At least Diane Keaton, fleetingly vamping with 50 Cent or kissing a frog, seems like a plausibly fun breakfast anchor.
Essential in the truest sense of the word.
Callie Khouri’s film is unbelievable, slapdash, and idiotic in virtually every respect.
It’s so good on divorce, plate-smashing fights, and the bad behavior of disappointed lovers that it remains a small classic.
The film is a major, unwieldy film about breaking up.
Stop sawing logs, this is the definitive Twin Peaks DVD box set.
Don’t rent or buy this movie...because I said so!
It’s worth considering where The Sopranos fits in the pantheon of great mob stories that have been committed to film.
CBS DVD in association with Paramount presents the second season of Twin Peaks in near-pristine 1.33:1 hi-definition transfers.
Welcome to the rom-com in the age of Must Love Dogs.
A handsome, unsatisfying DVD of a handsome, unsatisfying epic.
Reds is finally just an appealingly conventional epic movie-star romance with radical trimmings.
In fighting off waves of melancholy over Deadwood’s premature demise, it’s helpful to reflect on the improbability of the show’s existence.
It’s so contrived and smugly pleased with its own tolerant attitudes that it comes off as a rank slice of Christmas cheese.
Sending up Jack Nicholson’s real-life penchant for dating younger women, the film benefits greatly from his rascally screen presence.