal gang dubbed the “droogs,” paying for his crimes of torture and rape in one of the more unusual ways possible.

He agrees to become a subject of an experimental treatment to cure his ultra-violent ways. Treated like a lab rat, he’s exposed to a nonstop, multimedia sensory overload of horrors and violence all played out to the music of Beethoven.

With any thoughts of impurity now making him viciously ill, he is released to the world as a rehabilitated man but also, leaving him defenseless to his previous victims.

The 4K mastering stuns by the chance to admire the stark existence of a research facility against the wild colors of 1960s decor and the droogs’ bloody criminal acts in a world concocted by cinematographer John Alcott and Kubrick as they bend the rules in both composition and lighting.

Best extras: First watch the film in 4K with an optional commentary track with Mr. McDowell and filmmaker Nick Redman, then dive over to Blu-ray for bonus content culled from the 2011 DigiBook high definition release.

The best include three retrospectives on the film (more than 90 minutes in total) deconstructing the production and its legacy with help from filmmakers such as William Friedkin, Sydney Pollack and Steven Spielberg.

Unfortunately, missing are two meaty retrospective documentaries (almost four hours in total) covering Kubrick and Mr. McDowell, included in the 2011 release, that would have made this package the ultimate “A Clockwork Orange” release.

The Shawshank Redemption (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, Rated R, 142 minutes, 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $33.99) — Director Frank Darabont’s 1994 multiple Academy Award-nominated adaptation of a Stephen King novella makes its debut on UHD to offer a new generation of home theater audiences the chance to appreciate one of the best films in the history of cinema.

The prison drama centers around the woeful existence of mild-mannered Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins), a banker wrongly convicted of killing his wife and her lover and serving two life sentences in Shawshank State Prison.

He befriends Ellis Boyd “Red” Redding (Morgan Freeman) and forms a lifelong friendship beyond prison as each learns about life, survival in the harshest of environments and that dreams can actually come true.

The screen-filling presentation pays homage to the grizzled and often sterile source material, sometimes set awash in a bluish tint amid the shadowy existence of the trapped prisoners, but by far, it’s the best digital version of the movie to date.

Best extras: Found on the included Blu-ray disc are all of the goodies originally released on the 2008 DigiBook, high definition version of the film.

Don’t miss the optional commentary track with Mr. Darabont (his directorial debut by the way) and a vintage roundtable discussion with Mr. Darabont, Mr. Robbins and Mr. Freeman on a 2004 episode of the “Charlie Rose” talk show.

Inglourious Basterds (Universal Pictures Home Entertainment, Rated R, 153 minutes, 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $29.98) — Quentin Tarantino’s 2009 World War II revenge fantasy finally debuts on UHD for fans of the director and extreme war dramas.

With eight Academy Award nominations, the film covers the adventures of an American team of soldiers nicknamed “the Basterds.” Led by Lt. Aldo “the Apache” Raine (Brad Pitt), they stick it to the Third Reich while ultimately on a mission to take down Der Fuhrer.

Most notable is the Academy Award-winning performance of Christoph Waltz as a quirky, ruthless and sinister SS officer, Standartenführer Hans “The Jew Hunter” Landa. Mr. Waltz pretty much steals the show.

The 4K release takes full advantage of the format adding crisp detail and high dynamic range to showcase the period costuming, the production design and, of course, the stomach-churning violence.

Best extras: Universal ports almost all of the production featurettes from the 2009 Blu-ray release led by a 31-minute roundtable discussion with Mr. Tarantino and Mr. Pitt, moderated by film critic Elvis Mitchell.

Additionally, viewers get a new extra, an over hourlong chat with Mr. Tarantino from 2009 as a part of The New York Times’ “TimesTalks” series, moderated by journalist Lynn Hirschberg.

Star Trek: The Original Four Movie Collection (Paramount Pictures Home Entertainment, Rated PG, 585 minutes, 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $90.99) Paramount boldly takes the most beloved of USS Enterprise crews into UHD realms with the release of their first four films in this eight-disc set featuring 4K remastering of each from original film elements.

In a befuddling release for the studio, it offers the first four films — “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” (1979), “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan Director’s Cut” (1982), “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock” (1984) and “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home” (1986) — starring Capt. James T. Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy), Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy (DeForest Kelley), chief engineer Montgomery Scott (James Doohan), security officer Pavel Chekov (Walter Koenig), helmsman Hikaru Sulu (George Takei) and communications officer Lt. Nyota Uhura (Nichelle Nichols) but leaves out their final two films “The Final Frontier” and “The Undiscovered Country.”

No matter, each of the 4K discs offers the best available version of the films to ever be released and by far the gem of the lot is “The Wrath of Khan,” which has Capt. Kirk and the Enterprise crew face-off in a cat-and-mouse game with archenemy Khan Noonien Singh (Ricardo Montalban).

Obviously, fans of Gene Roddenberry’s universe will be smitten with a visually fresh look at these classic sci-fi films.

Best extras: Although each of the 4K discs offers optional commentary tracks (seven in total with the fourth film spotlighted by a track with Mr. Shatner and Nimoy, no less), the bulk of the goodies are found on the four Blu-ray disc versions of the films (also remastered).

