The film suggests something like a western-inflected musical riff on Design for Living.
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.
Beware! Cheekiness Overload!
You saw Brother Bear in theaters but skipped the truly subversive Teacher’s Pet? Here’s your chance to fix that.
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.
An essential addition to both cinema history and any cinephile’s DVD collection.
Jam-packed with extras, this DVD is further proof that the slain rapper isn’t going away anytime soon.
It's a historical document that turns its subject matter into a clear plea for civic activism.
We’re afraid this set might have priced itself clear out of range of anyone but die-hard SCTV fans.
Eruotrip barely made a blip at the box office, but DreamWorks does right by it on this DVD edition in the supplements department.
Spartan is an example of a film only a struggling screenwriter could love.
A solid video and audio transfer should be enough to please fans of Meirelles's gangster epic.
For Bresson fans, this DVD edition of the film is as good as it gets for now at least.
Not exactly a definitive DVD package, but the film is a must-own.
The film is ugly as sin, but it gets a top-of-the-line video transfer.
For a much-hyped three-disc set, this Mystic River package is a little disappointing, but who cares when the film is this good?
This treatise on how homosexual sociology thrived before being validated is required viewing.
Catch That Kid? Let’s not.
Remember: the definitive, extended DVD edition of the film is a few months away.