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It’s better without the 3-D Imax

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Jonas Brothers

The Concert Experience

Walt Disney, $29.99/$39.99; Blu-ray, $44.99

Unlike a lot of other tween-targeted pop acts, the Jonas Brothers are accomplished musicians more than magnetic personalities, which might explain why the band’s records sell so well while its Disney Channel efforts have proved disappointing. The 3-D Imax feature “Jonas Brothers: The Concert Experience” was supposed to become a phenomenon just as Miley Cyrus’ concert movie did, but it started slow at the box office and tapered off quickly, perhaps because the brothers tend to look stiff when cameras are pointed at them -- and even stiffer when blown up to the size of a wall. “The Concert Experience” will play better smaller, on DVD and Blu-ray editions that include bonus performances and a behind-the-scenes featurette.

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Eastbound & Down

The Complete First Season

HBO, $29.98

Comic actor Danny McBride can take some getting used to, with his rapid-fire Southern mumble, nonchalant self-absorption and casual profanity. McBride and director Jody Hill’s HBO sitcom, “Eastbound & Down,” has become a sensation among comedy aficionados, though the show’s depiction of a pro baseball player on the skids certainly isn’t for everyone. The show’s first-season comes to DVD on a two-disc set that includes deleted scenes, bloopers, behind-the-scenes featurettes and audio commentaries.

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The Education

of Charlie Banks

Overture/Anchor Bay, $29.97

Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst began his transition to directing with 2007’s “The Education of Charlie Banks,” a festival favorite starring Jesse Eisenberg as a nervous nebbish and Jason Ritter as the bully who both torments and befriends him. It’s a fine little film -- better, in fact, than Durst’s second film, “The Longshots,” which was actually released first. The “Charlie Banks” DVD comes with a commentary track by Durst and Ritter.

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Parker Lewis

Can’t Lose

The Complete First Season

Shout! Factory, $49.99

The early ‘90s Fox TV favorite “Parker Lewis Can’t Lose” has its own eccentric style and tone, full of fisheye close-ups and absurdist fantasy interludes -- like a combination of “Better Off Dead,” “Square Pegs” and a David Lee Roth video. This first-season DVD set comes with a tedious “we were so awesome” featurette and jovial cast commentary tracks on select episodes, but the real selling point is the show itself, which remains a lighthearted, richly imaginative sketch of suburban California high school life.

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Two Lovers

Magnolia, $29.98; Blu-ray, $34.98

It’s too bad that Joaquin Phoenix’s late-night TV meltdown (or tone-deaf performance art, depending on how you parse it) distracted from the movie he was supposed to be promoting. Writer-director James Gray’s “Two Lovers” is highlighted by Phoenix’s performance as a Brooklyn photographer trying to choose between a stable girlfriend (Vinessa Shaw) and a fragile kindred spirit (Gwyneth Paltrow). The DVD and Blu-ray include deleted scenes, featurettes and a Gray commentary.

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All titles released Tuesday.

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