The film is a collection of old-fogey clichés, with a narrative that mixes a career retrospective with a road trip.
Dog Years is a collection of old-fogey clichés, with a narrative that mixes a career retrospective with a road trip.
One of Sergio Corbucci’s lesser-known westerns is scarred by ludicrous casting, but elevated by the integrity of its punchy filmmaking.
Coppola’s ambition had always been his best friend and worst enemy.
Critically reviled upon release and ripe for reappraisal, the film’s title may (hopefully) prove sweetly prophetic.
Warner's 1080p transfer of the film preserves the haunting, mythic quality of Vilmos Zsigmond's work.
Second only to Leone, Sergio Corbucci is the king of the spaghetti western.
With its mythic production long in the past, Lucky Lady now stands as a highly enjoyable, underappreciated adventure film.
A limited but revealing look at Peter Bogdanovich’s remembrances of cinematic things past.
Only Uwe Boll would assume that the moviegoing public craved a trashy Lord of the Rings rip-off starring Burt Reynolds and Matthew Lillard.
A haunting masterpiece, as mysterious as the deep, dark woods.
This man-versus-nature story is also about man indulging his most uncivilized instincts.
Broken Bridges soft-pedals tired tripe about redemption, reconciliation, and finding solace in the bottle.
Played for laughs, the extras collected on this unrated DVD of The Dukes of Hazzard will hardly summon a chuckle.
Jay Chandrasekhar’s film is at least a loyal dog.
It overflows with so many gay-centric gags that it’s a wonder the filmmakers didn’t utilize the film’s title for a penis-related pun.
“Outrageous and zany,” says Jeffrey Lyons. Words to die by.
John Boorman may be the worst thing to happen to hillbillies and banjo music.