The outstanding highlight among the hours of production featurettes is an encyclopedic “Library Computer” viewing mode for each film stuffed with pop-up facts on topics such as culture, life forms, science, people and ships.

Randolph Scott Western Collection (Mill Creek Entertainment, not rated, 968 minutes, 1.85:1, 2.39:1 aspect ratio, $75.99) — Although perhaps not as familiar as John Wayne or Clint Eastwood, Randolph Scott was one of the hardest-working and equally endearing leading men in Hollywood.

He gets celebrated in this Blu-ray collection of a dozen films sampling just some of his 60 performances as a quiet, weathered cowboy.

Specifically covering his Westerns for Columbia Pictures from the 1940s to 1960, the collection includes “The Desperados” (1943), “The Nevadan” (1950), “Santa Fe” (1951), “Man in the Saddle” (1952), “Hangman’s Knot” (1952), “The Stranger Wore a Gun” (1953), “A Lawless Street” (1955), “The Tall T” (1957), “Decision At Sundown” (1957), “Buchanan Rides Alone” (1958), “Ride Lonesome” (1959) and “Comanche Station” (1960).

Most notable from the films, besides the panoramic views of the Southwest, are the appearances of many Hollywood legends such as Glenn Ford, Angela Lansbury, Lee Marvin, Maureen O’Sullivan and Donna Reed.

Don’t expect any remastering here, but the visuals using technologies of the day such as Technicolor and CinemaScope hold up and deliver some colorful adventures in the Old West.

Best extras: Viewers get five optional commentary tracks from historians and critics for the films “The Desperados,” “The Tall T,” “Buchanan Rides Alone,” “Hangman’s Knot” and “The Stranger Wore a Gun” and an 11-minute brief overview of Scott’s work at Columbia.

Also, the package includes a 12-page, full-color booklet showcasing posters and a synopsis of each movie and some Scott trivia.

Stephen Sondheim dies at 91

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NEW YORK (AP) – Stephen Sondheim, the songwriter who reshaped the American musical theater in the second half of the 20th century with his intelligent, intricately rhymed lyrics, his use of evocative melodies and his willingness to tackle unusual subjects, has died. He was 91.

Sondheim’s death was announced by his Texas-based attorney, Rick Pappas, who told The New York Times the composer died Friday at his home in Roxbury, Connecticut. Pappas did not return calls and messages to The Associated Press.

Sondheim influenced several generations of theater songwriters, particularly with such landmark musicals as “Company,” “Follies” and “Sweeney Todd,” which are considered among his best work. His most famous ballad, “Send in the Clowns,” has been recorded hundreds of times, including by Frank Sinatra and Judy Collins.

The artist refused to repeat himself, finding inspiration for his shows in such diverse subjects as an Ingmar Bergman movie (“A Little Night Music”), the opening of Japan to the West (“Pacific Overtures”), French painter Georges Seurat (“Sunday in the Park With George”), Grimm’s fairy tales (“Into the Woods”) and even the killers of American presidents (“Assassins”), among others.

“The theater has lost one of its greatest geniuses and the world has lost one of its greatest and most original writers. Sadly, there is now a giant in the sky. But the brilliance of Stephen Sondheim will still be here as his legendary songs and shows will be performed for evermore,” producer Cameron Mackintosh wrote in tribute.

Six of Sondheim’s musicals won Tony Awards for best score, and he also received a Pulitzer Prize (“Sunday in the Park”), an Academy Award (for the song “Sooner or Later” from the film “Dick Tracy”), five Olivier Awards and the Presidential Medal of Honor. In 2008, he received a Tony Award for lifetime achievement.

Sondheim’s music and lyrics gave his shows a dark, dramatic edge, whereas before him, the dominant tone of musicals was frothy and comic. He was sometimes criticized as a composer of unhummable songs, a badge that didn’t bother Sondheim. Frank Sinatra, who had a hit with Sondheim’s “Send in the Clowns,” once complained: “He could make me a lot happier if he’d write more songs for saloon singers like me.”

To theater fans, Sondheim’s sophistication and brilliance made him an icon. A Broadway theater was named after him. A New York magazine cover asked “Is Sondheim God?” The Guardian newspaper once offered this question: “Is Stephen Sondheim the Shakespeare of musical theatre?”

A supreme wordsmith – and an avid player of word games – Sondheim’s joy of language shone through. “The opposite of left is right/The opposite of right is wrong/So anyone who’s left is wrong, right?” he wrote in “Anyone Can Whistle.” In “Company,” he penned the lines: “Good things get better/Bad gets worse/Wait – I think I meant that in reverse.”

He offered the three principles necessary for a songwriter in his first volume of collected lyrics – Content Dictates Form, Less Is More, and God Is in the Details. All these truisms, he wrote, were “in the service of Clarity, without which nothing else matters.” Together they led to stunning lines like: “It’s a very short road from the pinch and the punch to the paunch and the pouch and the pension.”

Taught by no less a genius than Oscar Hammerstein, Sondheim pushed the musical into a darker, richer and more intellectual place. “If you think of a theater lyric as a short story, as I do, then every line has the weight of a paragraph,” he wrote in his 2010 book, “Finishing the Hat,” the first volume of his collection of lyrics and comments.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

Pinterest Pledges $50 Million on Reforms to Resolve Discrimination Allegations

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Pinterest pledged $50 million to overhaul its corporate culture and promote diversity as part of an agreement to resolve allegations that it discriminated against women and people of color, according to court documents and statements from the plaintiffs and the company.

