You mean, that’s the same place they shot the police station in Blade Runner? Well, guess I’m buying this DVD post haste.
Thanks, Criterion, for keeping the film’s mystique of fakery alive.
The set is a fine addition to the ever-growing legion of television programs hording the shelves at your local retailer.
Everyone seems slightly embarrassed to be in the film and rightfully so because, above all else, the film just isn’t funny.
The film is one of the more wistfully humorous of Welles’s wrestlings with reality.
The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill is a documentary of quiet, introspective charm.
Travellers and Magicians is the story of a dream within a story.
The film is a wild orchestration of flamboyantly touching images and fair ground theatrics.
An enjoyable DVD release of a wonderfully strange film.
Larry Cohen disquietingly blurs the lines between what’s normal and what’s not, and what it is to love a child unconditionally.
The second and third parts of Larry Cohen’s It’s Alive trilogy are by turns silly and sublime.
The second and third parts of Larry Cohen’s It’s Alive trilogy are by turns silly and sublime.
If not as packed with extras as one may have hoped, this It’s Alive DVD is a much-welcomed event.
While perhaps not as necessary a purchase as the release of It’s Alive, the two-for-the-price-of-one approach of this DVD is certainly appealing.
The Black Cat is one of the neglected jewels in Universal Studios’s horror crown.
The show is an often glorious evocation of the world of the iconic Dark Knight.
For fans, this is a must have, and for anyone else interested in taking a nostalgic trip back to the heady days of 1980s weekday animation.
Bad Santa is the perfect DVD to use to entertain unexpected guests and small children.
Skip this one and pop in that Criterion edition of Hard-Boiled for the real deal.
Morris’s latest slowly transforms itself into haunting portrait of a life forever interwoven with history.