A cult film receives a sterling A/V transfer, while its miscalculation of a sequel makes its high-def debut.
In its fifth season, the series manages to make its steady flow of transformations feel organic and endearing.
The film follows its predecessor in being broadly concerned with comforting notions of home and family.
With the exception of a feature-length making-of doc, this release is identical to the previous Blu-ray edition of the classic comedy.
Give this Blu-ray ribbon for improved A/V quality. Otherwise, Warner supplies exactly the same extras package as before.
American Reunion is admittedly a bit of a relief after the cynical and indifferently made American Pie 2.
Madea’s Witness Protection is the funniest Madea film yet.
You can always go home again according to American Reunion.
Hockey is reduced to a sport in which team play and goals are mere diversions from main-event fist fights in Goon.
Crying with Laughter begins as a captivating character piece, only to turn into a breezy “mystery” thriller with plot holes.
Taking Woodstock fails to immerse us in the visceral feeling of being at the titular iconic event.
The disc’s image quality is so reprehensible it makes it impossible to enjoy Catherine O’Hara’s great performance.
In For Your Consideration, Catherine O’Hara masterfully delineates the stages of her character’s excitement over the awards buzz.
Catherine O’Hara is the rare comic who never plays scenes for cheap laughs, and amazingly bags every one.
The film timidly lands on an underdeveloped middle ground between skewering and embracing mass-market consumerism.
For the most part, those young and old fans of the classic children’s books will find much to enjoy about this sprightly adaptation.
Cheaper by the Dozen 2 is far more concerned with pat platitudes than it is with sex.
The Ghosts of Christmas Past, Showtime, and Taxi seemingly haunt every shot of the film.
SCTV’s portrayal of a world obsessed with the culture of mass media is in full bloom here.
Perhaps SCTV at its peak, this set is also essential for John Candy’s vinegary impersonation of Divine singing raunchy Christmas carols.