The settlement was announced on Wednesday by Seth Magaziner, the general treasurer of Rhode Island, who was acting on behalf of the Employees’ Retirement System of Rhode Island and other Pinterest shareholders that had sued the company, which is known for its colorful virtual pinboards.

The shareholders had accused Pinterest’s board of directors of failing to respond to a culture of discrimination and retaliation against women and people of color. By allowing the discrimination to continue, the shareholders argued, the board had failed to act in the best interests of stockholders.

The allegations came to light when two Black female members of Pinterest’s public policy team, Ifeoma Ozoma and Aerica Shimizu Banks, publicly criticized the company’s treatment of employees, according to court documents.

Under the settlement, an audit committee of the board will help oversee changes intended to create equal opportunities for employees. The changes require that a board member act as a co-sponsor with the chief executive on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, according to the plaintiff’s legal team.

The settlement also releases former employees from nondisclosure agreements and creates an external ombuds office for employees and external audits that review performance ratings, promotions and compensation across gender and racial categories.

The settlement was announced nearly a year after Pinterest agreed to pay $22.5 million to resolve a gender discrimination and retaliation lawsuit from Françoise Brougher, its former chief operating officer.

“We pushed for these sweeping reforms to support Pinterest’s employees with a fair and safe workplace, and to strengthen the company’s brand and performance by ensuring that the values of inclusiveness are made central to Pinterest’s identity,” Mr. Magaziner said in a statement.

Pinterest said in a statement on Wednesday that it had “reached a resolution with certain shareholders who raised concerns and filed derivative lawsuits concerning the allegations made last year about the company’s culture.”

“Since that time, we have been working hard to ensure that our culture reflects our goals and values and today’s resolution,” the company said.

Holiday shopping 2021: more in-person experiences, but prepare for shortages.

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Black Friday is an American import that has caught on in much of Europe, embraced by retailers and shoppers as an opening trumpet blast for the start of the holiday shopping season — even if Thanksgiving remains a distant country’s holiday.

But Black Friday takes shape in different forms. With toy stores as a focus, here are three snapshots of the state of Black Friday in Europe.

Early this week, Clara Pascual was preparing to pin a poster advertising a Black Friday sale onto the front door of her family-owned toy store in central Madrid.

Her store was empty of customers — which was no reason to worry, she said, because she expected most of her clientele to show up Friday and Saturday to take advantage of the 10 percent discount on toys purchased during her Black Friday event.

“For the past week or so, I think more people have been coming in to check that we were going to have a Black Friday special offer than to actually buy something,” said Ms. Pascual, whose store is called Hola Caracola, or Hello Snail.

For toy stores, Black Friday is a shift forward in their retail calendars, because the Spanish tradition is that children get their presents on Jan. 6, the feast of Epiphany, which celebrates how a star led the three kings to baby Jesus.

“We have already had to adapt to the fact that more Spanish families are gifting at Christmas than for the kings so that their children could enjoy their toys during a longer holiday spell,” Ms. Pascual said, “and now on top of that we know that many people will be buying their Christmas toys already on Black Friday — particularly this year as everybody has got worried about delivery problems.”

“Obviously Black Friday is a cultural import that has nothing to do with our own traditions and everything to do with globalization,” she said, “which is something that can you can welcome or not.”

Federico Corradini, the chief executive of XChannel, a marketing company that represents a dozen toy brands in Spain and Italy, said he expected their sales to triple this Black Friday compared with last year, buoyed by an increase in their ad spending.

“Most of our companies are placing a big bet on this Black Friday to sell as much as possible, also because they already know that they will have delivery troubles during the Christmas time,” he said.

In Italy, the appeal of serving customers in person.

Credit…Clara Vannucci for The New York Times

The Dreoni toy store has been a landmark in Florence, Italy, for 98 years, and it didn’t last that long without responding to new trends.

A few years ago, Italians started expecting big sales on a day called Black Friday, said Silvia Dreoni, a co-owner of the store and a member of the third generation to run it.

“We inevitably had to adapt,” she said. “We want to keep the pace with the times, and we embraced the Black Friday, like we did with Halloween.”

However, when translated to Italian the words suggested a collapse in the stock market. So the English term “Black Friday” stuck, marking its American roots.

Walking into Dreoni is magic for children and adults alike, with a ceiling painted to look like a blue sky crossed by puffy white clouds. A large puppet theater shows the Italian character of Pinocchio, the wooden puppet who dreams of becoming a real boy. The tale of Pinocchio was written by Carlo Collodi, who was born near the store.

About 10 years ago, Ms. Dreoni and her sister realized that their business needed a website, and their online store now showcases the 8,000 toys that they have on their shelves. But in-person sales provide more satisfaction, Ms. Dreoni said.

“Online sales are fine, but they are cold, no emotions,” she said. “Many people still like to touch a toy or have an expert explain it to them. It’s not like buying a pan or a pot.”

The surge in online purchases at this time of the year strains courier services across the country, making life difficult for smaller delivery companies.

