Green Dragon feels strangely akin to a gushy episode of M*A*S*H, only this time from an Asian perspective.
The film’s quirky, surreal mise-en-scène meshes poorly with the curiously unfunny yet not necessarily terrible deadpan humor.
Luis Buñuel’s jabs at society’s oppression of women are limp only by his standards.
From the killer interactive menus to the gruesome, richly informative featurettes, this is one of the more stylish DVDs of the year.
This awesome DVD package exposes the technical brouhaha behind Linklater’s magical concept art.
The drama has been seemingly extracted from all sorts of domestic abuse manuals and pamphlets and the result is strangely akin to a Lifetime see-Jane-run procedural.
While the melodrama is certainly potent, Susana lacks considerable bite.
The latest toy from George Lucas’s soulless Star Wars factory is at least better than The Phantom Menace.
It Came From Outer Space remains the granddaddy of the ’50s atomic-scare pictures.
Silent Running definitely shows its age.
This is an essential purchase for fans and novices of Arnold’s films and ’50s sci-fi flicks.
Trumbull is no Kubrick but fans of his campy Silent Running will applaud Universal’s generous DVD treatment.
If you think Elvis, Tupac, and Biggy Smalls are still alive, you’re likely to swoon over Alan Taylor’s trivial piece of historical revisionism.
Los Olvidados is a film obsessed with the terror of being left alone in the world.
If you love ’80s relics, none come more gorgeously artificial than Ridley Scott’s faerie-tale Legend.
The folks at Universal have given Scott’s cult classic a legendary DVD treatment.
A flawed but intimate DVD presentation for Australia’s critically acclaimed Lantana.
Now that women are cheating on Richard Gere, a door has opened for a fresher Mr. Goodbar.
A flawed film about boxing’s greatest heavyweight gets a lightweight DVD treatment.
Just in time for Christmas in July. Wrap it up and give it to that woman in your life still hung up on Meg Ryan faking orgasms.