The film does Nicholas Winton a disservice by reducing his heroics to the stuff of facts.
A film as misshapen and compelling as its central creature, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is a beautiful monstrosity in 4K.
Though The House is handsomely made, the anthology series as a whole lacks a sturdy foundation.
When Enola Holmes teeters, it’s due to an unwillingness to commit to an audience.
The series homes in on the growing chasm between royal expectations and public norms.
Part of the pleasure of Gary Ross’s film lies in watching it turn a typically male-dominated genre on its head.
The new trailer for Ocean’s 8 reminds us, more than once, that committing a crime can be deliciously fun.
The film doesn’t clear the CGI cobwebs or successfully anchor any of its new events with emotional heft.
The film’s episodes and attitudes register with searing immediacy while feeling true to their time period.
Criterion’s 4K Blu-ray masterfully displays what makes Merchant Ivory productions a continued commercial attraction.
The filmmakers cut the film to emphasize the story’s familiar plot points, rather than highlight any instances of personal visual artistry.
Branagh fully understands the societal critique underlying the tale, and brings it out into the open.
Verbinski’s real purdy (and genuinely entertaining) big-budget western has been snuck out on video under cover of darkness.
The crashes, bangs, and booms are no less numbing than anything else you’ve seen in this summer of garbage blockbusters.
Everything in the film, songs included, is cranked to 11, the melodrama of it all soaring.
Warner’s Blu-ray release of Tim Burton’s latest underpraised ode to resurrection and individuality looks and sounds spectacular.
Throughout, Michell and screenwriter Richard Nelson keep you at arm’s length from Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The film recalls bloated misfires of decades past like The Witches of Eastwick and Dracula.
The film is agreeable in everything but its treatment of Helena Bonham Carter’s monstrous embodiment of lower-class pettiness.
David Yates finds limitless opportunity to depict smallness and stillness in chaos and hubbub.