Criterion’s Blu-ray release of Neil Jordan’s Mona Lisa offers a superb upgrade on the A/V front and a few new extras to boot.
Is there some sort of a deep political hypothesis nibbling on a carrot and overseeing the action in this film?
I was so excited to see the film as a kid that I nearly vomited after getting my ticket punched.
It may be a cartoon, but the film’s deep engagement with municipal history is very much real.
Criterion continues to show enduring love for Gilliam’s wondrous magnum opus with their generous Blu-ray package.
The film updates the fairest fairy tale of them all with more-grim-than-Grimm conviction.
A handsome Blu-ray presentation of a film that largely plays like one of those video game cutscenes you can’t skip.
Will Made in Dagenham finally win Sally Hawkins the Oscar nod denied her two years ago for Happy-Go-Lucky?
The Long Good Friday is both a classic British gangster film and a potent political commentary about Western urbanization.
Robert Zemeckis is as committed to motion-capture CG animation as Ebenezer Scrooge is to pinching pennies.
Nixon is a staggering work of empathy for Stone.
An epic film deserves an epic DVD treatment, and Nixon gets one.
Its vision of humanity rewound to a feudal state of being is pulpy and smart, though the film is more likely to be remembered as the longest car commercial ever made.
Neil Marshall’s film thrives on the basis of chic, iconic imagery, juxtaposing eras new and old in a violent upheaval of social values.
Welcome to the seedy demimonde of the club Paradise, where Abel Ferrara probes the dreams of lives less ordinary, including his own.
This is definitely one of those films made of moments greater than the whole.
In Paris Je T’aime, 18 renowned directors contribute star-studded vignettes about amour, each set in a different Parisian neighborhood.
The duality between what one has/wants and what one is/desires to be proves to be a lackluster thematic spine.
The disc’s image is clean and sleek and the soundtrack is deep and bassy.
With Mrs. Henderson Presents, Stephen Frears offers Judi Dench a Being Julia to call her own.