Robert Redford’s film is blindly cocooned by its own nostalgic self-regard.
The series feels like it has some firm footing and a newfound sense of certain direction that was lacking intermittently in the second season.
The sheer wastefulness of Eran Creevy’s Welcome to the Punch is off-putting enough, but the film is also falsely painted-up as a crime epic.
The film confidently and forcefully storms onto DVD with an admirable A/V transfer, only hindered by a paltry gathering of extras.
Director Marc Evans’s monotonous style keeps the film earthbound.
Kirk DeMicco and Chris Sanders’s film takes more than a few pages from the James Cameron playbook.
In form, O Muel’s film is invigorating, even striking, but it feels ill-matched to his attitude.
The omnipresent power of criminals that resides beneath the buff and shine of Silvio Berlusconi’s Italy provides the context for the film.
The great expanse of time and episodic nature that partially defines the series format allows Campion to work at once ambitiously and confidently.
Les Coquillettes has a lot in common with the prolific Hong Sang-soo’s leisurely lacerating character studies.
The film is an enjoyably self-aware black comedy tinged with all manner of Cold War bric-a-brac and sexualized symbolism.
The film is overtly suspicious and critical of the new and only serviceably romantic about the old.
Spielberg’s film arrives on Blu-ray with a fantastic A/V transfer and a modest helping of contextual extras.
The urgency of Fritz Lang’s genre-establishing masterpiece hasn’t aged a day.
Disney’s desperate and wrong-headed riff on Toy Story gets an expectedly excellent A/V transfer on Blu-ray with a bundle of extras that offer a few bonus points.
The very release of The Sweeney feels discernably like a strike-while-the-iron’s-hot career move for Plan B.
Disney’s playful, scatterbrained variation on J.M. Barrie’s play and novel soars on Blu-ray.
The film attests to Bellocchio’s technical mastery and formidable empathy.
The film is a lugubrious, elongated study of forced prostitution and political lechery.
Kazan’s furious look at barely dormant post-war anti-Semitism gets a classy Blu-ray release.