Lizzie Gottlieb’s documentary is a celebration of a profound, dying privilege.
Still one of the most fun sugar rushes of the year, the film arrives on home video with a shimmering, chromatic video transfer.
The film is an unbroken chain of one-liners, sight gags, and pop-culture references, and the hit-to-miss ratio is high.
The film makes one wish that O’Brien’s woe-is-me harping about his faux-tragic The Tonight Show fate would finally stop.
What’s up with the ’70s cop show parodies?
Queer Duck: The Movie has the homespun charm of an early season of The Simpsons.
It’s hard to ask for much from this movie, what with it being digitally drawn in basic, web-friendly cartoon animation.
A hearty DVD package but strictly for that special pre-schooler and Robin Williams completist in your life.
Chris Wedge’s Robots more or less confirms that production studio Blue Sky is likely to be remembered as the Jan to Pixar’s Marcia and PDI’s Cindy.
Todd Solondz is sensitive to criticism, a fear he hypocritically lays bare throughout Storytelling.