Arrow gives one of De Palma’s most moving films the long-overdue masterpiece treatment.
Kino Lorber’s release marks the long-overdue arrival of Todd Haynes’s ravishing melodrama on Blu-ray.
Criterion continues to polish their gold standard with their release of David Fincher’s most underrated and unseen masterpiece.
The funny thing about the movie isn’t its failure-to-launch humor, but the weird mess of life that rushes in despite it.
Will Sylvester Stallone receive residuals from Real Steel?
The Box wrestles with issues of greed, altruism, and one’s vital place in the (local, global, universal) community.
Jake Goldberger has lassoed a great cast to ham it up in this comical homage to Billy Wilder’s classic noirs.
Director Mark Brokaw, making an ill-advised leap from stage to screen, never finds a worthy tone for the film.
An American Affair piggybacks the pubescent sexual awakening sapfest onto the JFK assassination conspiracy thriller.
The film is beholden to high-concept gobbledygook that has almost no bearing on its mystery’s conclusion
In its own way, the film is just as stylized a take on the crime genre as something like Warren Beatty’s Dick Tracy.
This Saturday-morning vision is neither sweet nor complicated enough to credibly evince the mysteries and challenges of growing up.
What do any of its random acts of humor really have to do with the Hollywood industry?
Haynes’s remarkable use of mirrors emphasizes the emotional distance between characters and the sad way they avoid confrontation.
It’s just not as funny as it deserves to be.