Occasionally, the film reminds you that the man who made Mean Streets is behind the camera.
Neurotic seesaw framing and James Dean’s pyrotechnical debut cannot hide the fact that East of Eden’s expiration date has passed.
Giant defines the word interminable, and watching it just once is guaranteed to lop at least a year off your life.
The aesthetic make-up of the film isn’t only uniquely its own but it’s also too cool for words.
Time has not blunted the hard-edged anger of Fugitive.
Title be damned, Sturges’s classic isn’t a bad way to spend a day.
This may be the best Behind the Music special you’ll never see on VH1.
Those seeking another 1939 Ford revisionist history lesson should seek out Young Mr. Lincoln.
A shoddy presentation of a great film.
Bitchy Isabel would be much better company to have a drink with than Larry Darrell, zealot of the pure.
To those willing to endure A Farewell To Arms: Don’t be a hero!
Teachers take note: S21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine would make for a great double bill with Schindler’s List.
The image and sound quality is serviceable, but this is still one of the most noteworthy DVD premieres of the year.
Essential for admirers of Jacques Demy, and that should be everybody.
Wholesome family entertainment with a good message.
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.