Large national and international delivery companies have been swamped with online orders from Amazon and other e-commerce sites, said Marco Magli, owner of the ADL SPA Corriere Espresso, a local courier in Bologna. “Every day, we need to figure out who can help us deliver our goods in Milan or outside of the city” he said. “The market is totally saturated.”

“In the last couple of years, volumes of deliveries started going up already in November — whereas before it was only in early December” confirmed Massimo Pedretti, a union leader at SDA, a courier company owned by Italy’s postal service.

“It’s because of the Black Friday week,” he said.

In Germany, another holiday season can’t escape the pandemic.

Credit…Christof Stache/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Record numbers of new coronavirus cases are dampening German shoppers’ spirits in a year when many were looking forward to the chance to return to holiday markets and decorated shopping streets.

In Bavaria, the closure of many holiday markets to curb the virus’s spread has turned out to be good for business atKunst und Spiel, or Art and Play, a store that specializes in German-made wooden toys and games.

“Our customers are happy that we are open,” said Florian Bartsch, who runs the store.

But given the current rate of infection, only 50 people are allowed at a time in the downtown Munich store, he added. And limited supplies are hindering sales. “Wooden toys are popular this year, although we are having trouble with deliveries,” Mr. Bartsch said. “All of the wholesalers are buying them up.”

Supplies of some locally sourced toys are still feeling the effects of the previous lockdowns, he said, including some items produced at a workshop for the handicapped in Germany.

“They were forced to close at the height of the pandemic last year and only recently got back to full production,” he said. “They are backed up by at least nine months.”

Fears that the shipping delays will make it harder to find last-minute gifts could drive up sales during Black Friday promotions by 27 percent over last year, the German retail association H.D.E. said this week.

At the start of November, the retail association was predicting a sales increase of 2 percent increase for the last two months of the year based on strong consumer sentiment heading into the holiday season. But the past two weeks have seen the country break one record after another in numbers of new infections, forcing authorities to close restaurants, bars and Christmas markets in the country’s eastern and southern states.

At Kunst und Spiel, Mr. Bartsch said that sales during the last three months of the year typically account for 70 percent of his annual business. After the loss he incurred during the lockdown in 2020, he is hoping he will be able to stay open, even if it means his staff has the added job of ensuring shoppers are vaccinated, masked and no more than 50 at a time.

“If our sales remain as they are so far, I will be happy,” he said.

WHO to debate dangerous South Africa coronavirus variant with ‘many mutations’

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The World Health Organization will meet Friday to discuss what an alarming coronavirus variant with a “large number of mutations” could mean for COVID-19 vaccines and treatments as European countries started to ban flights from South Africa and surrounding nations.

The variant known as B.1.1.529 was detected in small numbers in Johannesburg, South Africa, and nearby nations, but the globe has been burned by variants before, notably delta, and cannot afford a setback in the pandemic fight.

“We don’t know very much about this yet. What we do know is that this variant has a large number of mutations. And the concern is that when you have so many mutations, it can have an impact on how the virus behaves,” Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead for COVID-19, said in a social media Q&A.

Professor Tulio de Oliveira, the director of the Center for Epidemic Response and Innovation in Africa, said in a news briefing Thursday the variant has “many more mutations than we have expected,” including more than 30 in the spike protein the virus uses to hack into human cells.

He said it is “spreading very fast and, we expect to see pressure in the health system in the next few days and weeks.”

WHO will decide if the mutations amount to a variant of interest or concern and possibly assign it a Greek name.

Other countries said they wouldn’t take any chances in the meantime.

The European Commission “will propose, in close coordination with member states, to activate the emergency brake to stop air travel from the southern African region due to the variant of concern B.1.1.529,” Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted Friday.

Europe is struggling with another wave of the virus and protests over economic restrictions.

British Health Secretary Sajid Javid said flights from six African countries — South Africa, Lesotho, Botswana, Namibia, Eswatini and Zimbabwe — would be temporarily banned as of noon Friday, and returning U.K. travelers must quarantine.

South Africa’s government criticized the decision on Friday.

“The UK’s decision to temporarily ban South Africans from entering the UK seems to have been rushed as even the World Health Organization is yet to advise on the next steps,” the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation said.

Mr. Javid recognized that little is known about the variant but said they couldn’t risk anything.

“More data is needed, but we’re taking precautions now,” he tweeted.

An aggressive variant known as “beta” emerged in South Africa earlier in the pandemic and spread worldwide. Then, the delta variant first detected in India swept around the world and produced a major setback in the U.S. fight against the virus in late summer.

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

Don We Now Our Menorah Tea Towels

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Bed Bath & Beyond conceded that its collection of items targeted to different cultural groups sometimes missed the mark. “In our effort to provide a wide selection of Hanukkah items, some were included that shouldn’t have been,” the company said in an email. “As soon as our team was alerted, the items were removed.”

Michaels, which had also initially stocked the Hanukkah-turned-Passover pillow online, said it was open to hearing customer responses to its holiday inventory.

“While the overall feedback to our expanded, inclusive product lines has been positive, we don’t always get it right,” a spokesperson for the company said in an email.

