“Baby, I don’t care.” But you do, Bob, and this set proves it.
Andrei Kravchuk’s film doesn’t shrivel into a procession of audience high-fives like The Pursuit of Happyness.
A long-overdue presentation for the valuable fragments of Anger’s outlaw poetry.
By refusing to distance itself from its targets, Mike Judge’s brand of satire risks being mistaken for what it’s satirizing.
Judge’s nervy futuristic comedy survives studio cluelessness on its way to cult appreciation.
There’s no denying the immersive being of Alejandro Jodorowsky’s film.
A nutty collection of features highlight this tight Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Boby DVD.
The film is a fierce document, rigorous and startling in its portrayal of a soul wrestling for wholeness.
An intense, baroque epic that just misses greatness, To the Left of the Father is still a unique film experience.
The film was one of several historical pageantries made by Ernst Lubitsch during his early tenure with UFA studios.
The Arabian Nights spectacle of Sumurun attests to silent German cinema’s fascination with ornate orientalism.
Lubitsch’s comedies dig deeper, but this early drama is still an intriguing entry in the director’s evolution.
Ernst Lubitsch started his career in broad slapstick, and a gleam of rowdy humor never fully left his work.
Sumurun of the urbane Lubitsch’s most fascinating detours into exotica.
An uproarious treat for fans of Ernst Lubitsch and silent comedy.
Nothing less than a miracle is needed to rouse Ingrid Bergman’s characters out of their spiritual stupor, and Rossellini provides it.
An uneven set illustrates the facets of Cooper’s persona. Worth it for fans? Yup.
The film suggests not so much the stirring of a soul as Sir Ridley grinding his teeth behind the camera.
The film’s deep respect for human resilience and hope ultimately renders cynical accusations of touristy condescension moot.
Digital animation has elbowed claymation out of the frame and a certain frenetic coarsening has settled over Aardman’s latest.