The film’s world is so hermetically sealed that it seems to have been intended only for writer-director Emily Hubley’s pleasure.
Did Zak Penn’s The Grand, an improvisational comedy set in the world of poker, cast itself?
It’s not a demanding proposition, but after The Golden Compass, Alvin and the Chipmunks feels like rocket science.
This expertly executed but hollow exercise in imaginative biography reveals next to nothing about Bob Dylan.
She’s the Man is a Twelfth Night for the ninth-grade set.
For the most part, those young and old fans of the classic children’s books will find much to enjoy about this sprightly adaptation.
At times, it’s difficult to determine if Arrested Development is good or just really fast.
The DVD for is rather pedestrian, but luckily the film is extraordinary enough to stand on its own.
Joel attempts to fight the erasure in his own mind, and Eternal Sunshine admits early on that it’s a fight he cannot win.
Finally, the legion of yowling Ben Stiller Show fans can swallow this DVD and shut their stinking traps.
Serious film-lovers may need to take a shower afterward but this meaty DVD edition of Men in Black II will keep fans happily occupied.
Now that ImClone has brought Martha Stewart back to planet Earth, her superhuman tricks don’t feel quite so superhuman anymore.
The quality of Scary Movie 2 can only be measured by the ratio between what jokes work and what jokes don’t.