This trilogy shows just how versatile and highly entertaining the Japanese samurai film can be.
Just to have the films on DVD is enough to give the set an overall positive rating.
The film is quintessentially British in that it takes all the eroticism out of the vampire myth.
It’ll take you at least double this crummy film’s running time to get through the DVD’s genuinely cute Dukesberry interactive wonderland.
Not only for Spike Jonze fans, but for anyone that wants to see Fatboy Slim taking a bath.
Just as the show got better with every episode, so did the animation.
Go hungry for a few days and save enough money so you can buy the Looney Tunes Golden Collection over the Premiere Collection.
Despite the fact that one feature on this DVD actually has the nerve to threaten us with termination, this is a pretty un-dorky two-disc set.
If the series has taught us anything, it’s that underneath the padding, Santa is one hot piece of ass.
Whale Rider is essentially The Karate Kid Down Under. Looks good but smells cheesy.
Few documentaries get released on DVD, let alone receive a two-disc edition. This one deserves the red-carpet treatment.
It’s Lifetime. It’s camp. It’s seriously confused, and it should speak directly to drag queens in straight relationships everywhere.
G-rated movies rarely start out by suggesting multiple orgies. The ones that do are to be cherished.
Trivia, radio spots, and a few other none-too-consequential goodies round out a phenomenally extensive set of extra features. Nice job.
This is more or less a teaser for the inevitable DVD package containing all three films.
New Yorker Video deserves some kind of humanitarian award for finally releasing Lanzmann’s seminal film on DVD.
Batman and the Joker only wished for this kind of psychological complexity.
Every sound, line of dialogue, and cloying musical number comes through loud and clear.
This undervalued spooker should easily find a cult following on home video.
While there’s no commentary track to sell some prospective buyers, I’d keep this DVD edition solely for the awesome interactive menus.
A solid audio transfer and a nifty collection of supplemental materials highlight this DVD edition of Boyle’s solid genre spooker.