This year, Michaels changed its protocols for approving holiday merchandise, ensuring that its employee resource groups, which have representatives from different cultures, have more input into products sold online, a process that they’ve found helpful when stocking up for Pride celebrations. Lowe’s and TJX, which owns the T.J. Maxx and Marshall’s brands, both said that their holiday wares were reviewed internally to confirm that cultural iconography was used appropriately.

But some shoppers are fed up: “There’s a Santa on Wayfair wearing a tallit,” Ms. Herman said, referring to a Jewish prayer shawl. “Tallits are kind of a big deal, it means you went through a bar mitzvah. Is St. Nicholas now a Jew, like, welcome to Jewish adulthood? ”

Credit…Bed Bath & Beyond

More than 150 years ago, American Jews faced the opposite problem. Families settling in U.S. cities found that December was filled with cheer for Christian families — caroling, decorations, presents — while Jewish children were left without much levity to distract from the winter gloom. One Cincinnati rabbi happened across a neighborhood Christmas celebration and realized that Hanukkah, a holiday without much religious significance, could benefit from festive traditions: songs, Maccabee costumes, gifts (the children got oranges, a rarity in the midst of a Midwestern winter).

The Holiday Shopping Season Is Here, but Is It Back?

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The pandemic is not over but with the help of vaccinations and Covid-19 safety precautions, Santa Claus is feeling much better about coming to town this year.

Stephen Arnold, president of the International Brotherhood of Real Bearded Santas, a trade group with more than 1,800 members, appeared at only a single tree lighting event last year. It was a frightening time, he said, particularly for a group of elderly men who are often overweight and have diabetes.

But this season, Mr. Arnold said that all five of his tree lighting ceremonies are back, including a splashy event that he loves at Graceland, Elvis Presley’s estate in Mr. Arnold’s hometown, Memphis. He plans to participate in more than 200 appearances, on par with his prepandemic schedule in 2019. At times, he may perform from inside a life-size snow globe like last year, and a sizable chunk of his events will be held virtually, but it’s a world apart from 2020.

“I think almost all of our Santas intend to work a great deal more than they did last year, and a much higher percentage, probably 65 to 70 percent of us, will return to what we consider some kind of normal schedule,” Mr. Arnold, 71, said. “I’m trying to be prepared for a season of relatively close contact.”

And so it goes as the United States enters a holiday shopping season that is much more physically present than 2020, but not quite as carefree as it was prepandemic. People are more comfortable shopping at stores, but the number who return will likely vary by geography, and the employees will typically be wearing masks.

The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade was massively expanded, with more floats and a longer route, though children under 12 were not allowed to participate in the parade itself. Big chains will offer certain festivities, like Champagne bars, that were missing last year. Gift ideas and decorations will feature more prominently in stores as retailers anticipate more people browsing and planning bigger gatherings.

“There’s a lot of pent-up energy to do things,” said Marie Driscoll, managing director of luxury and fashion at Coresight Research, an advisory and research firm. “Everything old is new again.”

But hallmarks of a changed season remain. Many stores closed on Thanksgiving and holiday hours at certain malls and chains will be shortened, in part because of a national labor shortage. And many people are bracing for a dearth of products like popular toys as “supply chain issues” becomes the refrain of 2021. There are also those customers who will stay away from stores, based on new habits adopted during the pandemic or ongoing concerns about the virus, and opt to shop online or using curbside pickups.

Ms. Driscoll said that signs of precautions would likely be visible throughout stores. “Retailers are going out of their way to make everybody feel comfortable, so at your own discretion you’re wearing a mask, there will be cleansers everywhere, there are options for self-checkout to not necessarily have to queue up and wait in lines,” she said.

The retail industry is still recovering from a plummet in store shoppers last year. In November and December 2020, foot traffic to department stores plunged more than 30 percent from the prior year, according to data from Vince Tibone, a senior analyst at Green Street, a real estate analytics firm. That picture seems to be improving, though, with department store foot traffic down 9 percent in October compared with October 2019, the data showed.

Jeff Gennette, Macy’s chief executive, said in a recent interview that foot traffic at stores had recovered significantly from 2020 but remained down about 19 percent from 2019. The decline has been “stubborn,” he said, adding that the retailer expected it to improve in 2022.

Tom Nolan, chief executive of Kendra Scott, a fashion jewelry business with 119 locations, said that in-store visits varied by region.

“In the Northeast and West Coast, the numbers aren’t what they have been in Texas and the Southeast,” he said in an interview. While the chain’s sales were robust compared with 2019 or 2020, he noted that it was a boost for business when customers came in to browse, especially with family and friends.

People are much more likely to make purchases when they’re at a store than while browsing the store’s website, said Meredith Darnall, senior vice president in the retail division of Brookfield Properties, which oversees more than 130 malls. “The ability to touch and see and talk to somebody about the product is real. They also have add-on sales — you come in for the T-shirt, you’re likely to buy the denim.” Adding to the appeal of in-store shopping for retailers, she said, is the fact that return rates are much higher for e-commerce purchases, especially in apparel and shoes.

Plenty of consumers seem eager to shop in person this year. The NPD Group recently surveyed more than 1,000 people about holiday traditions that they missed most in 2020 and hoped to return to this year. About 36 percent said they missed browsing retail stores, while 30 percent said they looked forward to returning to shopping in malls and the “Thanksgiving and Black Friday frenzy.”

