Radiance shines a spotlight on a lesser-known gem of the early Japanese New Wave.
You mean, that’s the same place they shot the police station in Blade Runner? Well, guess I’m buying this DVD post haste.
The quote on the back of the DVD cover proves that anyone can sound like Earl Dittman if they’re taken out of context.
Don’t miss the film for Al Pacino’s great scenery-chewing performance and bold expression of a great moral conflict.
Fans will appreciate New Line Home Entertainment’s gesture of goodwill.
When you take interactive sex questionnaires, do you easily become sexually aroused?
The only thing that doesn’t move in The Pajama Game is Doris Day’s scary butch hairdo.
A very good film reconstructed into a classic, Fuller’s WWII epic is not to be missed.
Art and commerce collide on this two-disc DVD edition, a schizophrenic collaboration between Buena Vista Home Entertainment and the Criterion Collection.
Don’t miss the unrated puppet sex scene. It’s the shit!
I’d like to presume that Lynde is removing lipstick from his teeth, and not Vaughn’s short curlies.
If Custer’s beyond-the-grave wish was to protect the Native Americans from corporate cretins, then I’m Errol Flynn.
Love Me or Leave Me is painted in broad strokes, sometimes too obvious, but the actors lend a rich subtext.
The film casts Kirk Douglas as a selfish artist who gets his comeuppance, but it’s a theme that smacks of bullshit.
Not only is Hindle Wakes ripe for rediscovery but it looks to teach our film and human culture a few lessons.
This dismal bore is for Bette Davis completists only.
Have you ever heard the wolf cry to the blue corn moon?
Ignore Fox Mulder’s mantra: You can trust The Lone Gunmen.
Strictly for cock-juggling thundercunts and the people who love them.
The miscasting of Errol Flynn doesn’t distract from the many great set pieces.
To quote Simon Cowell, Les Choristes has “about as much passion as a kitten mewing.”