For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
Neil Young: Heart of Gold (Paramount)
Bonuses are almost superfluous for a film like this; the original piece is so special that to surround it with extras only distracts attention from the reason we're here, which is to see Neil Young and band performing Prairie Wind in its entirety, followed by an abbreviated best-of set list. What could have been a drag (static camera, static performer) is an utter delight. The main attraction on the second disc should have been the making-of doc, tracking the band's rehearsals through opening night a week later; it's fly-on-the-wall stuff, except that director Jonathan Demme talks over the damned thing and drowns out Young's instructions, not to mention the rough-take performances. Also here: Young on Johnny Cash's 1971 TV show and other space fillers you'll never get to, since the concert on Disc One is forever Young. -- Robert Wilonsky
Dave Chappelle's Block Party (Universal)
Dave Chappelle crammed a full celebrity life cycle into two years, going from unknown to superstar to freaked-out failure in less time than it takes to make a movie. Which explains why this concert film, put together in Brooklyn while Chappelle was perhaps the hippest man in America, is such a great party: It captures the comedian at his momentary peak. But don't come expecting Chappelle's sharp-tongued rantings; he has the good sense to stand back and let the musicians take the spotlight. From Kanye West to Erykah Badu, Chappelle crowds the stage with the type of nonthreatening black artists that make white people say, "I don't usually like rap, but ..." The DVD's extended performances are great, and the making-of doc is fine -- but who wants to watch the making of a party? -- Jordan Harper