Pixar’s superfluous but characteristically touching epilogue for its flagship franchise gets an equally fond send-off on home video.
The film seamlessly interweaves fun escapades and earnest emotions, but it lacks the visual power of its predecessor.
Any film festival dedicated exclusively to the treasures, glories, and the occasional folly of the past is likely to be visited by ghosts.
One of Roger Corman’s leanest, meanest, most disturbing, and ambitious films receives primo Blu-ray treatment courtesy of Kino.
Tears tell no lies in the end: Toy Story 3 is sketchy, but it's also profoundly moving.
Tears tell no lies in the end: Toy Story 3 is sketchy, but it’s also profoundly moving.
Toy Story does the impossible in casting us up.
In the film’s doting view, there’s no great subtext, no great mystery, to Rickles’s success or appeal.
A competent package that should help overthrow the reductive image of Corman as a mere impresario of schlock.
It’s hard to imagine a documentary more foul-mouthed—or jaw-droppingly, side-splittingly hilarious—than The Aristocrats.