A Ketel One ad that just won’t quit, or Bellflower for people whose Blackberry is a vital organ.
The hardware all looks appropriately 2011, but Rat King’s cautionary attitude toward Internet overindulgence is stuck in the mid-1990s.
Materially speaking, the state of Ozu’s work improves as one moves, chronologically, toward his late period.
The geometry of human relationships is the main theme of The Day He Arrives.
Over the course of the film, Frédéric Jardin’s style doesn’t exactly change gears, but after a few turns in the modest narrative, an unlikely sense of structural resilience begins to emerge.
Whatever The Iron Lady is to you, this Blu-ray will give you just-adequate satisfaction.
In the hands of the Farrellys, the Stooges are, unsurprisingly, made into totems of the duo’s favored themes and values.
A Razzie-worthy sci-fi zero gets the undeserving high-definition treatment from Summit Entertainment.
A slick, professional high-def disc that’s designed a little like a handmade mixtape.
As larks go, it’s solid carpentry, lined with goodies for the nerd in all of us.
The unfunny flies fast and furious in Fox’s unremarkable Blu-ray presentation of David Gordon Green’s latest letdown.
Wrath of the Titans sputters and coughs on the fumes of its own inevitability.
Warner’s mega-classic arrives, on a sedan chair, with an alabaster high-definition transfer. Don’t drop it on your foot.
Bonnello’s haunting, multi-layered visual tour de force gets a mediocre standard-definition release.
Neither the best nor the worst of Capra’s most celebrated films, Lady for a Day is an odd pre-Code tent pole to get the high-def makeover challenge.
A veritable romper-room presentation of this lovable (or, for some, insistently love-craving), reflexive musical comedy.
The film gets a no-frills but flawless high-definition release from the Criterion Collection.
Evans’s mostly no-nonsense, floor-by-floor ass-kicking panorama is admirably humble.
The Killing imports the Euro policier for Barnes & Noble shoppers.
Fritz Lang’s earliest, substantially preserved adventure epic gets a solid, workmanlike DVD presentation from Kino.