A blogger steals someone else's life story and calls it her own.
How William Orr's quest for better, cheaper gas became a crime.
I worked at Kmart with John McCain's director of strategy.
Ellie Parker (Strand)
This extremely raw portrait of an actress trying -- and failing -- to make it in Hollywood showcases Naomi Watts in a wrenching and sympathetic performance. Writer-director Scott Coffey shot the movie over nearly six years, beginning in 1999, before Watts was a household name. Though they filmed only between other projects, Ellie maintains its claustrophobic continuity. The story is simple: Ellie suffers through countless auditions, getting her heart ripped open and never getting called back. Her boyfriend's a jerk, and her best friend routinely undermines her. Among the bonus features, a behind-the-scenes bit offers a fun glimpse of co-star Chevy Chase at work. -- Melissa Levine
The Laurel and Hardy Collection (Fox)
This three-disc set features Great Guns (1941), Jitterbug ('43), and The Big Noise ('44) -- in other words, Laurel and Hardy's post-RKO features, made just about the time the boys called it quits. You can see the look of resignation in their eyes and hear the give-up in their voices; they deliver the jokes as though they were eulogies. Just as Harpo Marx morphed from manic imp to sad clown in the 1940s, Laurel and Hardy devolved into a freakishly oddball odd couple defined only by their sizes. The saddest reminder of all comes in the bland, ancient doc "The Revenge of the Sons of the Desert," about a group of middle-aged men who worship the pair's 1933 classic Sons of the Desert, from which we're treated to quick glimpses that surpass the entirety of the three movies contained here. -- Robert Wilonsky
Fun with Dick and Jane (Sony)
This remake of the George Segal-Jane Fonda, er, classic arrived in theaters at Christmastime smelling of a regifted moldy oldie, with Jim Carrey once more doing his crazy-man dance in the suburbs. But Dick and Jane, a satire sold too middlebrow to matter, deserves a second look (the deleted scenes, though, not even a first): With the Enron trials in full swing, this retrofitted comedy about an emasculated exec husband (Carrey) and outta-work wife (Tea Leoni) breaking the law to make ends meet bears the bitter taste of real-life drama; the scene in the backyard hole -- the pool they could no longer afford to finish -- belongs in Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, which would make a swell chaser to this grim slapstick gem. -- Wilonsky