This is one week you’ll wish you had two or three DVD players in your house so no one has to fight about who watches what when. Dropping this week for the men is Street Kings, for the ladies there’s Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, and the tweens will go ga-ga over Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour. Also debuting on DVD this week are Prom Night and Quid Pro Quo for those who are somewhere in between. 

Street Kings is a dark cop drama written by the king of LA noir, James Ellroy.  It stars Keanu Reeves, Forest Whitaker, Hugh Laurie, Chris Evans and Cedric the Entertainer, just to name a few. It poses some very interesting moral dilemmas: how far should a cop go to catch a really heinous criminal? Do the ends justify the means? Yes, it's a 'guy' film, but it’s also a great bargaining chip for the ladies—see this one with him, in exchange for Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day.

Based on a 1938 Winifred Watson novel, Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day stars Frances McDormand in the title role of a hapless governess who finesses her way into a position as social secretary to a young, American gold digger and singer played by Amy Adams. Think vintage, screwball comedy on an art deco set.

If there are girls in your house between the ages of eight and 15, there is no getting away from Miley Cyrus, especially now that Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour is available on DVD.  Those who have seen it gush that it’s a “bubbly concert film, a celebration of girlhood, of sisterhood, of the power of positive thought.”  Woohoo! Go backstage with the 15-year-old performer, watch her rehearse and perform, and even meet the Jonas Brothers. What more could a young girl ask?

Make sure you keep her away from Prom Night, although her older brothers and sisters will be running out to rent this one.  Brittany Snow stars in the remake of the 1980 slasher film that originally starred Jamie Lee Curtis. Snow is the only survivor of her family's massacre at the hands of an obsessed teacher, who returns three years later to finish his campaign on the eve of, you guessed it, her senior prom night. It’s frightening to be sure, but not quite as provocative as Quid Pro Quo.

Quid Pro Quo is a dark, suspenseful drama about “Wannabes," people who so desperately long for wheelchair confinement that they maim themselves. Nick Stahl (HBO’s "Carnival," Terminator 3, In the Bedroom), plays Isaac, a public radio host à la Ira Glass, who receives an odd phone call from someone who claims a man recently paid a doctor at a local emergency room more than $100,000 to cut his legs off. As Isaac investigates, he finds a strange group of people who meet regularly to discuss their wheelchair fantasies and finds himself oddly drawn to a woman, played by Vera Farmiga (The Departed, Down to the Bone)with her own handicap issues. This film will surprise you, which doesn’t happen often these days.

Also surprising is the fact that in one day, you’ll find enough good new offerings to keep you happily watching for the next several weeks, long after the Olympics are over.