George A. Romero’s film holds up as a stark, eerie and unrelenting parable of dread.
It holds up as a spectacle film, spooky funhouse ride and rollicking adventure yarn.
We learn that Indiana Jones was named after the family dog. Aren’t you glad you tuned in for his latest adventure?
If anyone doubts that children’s games are dark as well as exhilarating, they lack an understanding of the true nature of kids.
One can feel the growing pains inherent in this transitional film.
Romero gives his original masterpiece a modern-day reboot and scores a comeback after the dismal Land of the Dead.
We’ll take bottom-shelf Harmony Korine over just about anything else currently playing in theaters.
Tough, lean and spare, The Fall of the Roman Empire was an epic swords and sandals picture coming fast on the heels of Ben-Hur and Cleopatra.
Miller discusses Jones and his other film work, including the upcoming God’s Land.
Many of the images are indelible, catching subtle interactions between the band as well as epic gestures.
We still await the definitive DVD release of Lost Highway, a film crying out for rediscovery.
In many ways, Lost Highway finds David Lynch at his most daring, emotional, and personal.
See the Baron dance with Venus! See a man outrun a speeding bullet!
This lavishly over-the-top and notoriously expensive oddity is essentially a compilation of Monty Python gags and storybook adventure.
“It’s a neighborhood movie,” says Jim Mickle, director of Mulberry Street.
The film is told with rigorous control, with unobtrusive camerawork and naturalistic, unpretentious sound design.
When Shotgun Stories locks into this tragic narrative, it gradually tightens the notch until violence becomes inevitable.
The filmmaker proved to be most sensitive, contemplative and articulate about this powerhouse debut.
Horror fans should definitely take a walk down Mulberry Street and choose carefully among the rest.
The film is brisk, peppy, light on its feet, and tries awfully hard to be reminiscent of a fast-talking Depression-era rags-to-riches comedy.