Men at Work is patient zero for the plague of Charlie Sheen movies that infected the 1990s.
The second season of Anger Management is mostly a depressing slog, lacking even the calculated urgency that characterized the first season.
The film’s indulgence of its central, vaguely monstrous figure is as stunning as its not-so-casual misogyny.
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.”
MGM has backed their impressive transfer of Stone’s masterwork with an abundance of all-encompassing extras.
The film feels familiar because every tabloid or celebrity story of the past 30 years has followed the exact same outline.
A fascinating specimen of modern-day American power lust, a tragic moral lesson our financial players have yet to learn.
Paramount’s production team clearly took the day off when it came time to bring Ferris Bueller to Blu-ray.
Ferris’s upbringing allows him the luxury of flitting all he wants like he actually earns his joie de vivre.
Greed may be good, but this anniversary edition of Oliver Stone’s humorless ’80s satire is exceedingly generous with extras.
Oliver Stone’s attack on the excesses of the Me Decade could easily be dubbed Mr. Smith Goes to Wall Street.
Surviving better than it should, Red Dawn comes to teach a new generation about the perils of commie invasions.
Released in the midst of renewed Cold War nuclear dread, Red Dawn doesn’t starve for unintended wackiness.
With baseball season underway, it’s perfect timing to bring back this quotable classic.
Comedy is the lasting virtue here.
Veteran. Agitator. Provocateur. Bully. Conspiracy nut. Patriot.
Does Elmore Leonard sell the rights to his novels only after filmmakers agree to use “It’s Your Thing” on the soundtrack?
Okay, so the scene where Pamela Anderson talks to Jennie McCarthy’s severed head is kind of funny, but that’s about it.
The film’s anticlimactic big heist unspools with all the excitement of watching ice melt.
Even the usually reliable Leslie Nielsen looks baffled by his involvement in this dud.