Criterion’s perfect 4K A/V transfer and loaded extras give Uncut Gems the deluxe treatment that it deserves.
With an overload of winking, Kay Cannon’s Cinderella displays a contemptuous attitude toward fairy tales in general.
Woke Disney, trying to navigate a tricky representational path, steps all over itself throughout.
In Josh and Benny Safdie’s film, a man’s individual tragedy illuminates the emptiness of the systems that define him.
Luckily for Tom Kitt, he was in his dorm room when opportunity knocked.
If/Then has all the emotional subtlety of a Nicholas Sparks novel.
The film’s empowering themes of feminine strengths and bonds eventually flourish in novel fashion.
As with so much of Disney’s female-centric fantasies, the energetic film eventually peddles the same old ass-backward messages.
A show queen couldn’t possibly do any better for the Broadway beat than Dori Berinstein’s breezy, affectionate valentine to the Great White Way.
When you get right down to it, Ask the Dust is unforgivably dull as dishwater.
Rent-heads will shriek for joy when they encounter the supplemental materials available on this two-disc DVD edition.
Debra Kirschner’s The Tollbooth has all the nuance of a stun gun.
Virtually no musical number transpires without an array of swirling indifference, undermining a lot of the drama.