Johnson’s film is effectively a light-hearted version of David Fincher’s The Game.
The A/V transfers and extras on this collection will satisfy even the most obsessed Star Trek fan.
George Clooney’s film is a coming-of-age story that feels as if it was conceived inside of a lab.
The film offers chaos by the yard with no real stakes or emotional reverberations.
Writer-director Shana Feste’s film alternates between cutesy comedy and undercooked emotional drama.
No one in Zach Braff’s Going in Style seems to really know what the hell they’re doing or why.
It comes unsettlingly close to being an apologia for the kind of violence that stems from adolescent disaffection.
The film lets Marty and Doc honestly and truly understand each other for the first time in the series.
Whereas a single, stinging one-liner would have sufficed Tourneur or Lang, Miller’s overcompensating flood of pulpy dialogue only renders his characters flat and sans empathy.
Is there some sort of a deep political hypothesis nibbling on a carrot and overseeing the action in this film?
It may be a cartoon, but the film’s deep engagement with municipal history is very much real.
Delhi Safari makes the second-rate output of DreamWorks Animation look dazzling by comparison.
Reviewing The Oogieloves in the Big Balloon Adventure from an adult perspective is essentially fruitless.
Clue arrives on Blu-ray with little in the way of extras to sort out its brilliant showcase of comedic performances.
Both literally and figuratively, Piranha 3DD lacks guts.
Image’s barren single-disc of this cheeky fairy tale is essential for Roeg-ians, but an optional curiosity for most.
I’m not sure what part of Snowmen doesn’t scream completely inappropriate, sentimental Manichean drivel.
The 3D-enhanced death sequences are tailor-made for those who always wanted to take an ax to the MTV Beach House.
The film remains a stunning collective of method acting and 1970s social critique.
Piranha 3D proves a worthy heir to its brazen exploitation-cinema forefathers.