Allegedly containing the largest cast in history, Movie 43’s cornucopia of A- and B-listers never come together as a true ensemble.
Get ready to dig your fingernails into your palms all over again.
Tim and Eric’s defining trait is that they seem too soft-spoken to wield brickbats against established orders.
There’s something highly endearing about the directness of the movie’s charm.
Breaking Bad is a complete work, one thought out long in advance and unfolding in its own time.
It’s an immersive and harrowing tale of moral decay and conflicted identity.
What does it mean anymore to be a father? We still roughly know what it means to be a mother. Indeed, we rather know it in our bones.
Every character has had multiple moments in the run of the show to pull back, to change course, to reverse the path they have headed down.
If Breaking Bad began heading downhill rapidly last week, this week, it lets off the brake, heading into what appears to be the second season’s final act.
“Better Call Saul” is the kind of episode that made me get interested in television in the first place.
With The Brothers Solomon, Will Arnett continues to squander the goodwill he engendered as Gob on Arrested Development.
The film is a comedy of tremendous miscalculation that doesn’t even have the conviction of its own stupidity.
Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic is mot quite as raunchy as The Aristocrats, but it’s also twice as offensive. Good.
Finally, the legion of yowling Ben Stiller Show fans can swallow this DVD and shut their stinking traps.