Texas Killing Fields is just another dull, morally mixed-up serial-killer movie.
Adam Pesce never condescends to any of his subjects, but good intentions alone don’t make for a captivating movie.
An affectionate and comprehensively detailed presentation of a surprisingly decent tent-pole movie.
Lucky McKee fans should generally be pleased with this beautiful Blu-ray transfer of his ambitious, uneven new horror film.
Ian Cheney’s film feels like something you might only half watch in a high school science class.
This well structured film is often tough to take, but it honors its own wounded integrity.
Loosies seems to mostly exist as an opportunity for Peter Facinelli, a longtime character actor, to assume the center stage.
Worth picking up for the nerds who hope to be at the center of a vampire-hunting blood bath.
One of Jim Carrey’s weakest efforts gets an admittedly attentive Blu-ray treatment.
Rafi Pitts manages an atmosphere of choked, ambiguous dread, somehow naturalistic and hallucinatory at once.
Colombiana is a self-righteous misstep from the usually reliable Luc Besson action-film factory.
To enjoy Miss Minoes you’ll have to take considerable and irrational pleasure in watching cats speak with badly dubbed British voices.
Our Idiot Brother is likable enough, but you don’t really need to see it.
What’s left to say of the film critic who haunts all others?
Seducing Charlie Barker is a big so-what, but you leave wanting more Heather Gordon, who might be something in a more original movie.
Tabloid is a haunting portrait of a not-so-everyday media casualty.
Grandma, A Thousand Times is somehow tough and nostalgic at once and in equal measure.
The Story of Lovers Rock is an unapologetically single-minded appeal for the legacy of lovers rock.
The film is a horrendous assembly of pat clichés that would be infuriatingly simple-minded if it weren’t so ridiculous.
One of the best and under-seen films of the year gets a surprisingly attentive DVD treatment. See it.