The experience of shopping was drastically transformed last year as many people avoided lingering in stores and were discouraged from touching and testing products. Fitting rooms were closed or limited in many places. Makeup counters were not offering makeovers or samples of lipstick or perfume. Plastic partitions, hand sanitizer and reminders to socially distance peppered the landscape. Shopper events were downsized or canceled.

This week, Saks Fifth Avenue unveiled its holiday window display and 10-story-tall light show at its New York flagship store. The retailer, which took a pause from its annual tradition of shutting down Fifth Avenue for a musical performance last year, returned to it this year with a performance by the Young People’s Chorus of New York City and an appearance from Michelle Obama. About 22 Nordstrom stores will have “immersive” photo booths.

At the flagship Bloomingdale’s on 59th Street, the store is offering fewer events than the 400-plus it held in 2019, but many more than 2020, when its limited activities were held outdoors. There will be more food and drink for shoppers this season, including Champagne and cups of espresso, though they are being handled more carefully than in years past. The store hosted a performance by Bebe Rexha when it unveiled its holiday windows this month, but kept it to roughly 15 minutes and carefully managed capacity and spacing.

“If you would have talked to me in 2019, we would have had elaborate spreads with caterers coming in and passed hors d’oeuvres and Champagne flowing,” said Frank Berman, Bloomingdale’s chief marketing officer. Now, the food is more likely to be prepackaged, and events like cooking demonstrations have been smaller.

Still, he said, the retailer has been seeing a recent uptick in tourists and a growing willingness from shoppers to spend time wandering the store.

“As it relates to Covid, they’re feeling safer, and you’re seeing more of that inspirational shopping, people going to make a day of it in our store,” Mr. Berman said. “They’re moving through the store and it’s not about, ‘I need to get this item and get out.’”

There are also significant shifts in what people are buying compared to last year. Dressy clothing and luggage are popular again as people have resumed traveling and socializing. And the boom in pet adoptions has led to an explosion in clothing for dogs, which are welcome in the store, Mr. Berman said.

The imprint of technology on physical retail has never been starker. Bloomingdale’s is still offering dozens of virtual events in addition to in-store activities. Shoppers now expect the ability to see whether products are in stock before they head to stores and for associates to help mail them, free of charge, when they’re not available, Ms. Driscoll of Coresight said.

Nordstrom is among retailers using space at the front of its stores for shelves dedicated to online pickup, Ms. Darnall of Brookfield Properties said. Curbside pickup remains popular at malls and other big box stores.

As for Santa Claus, Mr. Arnold is busier than ever as virtual visits add to his in-person gigs. Some parents prefer them after last year because the experience can be more magical once Santa is prepped by parents.

“You have so much information, you become so real and have a real conversation,” he said. “Then you stop talking and solicit things from them, maybe about elves or reindeer or Mrs. Claus and what she bakes in the kitchen. Once in a while you get a hard question like, ‘Can you bring back Grandpa?’ and you try to wiggle your way out of that one.”

Still, it is a rebuilding year.

Mr. Arnold’s group, which had more than 2,000 members last year, shrank after many performers who could not or did not want to work in 2020 failed to renew their memberships. Mr. Arnold is confident in a robust return next year by the time of the International Santa Celebration event in Atlanta in April, which had been delayed by the pandemic.

“You’re going to see the majority of Santas are going to feel like they’re returning to relatively normal conditions,” he said, adding that he was prepared with his vaccine and a booster. “And most of us who are smart enough will practice safety measures.”

A Holiday Gift Guide to Beat Inflation

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If groceries, gas or automobiles were any part of your budget this year, inflation has hit you hard. Now perhaps you want to keep the gift budget in check. Then again, maybe you haven’t seen your relatives in a long while, and you’d rather not be anything less than generous.

So here’s a challenge — a quest, even. Figure out a way to surprise and delight your nearest and dearest with presents that cost no more than they would have 24 months ago. This isn’t just possible; it can be rewarding for giver and receiver alike.

I found a few fun gifts that actually cost less than they did two years ago. Others that you give now can increase in value over the years. And then there’s the time you can offer up to those who crave more of yours — or relief for themselves.

“The most radical kind of gift is when you’re taking something away,” said Eve Rodsky, author of “Fair Play,” a book about couples, time, tasks, and the attendant conflict and resolution “Obligations. The need to cook dinner. The requirement to commute somewhere.” (Or, in her family, make an arduous journey to a renderer of animal fat.)

So once the splayed bird carcass heads into the stockpot, you’ve eaten the French silk pie with your bare hands and you stare down a gift-buying season of soaring prices, consider the gifts of tech, travel and time.

And schmaltz. Literally.

The few possibilities for paying less for good things are hiding in plain sight, just under the painful headlines about rising inflation.

That 6.2 percent figure from earlier this month was the rise in the Consumer Price Index over the 12 months through October, the biggest jump in 31 years. Bad news, for sure.

But dig a bit into the fact sheets that the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes and you’ll find some unqualified good news. The bureau, which gathers that data for the C.P.I., reports that prices in the “telephone, hardware, calculators and other consumer information items” category have fallen 25.7 percent in two years.

A popular gift item within that category is smartphones. The Bureau of Labor Statistics began breaking out prices there in December 2019. In the months since then, prices have fallen a whopping 29.1 percent.

