Broomfield lends frightening credence to the possibility of a conspiracy of epic proportions.
Dysfunktional Family affords comedian Eddie Griffin 90 minutes to talk about all things raunch n’ kink.
Note to cocky drug enforcement officers: Don’t try to be a superman.
Zombie’s film has nostalgia on its side but not much else.
On the Hollywood thriller Richter scale, Phone Booth doesn’t mess around.
The features on this DVD feel as if they’ve been designed for the five and under crowd.
It’s unclear what universe Head of State actually takes place in.
On the disc, De Palma discusses how Femme Fatale is his most unconscious film.
The big battle this year will be between singing murderesses, suicidal lesbians, and a Holocaust survivor.
The overall effect is not unlike watching tumbleweed roll across the screen.
The lack of features makes for a disappointing package.
Comparisons between The Sixth Sense and minimalist fright flick The Eye will be inevitable.
Jackass: The Movie is the closest thing the average Joe has to a prison-life simulation.
The filmmakers lovingly evoke how memories can reunite us with those that we have lost.
The rats are both frightening and strangely endearing, not unlike Crispin Glover’s performance.
Boat Trip is ultimately more offensive in theory than in execution.
Here’s a textbook example of a film that can still put you to sleep despite being well photographed.
Great picture and sound quality, but everything else is sorely lacking.
An intimate DVD treatment for an equally quaint and surprisingly rewarding film.
Here’s a film you’d expect a studio to roll out in the late 1800s.