Mike Flanagan reimagines Poe’s oeuvre as a nimble, tonally capacious collection of fables.
The intriguing and occasionally terrifying Fire in the Sky shimmers with maximum menace on this Blu-ray edition.
Mike Flanagan’s Midnight Mass exudes a narcotic pull in everything from its aesthetics to monologues that suggest the weight of confession.
Mike Flanagan’s Gerald’s Game is the rare Stephen King adaptation to be undone by the story itself.
Ouija: Origin of Evil complements its goose-pimply frights with an unabashedly naked emotional gravitas.
Rosie Grier let kids know that it’s all right to cry. E.T. gave kids, adults, and aliens no choice in the matter.
Alas, The Last Ride isn’t a bracing anti-hagiography in the tradition of Cobb.
This list is likely the only one to put Nicole Kidman in the company of Lori Loughlin.
A remarkable image and sound presentation dignifies this DVD release of Hallström’s latest cheesefest.
As midwinter sudsers go, you could do a lot worse than Dear John.
The only people who can possibly learn something from a movie like The Last Sin Eater are those who follow blindly.
Talented filmmakers working on material from genre aficionados, yielding uneven results.
Martin Scorsese’s Gangs of New York could be considered a breakthrough or a breakdown.