So maybe this holiday season is the time to forcibly upgrade the family Luddite. Or maybe it’s time to give in and buy a first phone for a child. (If so, consult our Wirecutter guide to the category, and do consider a dumbphone in lieu of a smart one.)

If someone in your circle loves to travel and is sick of being stuck at home, there is welcome news here, too. The C.P.I. includes an airline fares category, and prices have fallen 23.7 percent in the past two years.

Where might you might send (or take) someone? Consider the research firm STR’s data. I asked about a selection of popular destinations where average daily room rates are down a double-digit percentage in the past two years. It’s a decent-size list of appealing cities that includes New York, Washington, Chicago, San Francisco and Seattle.

The travel app Hopper offers promising airfare intelligence. Highlights include a 16 percent drop in prices to and from the New York and Newark airports in two years. Flights in and out of the three Washington-area airports are down 10 percent.

If you’re thinking about flights, though, it’s worth pointing out that there was a spike in prices in the spring, which has since receded. You may want to act fast, now that booster shots of confidence are available to all.

Some gifts have the potential to rise in value — and not just pristine Barbies that must stay in the box or trading cards whose worth falls with every wrinkle.

Over the long term, the stock market tends to rise. Money in an index fund is almost foolproof, as long as you leave it there for a few decades. Investing in individual companies is more risky, but even if the share you give falls, a younger recipient may learn valuable lessons anyway.

Less immediately satisfying than the alternatives might be a contribution to 529 college savings plan, but it is no less valuable. I get it — the gift of a daylong adventure with a 6-year-old niece or teenage grandson can make lasting memories. But imagine the gratitude that will result if the $100 you put into the pot each year means that a 22-year-old will have those first student loan payments covered upon graduation.

That’s not to say you shouldn’t give your time, perhaps the most precious resource you have.

If you’re working from home and so haven’t been commuting, you may have more of it on your hands — assuming you’re not among the workers handing your would-be travel time over to your employer. But even if you are, there are probably people on your list who would value your hours even more than you do.

This sort of thing can be an unexpected delight. Tim Kasser, an emeritus professor of psychology at Knox College and the author of the classic money-and-feelings book “The High Price of Materialism,” had elaborate time-couponing rituals with his wife and two sons. A particularly excellent one was the “Drop everything and play with me right now even if you happen to be working” coupon that his sons could redeem.

The gift of time comes in many forms. One of his sons, Dustin, a picky eater, gave out an “I’ll try four new foods” coupon. Mr. Kasser cashed it in when serving up watermelon juice and a chickpea dish — meaning he didn’t have to spend time making a second meal if Dustin approved of the novel cuisine.

Mr. Kasser did the same sort of thing for his wife. One year, he took over one of her least-liked chores: washing out the reusable plastic bags. More than a decade later, he’s still at it.

To Ms. Rodsky — whose next book, “Find Your Unicorn Space,” is about the quest for uninterrupted time for creative and other happiness-producing pursuits — the plastic-bag gesture is exemplary on at least three levels.

The first is that it’s a prime example of taking as giving. Second, the best thing to take away is often a task that delivers neither meaning nor happiness to the person who currently does it. (You should know what that is by now for your spouse. If you don’t, ask.)

Finally, it wasn’t a one-off thing — Mr. Kasser picked up the chore for the long haul. Ms. Rodsky said her husband had given her a similar gift by eliminating paperwork for her, filling out dozens of forms each year for their three children. She didn’t gloat about his labors on this front in our conversation, but she came close.

Ms. Rodsky has another idea for a gift her husband could give someone he loves. She mused about her mother-in-law’s kugel, a dish whose preparation requires her to commute an hour each way in Los Angeles traffic for the special fat that the recipe requires. It is rendered just so by a particular butcher, such that Ms. Rodsky’s mother-in-law swears by his schmaltz.

Does Ms. Rodsky’s husband have more time on his hands than his mother? No. But does Ms. Rodsky suspect that her mother-in-law would appreciate her son’s stepping up to procure the precious fat — a task that they refer to as the “lard run”? You bet.

As many of us tentatively get together again this holiday season, consider all the ways you can give. Maybe the best gift will be a little schmaltz.

Survivor found in coal mine accident in Russia’s Siberia

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MOSCOW (AP) — Rescuers have found a survivor in a Siberian coal mine where dozens of miners are presumed dead after a devastating methane explosion, a top local official announced Friday.

Sergei Tsivilyov, governor of the Kemerovo region where the mine is located, said on the messaging app Telegram that the survivor was found in the Listvyazhnaya mine in southwestern Siberia, and “he is being taken to the hospital.”

Acting Emergency Minister Alexander Chupriyan said the man found in the mine was a rescuer who had been presumed dead.

The authorities had confirmed 14 fatalities on Thursday — 11 miners were found dead and three rescuers died later while searching for others who were trapped at a remote section of the mine. Six more bodies were recovered on Friday morning, and 31 people remain missing.

Gov. Tsivilyov said finding other survivors at this point was highly unlikely.

Hours after a methane gas explosion and fire filled the mine with toxic fumes on Thursday, rescuers were forced to halt the search because of a buildup of methane and carbon monoxide gas from the fire. A total of 239 people were rescued from the mine; 63 of them, as of Friday morning, have sought medical assistance, according to Kemerovo officials.

