I Am Cuba’s politics are crude and transparent but poetically revealed.
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.
Operatic is scarcely the word for Sergio Leone’s impassioned riffs on the western tradition.
Oh Herb can you see, by the dawn’s early light. What so proudly we hail’d at the twilight’s last gleaming?
Skip this one and pop in that Criterion edition of Hard-Boiled for the real deal.
The Chronological Donald covers almost the first full decade of Disney’s Donald Duck cartoons.
Disney presents the world’s most famous neuter and his unabashed swan dive into apolitical, sexless, consumerist passivity.
If your penis is really, really big, then talk to director Donald Petrie, who will go to great lengths to digitally remove it.
An embarrassing audio/video presentation for one of the very best films of the year.
Hot blood carouses thorough the veins of this handsome Hammer Dracula installment, even if Christopher Lee apparently took a cold shower before filming started.
Fans will rejoice, even if they didn’t think the film was that funny.