Gary Sherman’s brooding and bloody film gets an exemplary 4K Blu-ray upgrade and an excellent array of extras from Blue Underground.
Hopper’s eccentric, fetishistic, and very sexy neo noir film from 1990 receives a red-hot facelift.
With the notable exception of Hilary Swank’s upright and uptight Mary Bee Cuddy, the film never lets its female characters speak for themselves.
The second season of Anger Management is mostly a depressing slog, lacking even the calculated urgency that characterized the first season.
Only one line anywhere in this show manages to ring true, and for an unintended reason: “This is what we in therapy call a train wreck.”
The film gets at something essential about man’s sense of his own dignity and the importance to the American notion of self.
Hardly worth a double-dip, but No Country’s ambient horror will pin you to the floor and slice into your neck with a taut handcuff chain.
The film dumps on audiences a plot that consists of 500-some-odd puzzle pieces that all come together exactly as you expect.
This is an unfortunately slim DVD package for the best Oscar top-dog since Million Dollar Baby.
The Coens bring a touch of levity to their adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s relentlessly bleak 2003 novel.
In the Valley of Elah is so obviously plotted it could have been scripted by the inflatable autopilot from Airplane!
While not enough of a grand statement to be taken as a career turning point, the film nonetheless signaled a change in the winds for Eastwood.
Clint Eastwood’s dust bowl drama is a sensitive road picture about a mostly luckless aspiring country music singer.
That rare sequel which improves on its original, which, in this case, wasn’t that hard to do.
Mick Garris’s Critters 2: The Main Course offers a heaping helping of everything that’s missing from the first film.