Much like the never-seen store chain of its title, David O. Russell’s film is content to wallow in obscurantist quirk and flash
“I remember….the Alamo,” says Pee-Wee in Big Adventure. Now comes The Alamo to destroy the man-child’s memory.
The film mixes the straight, middle-American white male angst of In the Company of Men with the sci-fi trappings of Pi.
Miranda #4: You have the right to own Homicide: Season 5.
“It’s just a game.” A game worth owning.
For foot fetishists, the highlight of this DVD is the bloopers section that shows Ashley going for Marky-Kate’s foot with her mouth.
The deleted scene included on this DVD is sure to whet everyone’s whistle until the inevitable two-film box set arrives.
The film is a 92-minute, color-coded mood enhancer boiling over with provocative ideas and unsettling imagery.
The film is a high-camp mélange of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights and B.F. Skinner’s Walden Two.
The past is constantly being interrupted in the film, intruded on by a more pressing and paranoia-stricken present.
I prophesy: You will buy Millennium: Season One. You can’t stop it.
Orson Welles reportedly said of the film, “It would make a stone cry,” and, indeed, the tears that come are more than earned.
Think of Jean-Jacques Annaud’s picture as the earnest antidote to Shrek 2’s calculated cynicism.
Key to understanding Father and Son is that it begins and ends in its characters’ dreams.
There’s a queasy uncertainty to The Terminal, a thematic discord apparent in the film’s consistently restless mise-en-scène.
Anyone looking for a woodwind buddy? Look no further than Agent Cody Banks.
It’s impossible to imagine anyone who scored at least a 500 on the verbal section of the SAT wanting to sit though this tripe.
You saw Brother Bear in theaters but skipped the truly subversive Teacher’s Pet? Here’s your chance to fix that.
An essential addition to both cinema history and any cinephile’s DVD collection.
Control Room, an engrossing behind-the-scenes look at the Al-Jazeera Arab television network, is an easy film to overpraise.