Even if the video transfer is somewhat underwhelming, this Spider DVD is a must-own. A film that deserves multiple viewings.
Laurel Canyon will make you wish that your mother liked to smoked pot.
A naked man. A naked woman. A slithering snake. A burning bush.
One of Polanski’s greatest films gets a handsome transfer on this DVD edition.
The film’s nihilist point is clear: It’s the world against Trelkovsky and not the other way around.
Body shots. Tequila shots. Boobies! Boobies! Boobies! Get your freak on with this DVD edition of The Real Cancun.
Girls Gone Wild meets The Real World in miniature, with Snoop Dogg’s seal of approval.
What is Legally Blonde 2 but a toothless, maudlin version of Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington?
By Cosmo girls, for Cosmo girls.
Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle is merely a preposterous, maximized manipulation of the original film’s winning formula.
Olivier Assayas’s obsession with the blurry line between fantasy and reality is lofty but unfocused.
The film suggests a grueling seminar for screenwriters with writer’s block.
Now, if someone could figure out a way to grind the disc into tablet form, insomniacs without DVD players can rejoice as well.
The conflict between modern medicine and superstition lends the film a striking moral urgency.
The indie heavyweight suggests that he hasn’t stopped drifting himself and that he too continues to look for that elusive “thing.”
It’s easy to be seduced by François Ozon’s deadly use of silence.
The high drama begins right away, with a petal falling over the opening interactive menu.
Mercifully, there’s no offending sermon to talk down to the film’s demographic.
Joe Carnahan’s genre pic gets an equally nifty sound and video transfer on this DVD edition.
Its self-devouring gags quickly reach their expiration way before their all-too-familiar payoffs are announced.