Stop sawing logs, this is the definitive Twin Peaks DVD box set.
With all the characters busily turning their lemons into lemonade, this film risks little and demands nothing from the viewer save tears of empathy.
CBS DVD in association with Paramount presents the second season of Twin Peaks in near-pristine 1.33:1 hi-definition transfers.
Though this is the story of only one pilot, the film would almost have us believe all bad sitcoms happen on purpose.
Until someone truly reinvents the stagnant romantic-comedy genre, trifles like Bart Freundlich’s Trust the Man will have to suffice.
It’s hard to ask for much from this movie, what with it being digitally drawn in basic, web-friendly cartoon animation.
Queer Duck: The Movie has the homespun charm of an early season of The Simpsons.
It’s awkward and atrocious in equal measure, though still possessing a somewhat admirable earnestness and sincerity.
Mirroring the anything-goes nature of the film it accompanies, the disc’s commentary turns on a dime between the serious and the humorous.
The very title of Michael Tolkin’s film evokes slippery visions of both spirit and sex.
Connie and Carla allows Nia Vardalos to showcase her abject desire to mug for the camera.
The film is too fixated with its own self-reflexivity to ever be about anything in particular.
At the very least, Zoolander is the most superficially good looking DVD of the year.
It’s a one-joke movie, but a funny one nonetheless.
Sometimes a fart joke is just a fart joke and sometimes a fart joke manages to transcend its mediocrity.