Criterion offers a lovely transfer of one of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers’s most enduring films.
Criterion grants the royal treatment to the first film to team Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy.
It’s going to take a whole lot more than 3,000 limited edition copies of this Blu-ray to help The Only Game in Town finally turn a profit.
It’s generally agreed that films fall into one of three categories: The Good, The Bad, and the So-Bad-It’s-Good.
This box set is a great reminder of why the screen couple has long endured as one of the most attractive romantic duos to ever come out of Hollywood.
Who needs perfection when you’ve got this much sheer, joyful grace?
Imaginary Witness is the most dispassionate account of the Holocaust in the last 20 years.
This is unrepresentative set of films starring one of the five major American screen actresses of all time.
The pain of Swing Time lies in the apotheosis of its dances.
Swing Time is Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers’s masterpiece.
Giant still has a reputation as a fine film, and it will no doubt go on boring audiences forever and a day, and then another day after that.
Giant defines the word interminable, and watching it just once is guaranteed to lop at least a year off your life.