These three films chart one of the most meteoric career rises in Hollywood history.
For all the thrills provided by its pioneering pageantry, the film leaves you with a soul-nagging query: What price entertainment?
Fox’s Blu-ray may be the reference disc of the year so far, with unimpeachable audio and video and a host of strong extras to boot.
The film’s action boasts some of the most sturdy, coherent direction to mark a giant-scale blockbuster in some time.
Twenty-six years after its release, it’s difficult not to watch Terminator 2: Judgment Day through a scrim of irony.
Linda Hamilton gets so little due respect over the years for how much of the film’s midsection rides on her.
Irony, sarcasm, or tactful and disciplined minimalism? Those are the cinematic realms through which this director just cannot, ever, pass.
A 90-minute geek-out session, with James Cameron’s technological obsessiveness and persistent perfectionism on full display as he strives to achieve his goal.
The ultimate takeaway here is that predicting this category is a total crapshoot—that, or we don’t know shit.
Believe it or not, there’s an interesting idea lurking inside Dead Heat.
Beyond being asinine and unwittingly cryptic, the film is also a slice of unintentional sleaze.
Like Avatar before it, Life of Pi is the kind of Oscar-y prestige pic that also stands as a benchmark for the medium.
Check out which films feel shy of making our list of the greatest films of the 1990s.
The film is a bit unwieldy in scope and in danger of being made obsolete by the next version of the RED camera.
The highly subjective task of compiling a list of the 10 best films of all time is nearly as daunting as the thought that plagues every film completist.
Critics get a bad wrap for being “out of touch” with the masses, but Tomatometer listings indicate that critics have been surprisingly forgiving of superhero fare.
You’re not going to find a grander spectacle in theaters right now, and the truth is, you haven’t found too many in the last 15 years.
Eventually we’re sure to get a proper Blu-ray release of this film, probably around the release of Terminator V.
Avatar looks more like a cartoon on the small screen than it did in theaters, but anyone who owns a Pixar film on video knows that isn’t meant as a slam.
So, curses to you, once again, robots!