Of Fathers and Sons’s front-facing depiction of unambiguous evil seems the most likely to draw voters less than moved by the mere existence of the Notorious R.B.G.
That Christian Bale packs it on and sheds it off with the change of seasons has become the essence of his thespian identity.
Lady Gaga has had this Oscar in her hands since the A Star Is Born trailer dropped and launched a hundred memes.
Brian De Palma’s showy Vertigo tribute gets a significant A/V upgrade from Shout! Factory.
How has Oscar royally screwed things up this year? Let us count the ways.
Honestly, it’s nearly a matter of life or death whether true cinephiles add this disc to their home libraries.
This buckaroo of a disc does not blow it on the image and sound front at least.
Skyscraper is little more than a faster-higher-stronger amalgamation of Die Hard and The Towering Inferno.
Criterion releasing it during Pride Month proves that their sense of humor is just as sick as that of John Waters and Divine.
When the winner of RuPaul’s Drag Race was announced, it felt arbitrary and compulsory.
RuPaul orchestrates the trip down memory lane as a rundown of oppositional forces in the latest episode of Drag Race.
Shout! pulls a rabbit out of its hat with this Blu-ray release, which boasts a solid transfer and a pair of great commentaries.
This season of RuPaul’s Drag Race has offered a full slate of above-average queens but no larger-than-life rock stars.
Director Jeff Tomsic’s debut feature film, Tag, is exactly the Terms of Endearment our era deserves.
The latest episode of RuPaul’s Drag Race is a fascinating compare-and-contrast exercise.
Graduation retains 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days’s thrilling pulse of morality itself racing to beat the clock.
The ambition of Cristian Mungiu’s follow-up to his Palme d’Or-winning 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days will not be denied.
If Vanjie is the matron saint the axed too soon, Kameron Michaels is her diametric counterpart.
The episode sees most of the remaining hunties, well, hunting for ways to kick-start their own storylines.
The makers of this rescued-footage documentary ultimately understand the power of its subjects’ personalities.