Arrow gives one of De Palma’s most moving films the long-overdue masterpiece treatment.
The only past that Dial of Destiny is interested in plundering is the glory of its predecessors.
The film extends into impactful hyperbole the tensions inherent in being subjects of and subjects to incessant surveillance.
Paramount Home Entertainment’s UHD discs add to an already impressive 4K roster for Spielberg’s filmography.
David Koepp is a fatally un-obsessive craftsman, one who’s fashioned a horror film that resembles a tasteful coffee table book.
Too much is at stake, leading to formulaic plot filler and exposition that snuff out the spark of the early scenes.
Ron Howard’s adaptation retains the essential inanity of author Dan Brown’s source material.
To have the film’s youth restored in a new HD transfer is, like you at the L’Oréal counter, worth it.
Paramount’s Blu-ray has both brawn and brains, but as a reboot, Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit is a largely retrograde mission.
In keeping his actors on his sober-yet-buoyant plane, Kenneth Branagh presents a convincing romance that doesn’t stall the film’s brisk clip.
Now a 20-year-old antique slapped with a superfluous 3D transfer, Jurassic Park still has the power to amaze.
A spry, inventive antidote to American blockbuster bloat.
This is a necessary package for any fan of the franchise.
The narrative is just a vehicle for action, the contents of the envelope simply the MacGuffin that drives the plot.
These shacks have giddily opened their doors to audiences through the years.
A geriatric summer adventure in which the appearance of action takes the place of the real thing.
The film may not be Raiders of the Lost Ark, but it’s hardly Spielberg and Lucas raping your childhood hero.
Ricky Gervais’s cutting bon mots and regular bouts of indignant stammering keep the film more dry and sharp than broad and squishy.
Equilibrium is a condition all too rarely achieved by the bloated Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.
In its own way, the film is just as stylized a take on the crime genre as something like Warren Beatty’s Dick Tracy.