Despite occasional hiccups in the source elements, these HD transfers look incredibly good.
I love the color blue on the DVD cover, but were the haloes, not to mention the tagline “Cupid Just Turned Eight,” really necessary?
Put this one in your DVDs To Snort Coke Off Of pile.
Even during its second season, the show’s color palette was at times inconsistent, with some episodes more vibrant than the next.
A little lean in the features department, but the blooper reel on this third season DVD set of Strangers with Candy is worth the price of admission alone.
Pressed under the DiviMax banner, the incredibly wan-looking Creepshow 2 is a benefactor of a format that only stresses the limitations of the original product.
Bad films. Great transfers and features. Strictly for the fans.
The DVD for is rather pedestrian, but luckily the film is extraordinary enough to stand on its own.
This DVD will not disappoint purists concerned that Disney might once again remaster one of their films from a newly updated version.
Saved! inspires anti-Christian resentment via bad comedy.
“What a ride!” says Joel Siegal. “Totally Cool” responds Gene Shalit. It makes me want to throw up to say that they’re kind of right.
Unless you’ve got a soft spot for British anthologies with fine, aged hams, you’re better off buying Kiss Kiss in paperback.
“And don’t hate me for being ugly, I didn’t make you that way, God did.”
“I remember….the Alamo,” says Pee-Wee in Big Adventure. Now comes The Alamo to destroy the man-child’s memory.
There’s no place like home, except who wants to come home to this?
Orca tarnishes its own attempts at eco-consciousness in suggesting that whales are interested in a little blood payback.
If you want anything more out of a DVD, then there’s just no pleasing you.
The Wrong Man is one of Hitchcock’s most affecting tragedies.
In Hitchcock’s gay burlesque, Farley Granger learns the hard way not to lick what he can’t swallow.
Miranda #4: You have the right to own Homicide: Season 5.
The Rock’s core fan base may have a problem adding the film to their permanent collection.