The film’s rain-drenched finale ravishingly evokes the horror of being trapped in a situation with no apparent way out.
You’re destined for disappointment if you approach Larry Clark’s latest provocation as an actual film rather than a moment in time.
Romantic comedy. Mob spoof. Dysfunctional family melodrama. Rain Man Redux.
You’ll have a hard time coming by another recent DVD release of a crucial film accompanied by an equally crucial commentary track.
This competent but disposable action thriller should appeal most to Friedkin enthusiasts.
For die-hard Jet Li and DMX fans only.
The central relationship between Croft and Sheridan is a fascinating one to watch mature and unravel.
The film superficially and naïvely underscores the many trials and tribulations of its eponymous racehorse with scenes of American underdevelopment.
The image and sound quality on this DVD is so mind-blowing that you may just want to put this one in your permanent collection.
Charlie Hunnam’s banal turn as Nicholas Nickleby may be the only disappointment of this sweet and old-fashioned comedy.
Bad Boys II could be the most vile creation to come out of Hollywood since Patch Adams.
The folks at Disney know their target audience all too well.
How to Deal unravels like pages from a self-flagellating tween girl’s diary.
Agustín Díaz Yanes reimagines Dogma but with none of its moral curiosities and certainly none of its humor.
So this is what Camp Mariah must be like.
For those into disposable satire and quickie blow-jobs, you can’t do much better than Phone Booth.
A day or two in the lives of some of the most annoying people in the world, filmed with equally devil-may-care obnoxiousness.
Basic is just that: a mundane military thriller whose only goal is to appeal to an audience’s basic desire to be tricked into multiple corners.
Beneath the surface of Imitation of Life lies the reality of what Sirk rightfully believed was a seriously deranged American society.
The skin tones on this disc are so accurate they’re almost ethereal.