Scorsese’s manic best picture winner looks sharper than ever on Warner’s UHD disc.
Can’t afford that course in Italian cinema at NYU? My Voyage to Italy is just as good, and it’s a hell of a lot cheaper.
What better way to show good old Dad that you love him (or hate him) by giving him a copy of The Barbarian Invasions.
You know what they say: Once you go black, you never go back.
“A crowd-pleasing movie treat bursting with music, dance and excitement”? Hardly.
Raymond Chandler might have scoffed at the gauze of Hollywood, but Murder, My Sweet is crawling with grunty RKO expressionism.
For fans, this is a must have, and for anyone else interested in taking a nostalgic trip back to the heady days of 1980s weekday animation.
So .38-caliber erections aren’t exactly as subversive as they once used to be. Gun Crazy is still drenched in Lewis’s B-movie finery.
One can only dream that every DVD contained commentary tracks and featurettes as insightful as the ones included here.
Not only should DMX not be allowed to act but he also shouldn’t be allowed to rap on commentary tracks.
It’s one of the most lazily framed mainstream films in history, but Warner’s video transfer looks truly wonderful.
Nicole Kidman’s voice in Cold Mountain is liable to send any man off to war. Except, that is, for Rex Reed.
The red, white, and blue barber’s pole is getting a little rusty, but fans of the wholesome franchise probably couldn’t care less.
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.
Repeat after me: I’ll just die if I don’t get this recipe. I’ll just die if I don’t get this recipe. I’ll just die if I don’t get this recipe.
Make a little room on your shelf for this unassuming DVD edition of The Station Agent. Don’t worry it’ll fit.
A testament to human perseverance or an anti-hiking advert. You decide.
Bad Santa is the perfect DVD to use to entertain unexpected guests and small children.
Beware! Cheekiness Overload!
You saw Brother Bear in theaters but skipped the truly subversive Teacher’s Pet? Here’s your chance to fix that.