The state Tass and RIA-Novosti news agencies on Thursday had cited emergency officials as saying that there was no chance of finding any more survivors, and put the death toll at 52 on Thursday evening. Rescuing a survivor on Friday morning brings that down to 51.

It appears to be the deadliest mine accident in Russia since 2010, when two methane explosions and a fire killed 91 people at the Raspadskaya mine in the same Kemerovo region.

In 2016, 36 miners were killed in a series of methane explosions in a coal mine in Russia’s far north. In the wake of the incident, authorities analyzed the safety of the country’s 58 coal mines and declared 20 of them, or 34%, potentially unsafe.

Regional officials declared three days of mourning. Russia’s Investigative Committee has launched a criminal probe into the fire over violations of safety regulations that led to deaths. It said the mine director and two senior managers were detained.

One more criminal probe was launched Friday into the alleged negligence of state officials that inspected the mine earlier this month.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

World takes action as new coronavirus variant emerges in southern Africa

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BRUSSELS (AP) — A slew of nations moved to stop air travel from southern Africa on Friday, and stocks plunged in Asia and Europe in reaction to news of a new, potentially more transmissible COVID-19 variant.

“The last thing we need is to bring in a new variant that will cause even more problems,” said German Health Minister Jens Spahn, amid a massive spike in cases in the 27-nation European Union.

Within a few days of the discovery of the new variant, it has already impacted on a jittery society that is sensitive to bad COVID-19 news, with deaths around the globe standing at well over 5 million.

There are fears that the new variant could be even more contagious than the current predominant one and could bypass the effectiveness of the vaccination campaigns.

“Early indications show this variant may be more transmissable than the delta variant and current vaccines may be less effective against it,” British Health Secretary Sajid Javid told lawmakers. “We must move quickly and at the earliest possible moment,” he said.

Israel, one of the world’s most vaccinated countries, announced Friday that it has detected the country’s first case of the new variant in a traveler who returned from Malawi. The traveler and two other suspected cases have been placed in isolation. It said all three are vaccinated but that it is currently looking into their exact vaccination status.

The new variant immediately infected stock markets around the world. Major indexes fell in Europe and Asia and Dow Jones futures dipped 800 points ahead of the market opening in the U.S.

“Investors are likely to shoot first and ask questions later until more is known,” said Jeffrey Halley of foreign exchange broker Oanda.

Oil prices plunged, with U.S. crude off 6.7% at $73.22 per barrel and the international Brent benchmark off 5.6% at $77.64, both unusually large moves for a single day. The pandemic caused oil prices to plunge during the initial outbreak of the pandemic in 2020 because travel restrictions reduced demand for fuel.

Airlines shares were hammered, with Lufthansa off 12.4%, IAG, parent of British Airways and Iberia, off 14.4%, Air France-KLM down 8.9% and easyJet falling 10.9%

The World Health Organization cautioned not to jump to conclusions too fast.

Speaking before the EU announcement, Dr. Michael Ryan, the head of emergencies at the WHO said that “it’s really important that there are no knee-jerk responses.”

“We’ve seen in the past, the minute there’s any kind of mention of any kind of variation and everyone is closing borders and restricting travel. It’s really important that we remain open, and stay focused,” Ryan said.

It quickly fell on deaf ears.

The U.K. announced that it was banning flights from South Africa and five other southern African countries effective at noon on Friday, and that anyone who had recently arrived from those countries would be asked to take a coronavirus test.

Germany said its flight ban could be enacted as soon as Friday night. Spahn said airlines coming back from South Africa will only be able to transport German citizens home, and travelers will need to go into quarantine for 14 days whether they are vaccinated or not.

Germany has seen new record daily case numbers in recent days and passed the mark of 100,000 deaths from COVID-19 on Thursday.

Italy’s health ministry also announced measures to ban entry into Italy of anyone who has been in seven southern African nations — South Africa, Lesotho, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Namibia and Eswatini — in the past 14 days due to the new variant. The Netherlands is planning similar measures.

The Japanese government announced that From Friday, Japanese nationals traveling from Eswatini, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Botswana, South Africa and Lesotho will have to quarantine at government-dedicated accommodation for 10 days and do a COVID test on Day 3, Day 6 and Day 10. Japan has not yet opened up to foreign nationals.

The coronavirus evolves as it spreads and many new variants, including those with worrying mutations, often just die out. Scientists monitor for possible changes that could be more transmissible or deadly, but sorting out whether new variants will have a public health impact can take time.

Currently identified as B.1.1.529, the new variant has also been found in Botswana and Hong Kong in travelers from South Africa, he said.

The WHO’s technical working group is to meet Friday to assess the new variant and may decide whether to give it a name from the Greek alphabet. It says coronavirus infections jumped 11% in Europe in the past week, the only region in the world where COVID-19 continues to rise. The WHO’s Europe director, Dr. Hans Kluge, warned that without urgent measures, the continent could see another 700,000 deaths by the spring.

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Lorne Cook in Brussels, Colleen Barry in Milan, Pan Pylas in London, Jamey Keaten in Geneva, Mike Corder in The Hague, Dave McHugh and Frank Jordans in Berlin contributed.

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

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