Colonia is what pop music might have sounded like in the era of gaslights and guillotines.
Apple Tree is filled with low-lying songs ripe for the picking.
Presidents aren’t prosecutors, and, unless you’re George W. Bush, the executive office doesn’t run the DOJ.
To hear it from the lips of Obama himself, personal responsibility is no longer just a virtue espoused by the right.
There’s no doubt that Doubt has been given a highly exalted DVD treatment.
To quote President Obama, I like to know what I’m talking about before I speak.
Hilson needs to do much more than pick fights with Beyoncé to justify her transition from hook girl to solo star.
Sally Hawkins and Eddie Marsen’s performances still make this DVD worth every penny, don’t they?
The album is a compromise between the experimental and the pedestrian.
Some things, it seems, aren’t plainly black and white.
A colorful portrait of an enduring marriage gets the star treatment on DVD.
Dark scenes lack definition on this widescreen edition of Stone’s W.
Right America Feeling Wronged doesn’t delve very deep when it comes to the opposition.
This DVD joint isn’t very fat.
Allen still has some choice words for men who have disappointed her.
Such a visually evocative film probably deserved a better overall presentation, but the interactive menus are pretty cool.
Get more bang for your buck with this two-disc edition, which is fudge-packed with plenty of titillating bonus features.
Tolerance and empathy are the primary themes of The Real World: Brooklyn.
It’s the things Bush doesn’t deem disappointments or disasters that could feasibly take several presidencies to undo.
There’s a frenetic, cyclical rhythmic pattern to so many of the songs on Emil Svanänen’s fifth album as Loney Dear.