Scorsese’s manic best picture winner looks sharper than ever on Warner’s UHD disc.
“It’s time to put on make-up. It’s time to dress up right.” Sing it to me, Dom baby, sing it!
A not-so-solid film gets a solid audio and video transfer and the red carpet treatment in the features department.
Boy, that preview for Beefcake sure shows up on a lot of these Strand discs.
This collector’s edition appears to be basically a replay of the earlier Superbit release.
Hotchi Motchi! The Critic gets a respectful and well-deserved DVD treatment.
With no supplemental materials specific to Gaudreault’s glorified sitcom, you may want to rent rather than buy.
No featurette overstays its welcome on this handsome Secondhand Lions DVD package.
Ridley Scott fans: Imagine for a second what Matchstick Men would have looked like if Robert Zemeckis had directed it.
Skip the film altogether and go straight to disc two. Wadd: The Life and Times of John C. Holmes says it better than James Cox did.
Gene Shalit, Renee Shapiro, and Wireless Magazine (I know that’s you Earl Dittman!) loved it, so it can’t be that bad. Right?
Regardless of whether he was playing a sinner or a saint, the deep throat of Christopher Lee made the battle between good and evil never sexier.
Good transfer but no supplemental materials. Strictly for die-hard fans of La Kudrow.
If you’re a Harvey Pekar fan, do yourself a favor and buy this DVD.
Rudolph’s most accessible film in years is anchored by incredible performances by Campbell Scott and Hope Davis.
This DVD is purely for fans of Beyoncé’s booty and you-know-who’s latest shrill performance.
Did we mention that Carol Channing’s performance in Irwin Allen miniseries Through the Looking Glass is one of the greatest performances ever caught on film?
Fans of this troubling, partial work will appreciate the two hours worth of new footage amassed for this two-disc set.
James Muro’s camerawork for Open Range was the unsung cinematographic wonder of 2003.
You know a film is in trouble when a studio has to dig all the way to the bottom of the barrel and use a quote by Earl Dittman.
This disc features one of the most personable collections of extras amassed for a major DVD release in quite some time.