Criterion gives one of the most compulsively rewatchable movies of the last generation its most fully satisfying home-video edition to date.
The film is unfortunate proof that Pixar, previously known for its brains, is now resting a little too heavily on its nominal brawn.
Pixar’s overlooked gem arrives in a worthwhile collector’s edition bursting with features and exceptional A/V presentation.
Andy Fickman’s Parental Guidance offers a confused and flat portrayal of generational differences.
It’s refreshing to experience a Pixar film in the theater with a head and heart full of nostalgia instead of expectations.
Peter Hyams’s Running Scared is one of the finest examples of The Jungle Fever Cookie Buddy Movie.
To be, or not to be. Kenneth Branagh’s seminal Hamlet is as conflicted and vital as life itself.
It’s plain to see why 20th Century Fox dumped the film in January.
A stunning release of one of Pixar’s most sadly underappreciated works.
What ultimately makes it more than a dude-ranch version of the first hour of Deliverance is its ability to make fun of itself.
A different way of tackling the sons-and-fathers story, but right up there with the best of them.
A film of remarkable forwardness, honesty, and humor, built, like all fairy tales, around one message, summed up late in the script.
Lacking the commentaries and home-video footage that graced previous DVD releases, this pedestrian set hardly excites.
In the film’s doting view, there’s no great subtext, no great mystery, to Rickles’s success or appeal.
This amusingly introspective family film, despite its self-analytical conceit, never devolves into cloying narcissism.
It’s sad but not surprising that the best part of this Analyze That package is the dorky mob game in the features department.
The film is burned by endless slow patches and, ultimately, feels painfully routine.
Parents should be prepared to sit in front of the television for hours on end before getting through half the extras available here.
The film’s humor is snappy, its attention to detail outstanding.
The only thing it gets right is that the P.R. flack will oftentimes forgo human decency while hawking and defending their shoddy products.