New and noteworthy experiences among DVDs, video games, gadgets and the Web.
Animals in uproar in kid-friendly film "Furry Vengeance."

New and noteworthy experiences among DVDs, video games, gadgets and the Web.
DVD
Nature strikes back "Furry Vengeance" is the kind of kid-friendly comedy that finds its delights in the varying degrees of slapsticky torture inflicted on Dan Sanders (Brendan Fraser), a well-intentioned real estate developer who, at the behest of his maniacal boss (Ken Jeong), is razing acres of forest to make room for an allegedly environmentally friendly, single-family subdivision called Rocky Springs. Of course, the cuddly woodland creatures that live in that forest aren't exactly in favor of the proposal. So they form a preservation posse and pool their resources -- acorns, boulders, a surprising deftness for hot-wiring cars -- to unleash all manner of Animal Planet fury on Dan. The DVD and Blu-ray (Summit, $23-$41), out Tuesday, include deleted scenes, commentary and featurettes.
WASHINGTON POST
Also out Tuesday: "Cemetery Junction," "The City of Your Final Destination," "Cougar Town" (Season 1), "Dexter" (Season 3), "Friday Night Lights" (Season 4), "The Good, the Bad, the Weird ," "Keeping Up With the Kardashians" (Season 3), "The Last Song," "The Lost Skeleton Returns Again," "One Tree Hill" (Season 7), "Rocky & Bullwinkle & Friends" (Season 4), "Temple Grandin," "Ugly Betty" (Season 4), and Blu-rays of "Black Orpheus," "Hamlet" and "Nanny McPhee."
GAME
Snoopy vs. Red Baron Fans of the "Peanuts" comic strip should find nothing surprising about "Snoopy Flying Ace" ($10 download for Xbox 360; rated Everyone 10+ for violence), which finds Snoopy living out his dream as a World War I flying ace in pursuit of the devious Red Baron. What might be surprising is just how deep the single-player flying campaign goes. "Ace's" compromise between arcade- and simulation-flavored controls feels perfectly right -- not so loose as to make flying the planes a mindless cakewalk, but neither stiff nor needlessly complicated enough to keep casual dogfighting game fans from enjoying themselves just as much. Nobody dies here -- pilots always parachute to safety before their planes crash. The variety and ease of play also translate nicely to the online multiplayer arena (16 players). It all adds up to perhaps the best console gaming value $10 can buy this summer.
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WEB
Edit videos right online The Internet has made sharing videos easier than ever. There are times, however, when raw video clips just aren't enough. For a long time, editing meant using a desktop program, but with JayCut (www.jaycut.com), you can edit your videos right in your Web browser. It lets you upload video clips, pictures and audio tracks from your hard drive. JayCut's free service offers 2 gigabytes of storage, plenty for casual use (with monthly pricing for heavy users). JayCut's drag-and-drop interface is intuitive and easy to use. Once you've finished editing, you can choose to export your movie directly to YouTube, format it for mobile devices such as the iPhone, or stream it to your blog. JayCut works best on computers with high-speed broadband access, and the newer your hardware, the better. While desktop video programs offer more muscular editing options, JayCut's tools are more than enough for adding a bit of polish to your videos.
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