Sam Raimi’s millenium Spider-Man is both sensitive and realistically self-serving.
Aberdeen is almost other-worldly, a divine reminder that one must work for love.
If you’ve followed Woody throughout the years, you might grow weary of the all the tongue-in-cheek ribbing.
A splendid package from First Run Features for a little-seen gem perhaps best savored on a rainy, meditative day.
Luis Buñuel’s political statement is rendered via his vilification of this objective approach.
Woody Allen understands the emotionally fragile and confusing period after a breakup.
An unfortunately lightweight DVD package for one of Allen’s greatest moments.
The DVD lacks meat for a two-disc set, but who cares when the film looks, sounds, and haunts this good?
Ramiro is Luis Buñuel’s most sympathetic rich man in that he’s humble despite the size of his wallet.
You’re young and you want to get high but you don’t have money for weed or smack. What do you do?
Welcome to the Crystal Lake Research Facility, a doomsday machine waiting to happen.
Finally, American Pie for adults.
The pitch must have read like a discarded House Beautiful spread.
If at all possible, How High’s pristine transfer to DVD may actually work against the film’s ganja-stoked visual palette.
This one may be only for Stephen King’s most fanatical followers.
If the Marquis de Sade had lived anytime during the 20th century, perhaps he would have made a film like L’Age d’Or.
Looking at Buñuel’s autobiography and Dali’s verbal art is to confirm that many of the film’s images were a product of a shared consciousness.
Here’s something pointless but kind of fun nonetheless.
Circuit queens won’t learn a thing because they’ll be too busy cursing the film’s strategically placed white sheets.
Forget the misleading title, what’s with the unexplained baboon cameo? How about all the “kiss already” gay subtext?