Terrible film, but you know the DVD is going to be good when the interactive menus all but have sex with you.
Confessions of an Opium Eater is mainly about our intrinsic need to make human connections.
This is storytelling at once unglamorous and edifying.
What could have been a simple five-minute segment on the crisis has become a two-hour celebration of Cuban perseverance.
Its drunk on irony and Jewish folklore, but lacks the existential wallop of the director’s masterful man-versus-earth collisions.
There aren’t enough features on this DVD edition of Invincible to make it a must-own.
If you’re a sadist and your Pure Moods CD has reached its expiration date, The Isle is probably a must-own for you.
The sophisticated collection of features should appeal to WWII even if John Woo fanatics decide to pass.
New Line Home Entertainment has officially spoiled us with their DVD Infinifilm editions.
For any overprotective parent whose ever had issues with their kids taking the car out at night, the film should hit closer to home.
Peyton Reed successfully recreates the pathology of a time period without ever really addressing it.
Not your average Spike Lee joint, but still a sensitive evocation of one man’s moral crisis set amid a city’s even bigger one.
Andrew Jarecki boldly addresses the notion that some victims of child abuse are really just victims of a mass conspiracy.
The best thing about this release is the seducation of Colin Farrell’s Irish accent on the commentary track.
The film is a ludicrous, insecure psychological thriller that purports to give a human face to Britain’s invisible underclass.
Cuban filmmaker Tomás Gutiérrez Alea’s gutsy Memories of Underdevelopment is a difficult work of political activism.
This shrill fashion industry satire by first-time director Michele Maher is as toothless as they come.
The collection of extras on this DVD should keep fans of the franchise creepily enticed for hours on end.
The hearty amount of features will keep die-hard fans occupied until two Fridays from now.
The serial is a towering and radical work of narrative fiction, remarkably attuned to the morality of the time.