Wilder’s tour of Hollywood’s village of the damned finally gets its close-up on Blu-ray with an excellent A/V transfer.
This early horror-tinged noir arrives on Blu-ray with an impressive A/V transfer and humble but rewarding set of extras.
At once impassioned and wholly manipulative, The Bay is a ruminative worst-case scenario as genre piece.
The transfer shows up the seemingly endless visual and auditory pleasures of Anderson’s latest masterpiece.
The end result showcases none of Curtis Hanson and Michael Apted’s strengths, though the thematic material is more in the former’s wheelhouse.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict goes down smoother than a sweet cup of tea in The Other Son.
Dial M for Murder may never look quite as impossibly perfect as it does on the big screen.
Alex Cross comes to theaters with the distinct timbre of a merger rather than a singular entertainment.
Cinderella makes full use of what distinguishes Blu-ray from DVD.
As a comedy, the film aims low and manages to miss the mark entirely.
The filmmakers’ attitude toward Kate is chiefly as a victim, but Mary Elizabeth Winstead’s admirable performance suggests so much more than that.
Death hangs over Song Fang’s first feature, Memories Look at Me, but it’s neither with grimness nor overt tragedy.
The Oranges is a wasteful study of the white and privileged with their neck hair standing on end.
Warner’s Blu-ray release of Tim Burton’s latest underpraised ode to resurrection and individuality looks and sounds spectacular.
The film exudes an elemental, intriguing mysteriousness, a reminder that things remain unseen and in a state of unrest.
Lionsgate decks the film out with an excellent A/V transfer and an admirable bundle of extras.
The key problem with Fringe is the same issue that made the better part of the last two seasons of Lost so utterly meaningless
Looper at once understands the visual power of violence and is deeply critical of it.
Criterion continues to polish their gold standard with their release of David Fincher’s most underrated and unseen masterpiece.
The Mindy Project is upfront about its flimsy vanity, but that doesn’t make it any better.