All of the new DVDs this week are winners, so get comfy on your couch and pop some popcorn and let us give you the scoop to pick out which flicks to watch first.

Rent it: High School Musical 3: Senior Year. The Wildcats debut on DVD this week from their first theatrical release. The first two installments of HSM appeared only on the Disney channel. Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens, Ashlee Tisdale, Lucas Grabeel, Corbin Bleu and Monique Coleman are graduating from East High School and are putting one last show together before they all go their separate ways. The film is full of exactly what you would expect: overly sweet teens singing and dancing their way through one hour and fifty-two minutes with some teen-angst moments sprinkled in. The HSM franchise is super popular among teens, but for some of us it’s so sweet it makes our teeth rot. However, fans will be lining up to buy this DVD, which is packed with special features. And we have to say, it could be worse.

Rent it: Body of Lies features Hollywood all stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe in a plot that centers on Middle Eastern terrorism. The film was based on the 2007 novel of the same name by Washington Post columnist David Ignatius. DiCaprio plays Roger Ferris, a CIA operative sent to Jordan to seek out a particular terrorist. Crowe plays his superior who watches his every move on spy satellites, which are incredibly accurate. The film is full of action from start to finish and is very entertaining, considering it’s about subject matter that hits very close to home. The plot is fairly complicated, but don’t be discouraged. If you pay attention, the plot sequences are easy enough to follow.

Rent it: Changeling. Angelina Jolie pulls out an amazing performance as a mother whose 9-year-old son vanishes and is then returned by police five months later, but Jolie insists that the little boy is not her son. She then goes on a mission to find her real little boy, and must battle all odds including a corrupt police department and her commitment into a mental facility. Clint Eastwood directs the film and portrays the setting of 1928 so vividly; you feel as though you are right there with Jolie, feeling her pain. The tale is based on the infamous Wineville Chicken Coup murders in the late 1920s where Gordon Stewart Northcott molested and killed 20 or more boys, adding to the emotion and eeriness of the film. The film has been nominated for many awards, including three Oscars for Best Actress, Best Cinematography and Best Art Direction.

Rent it: Quarantine is an adaptation of the 2007 Spanish film Rec and stars Jennifer Carpenter. It chronicles the outbreak of a rabies-like disease in Los Angeles where the unaffected residents of an apartment building are quarantined to try and contain the outbreak. The shaky camera technique and lack of any music within the film makes it different from most scary movies. Filmed as the action is occurring from the perspective of a reporter trapped in the quarantine, it has a first-person feel to it (ala Blair Witch Project), making it as creepy as it is scary.

—Jessica Delli Santi