A film like this that wears its homages proudly—and wears them this well—is something to be celebrated.
David Fincher’s blood-black comedy remains one of the most divisive pictures of the past 20 years.
This release will keep Fight Club misread as a nihilistic paean to violence—or as a celebration of hyper-masculinity-for years to come.
For all its problems, Chasing Amy remains for me the relative high point of Smith’s career.
Smith’s best film, in a disappointing audio-visual package with some great extras.
A stunning release of one of Pixar’s most sadly underappreciated works.
The extras are sweet, but Clerks’s low-budget ugliness is a questionable fit for Blu-ray.
Kevin Smith’s clever in-joke movie gets an anemic Blu-ray release.
A solid DVD release of a terrible, terrible movie.
The film is a nasty, soulless celebration of everything cool and romantic about violence.
The only thing mysterious about Orphan is why Vera Farmiga and Peter Sarsgaard signed on to such an idiotic mess.
Miike makes so many movies that his only truly essential one should get a deserving HD release. No such luck, sadly.
A striking Blu-ray transfer that does justice to the formalist experience that is The Girlfriend Experience.
It won’t convince Crank: High Voltage’s naysayers, but for those on the film’s insane wavelength, it’s a worthy DVD package.
The film starts bleakly and just gets bleaker, and as it progresses these stylistic decisions start to feel more and more oppressive.
No additions have been made to the standard-definition release’s stable of extras, but that was already a pretty strong set.
The film’s maudlin, self-sabotaging audience-coddling is right out of the Zemeckis playbook.
Say what you will about Boaz Yakin’s epically awful Death in Love, but it wastes no time letting you know what you’re in for.
At least the charmingly brittle chemistry between leads Katherine Heigl and Gerard Butler keeps things moving pleasurably enough along.
Screw the cheerleader, save the world?