Game of Thrones’s best season yet comes with a typically great transfer and enough extras to please devotees for days.
Whether you pay the gold price or the iron price, HBO’s top-notch box set of the show’s second season is well-worth the investment.
David Benioff and D.B. Weiss try too hard to introduce an elemental aspect to Game of Thrones’s focus on the nature of power.
After last week’s remarkable season premiere of Game of Thrones, “The Night Lands” is a bit of a letdown.
This Blu-ray release of Game of Thrones is the best way to field test your high-definition, DTS home entertainment system.
Minor Sheridan, perhaps, but freakishly well-acted by Toby Maguire and young actresses Bailee Madison and Taylor Geare.
Jim Sheridan has a gift for capturing glimpses of unvarnished, authentic emotion, and his humanism runs so deep that it’s capable of elevating even standard-issue fare like Brothers.
Here, Logan is a blandly brooding bore too grumpy to be a prototypical do-gooder yet too noble to be a cold-blooded antihero.
Righteousness has rarely been conveyed on screen with such shrillness.
The disc’s image is clean and sleek and the soundtrack is deep and bassy.
Stay is a tricked-out look at mental crisis.
Rex Reed called it “an action spectacle of weight, splendor and vast entertainment value.” Make of that what you will.
Wolfgang Peterson’s sturdy film is largely faithful in recreating the basic elements of Homer’s cumbersome narrative.
Not your average Spike Lee joint, but still a sensitive evocation of one man’s moral crisis set amid a city’s even bigger one.
With all of its oversights and indulgences, 25th Hour is still a persuasive, undeniably fascinating film.