Win a Date with Tad Hamilton! is Puppy Love 101 for the MTV generation.
Masculin Féminin is very much the Cinemarxist embodiment of Marx and Engels’s Communist Manifesto.
As this clever, slow-to-burn thriller speaks for itself, you may not care that the extras aren’t up to par.
In Hard Boiled, John Woo makes an art form out of creating deceptive surfaces.
On this disc, edge enhancement is scarce, colors are vibrant, and skin tones and contrast are excellent.
Guess who’s coming to dinner?
Emir Kusturica’s film is a randy peepshow, a thorny docu-tangle of real-life horror and magical realist wish fulfillments.
At its most beautiful, the film evokes the paralysis of modern living and the promise of change.
Because much of Jeepers Creepers 2 was shot at night, it’s a small wonder that this transfer is as good as it is.
Meticulously designed for those who like their movies with turtlenecks and cappuccinos.
With Snake’s final act of subversion, Carpenter heralds the power of analog to bring together sparring nations.
Unless David Fincher ever decides to talk about Alien³, this 9-disc set is pretty definitive. Alien fans should buy it immediately.
For fans of Carpenter’s cult classic, MGM restores the film’s infamous first reel. An A-number-1 DVD package.
The film’s human melodramas play second fiddle to the kick-ass action sequences.
For tango lovers and homicidal maniacs that like to dance before killing.
Not only is Ripley personality-free (is the character jaded or is Sigourney Weaver simply bored?), so is the alien.
The much-maligned last part in the Alien quadrilogy should be approached as the comic-book actioneer that it is.
As usual, the biggest surprises came in small packages.
Jacques Rivette’s spry and intoxicating 1974 comedy observes the way women look at each other, themselves, and the world around them.
This DVD of Chaos is purely for fans of Serreau’s high-energy film.