Objective pleasance is Safe Haven’s end game, an impossibility that suggests at least a certain twisted brand of ambition.
Your threshold for enduring Streisand will have great bearing not only on how you enjoy A Star Is Born.
Wild River rages on Blu-ray, thanks to Fox’s magnificent audio-visual treatment of Kazan’s long-overlooked political melodrama.
This is the rare film that not only would be helped by, but also feels incomplete without, audio or visual commentary.
This hodgepodge of a crime film looks great on Sony’s Blu-ray, but the package offers only crumbs in the extras department.
The Blu-ray offers an admirable A/V transfer that brings out the dormant beauty of Hartley’s beguiling masterwork.
Season three of Adam Reed’s deliriously brilliant and hilarious Archer shoots straight with a solid A/V transfer and a small arsenal of extras.
The film consistently feels like an unattended idling motor, existing for the sheer purpose of existing.
Kotcheff is an uncommonly energetic and enthusiastic artist, and that comes through clearly on his audio commentary.
This package boasts an excellent visual transfer, but it arguably comes up short in the audio department.
The A/V transfer and director’s commentary are worthy of sincere, ecstatic praise.
Shout! deserves credit for giving Newman’s oddly invigorating second film as a director a better A/V transfer than previous releases.
There’s a curious anxiousness at the root of Jack Reacher, an earnestly feigned, inconsistent attempt to be unique in a familiar genre.
The film comes to Blu-ray armed with a superb A/V transfer and a solid packing of extras from Universal.
Criterion continues to show enduring love for Gilliam’s wondrous magnum opus with their generous Blu-ray package.
Paramount offers a bold, beautiful A/V transfer Spielberg’s magnificently paced film.
MGM’s A/V transfer of this blissfully silly cult teen comedy is most(ly) triumphant.
Economical storytelling and an admirable sense of invention power Marcus Dunstan’s oddly welcome sequel to The Collector.
Sentai Filmworks has done an admirable job on their A/V transfer of Takahata’s deeply humanist anime.
Charlie Is My Darling is a thrilling portrait of the band as young musicians.