Eventually we’re sure to get a proper Blu-ray release of this film, probably around the release of Terminator V.
It’s easy to appreciate the drive that the film’s kids possess, but we never quite feel their burning passion.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
In a just world, Harvest would be getting a wide release alongside of, if not necessarily instead of, Thor.
Tyler Perry’s film settles for what might be called common sense and apolitical human decency.
Cinema Verite is a finely polished dramatization of the making of the landmark 1973 PBS miniseries An American Family.
And here I thought no film about crop circles could possibly be boring.
Nothing in the film tops a tripped-out opening in which the titular hero takes on a German machine-gun nest with nothing but a knife and superhuman bipedal ass-kicking.
A moving testament to human resilience in the face of unimaginable failure of government.
A high-water mark of American cinema gets its due treatment on this luxurious disc. No respectable collection should go without it.
This double feature of everyone’s favorite giant turtle should appeal equally to young children and middle-aged virgins.
Pick up this Joel-bilee of the enduringly awesome Mystery Science Theater 3000, preferably in the not-too-distant future.
Travis Bickle is God’s lonely man, but at the end of the day, aren’t we all?
Robert Bresson’s stylized direction at times suggests the ethereal effect of a silent film.
The Over the Hill Band lacks artistry, but it remains a somewhat uniquely oddball diversion.
Larry David would be proud.
Gorgeous, nightmarish, ethereal, and utterly insane.
The plot is filled to the rim with clichés, but to its credit, they all feel more or less organic in context.
All that’s missing from this set is a ticket voucher for the film’s eventual IMAX re-release.
Fact: You haven’t truly lived until you’ve seen Walter Huston do the jackrabbit dance.