A more-than-competent transfer of one of American cinema's unsung gems, but Ed Wood deserves Criterion-level respect.
Bad reputations can follow films and their makers for years (even decades) after the initial theatrical release.
It pains me to admit just how obnoxious The Pest is because it has all the ingredients of the kind of guilty pleasure I love.
Antonia Bird’s Ravenous is an exciting, new kind of gothic horror film.
Ferris’s upbringing allows him the luxury of flitting all he wants like he actually earns his joie de vivre.
Paramount’s production team clearly took the day off when it came time to bring Ferris Bueller to Blu-ray.
Tim Burton’s imagination jumped into the saddle and held onto the bridle with Beetlejuice.
Daylight comes to Beetlejuice in this anniversary DVD, but apparently the bonus features wan’ go home.
Who’s Your Caddy? is a fiasco that never met a crass stereotype it didn’t milk for lowest-common-denominator laughs.
The final season of a television masterpiece. Bring on those movies, HBO!
Deep down, you just knew that Whitney Ellsworth was too good to live.
The show depicts human beings as they are—scatterbrained, selfish, myopic, sometimes viciously cruel.
Deadwood has never shied away from theatrical flourishes that make metaphors concrete.
The episode feels like a summation of the show’s thoughts on what it means to be mortal.
Among hardcore Deadwood fans, a discussion of favorite characters could go back and forth for hours.
In Deadwood, no one incident is isolated; it inevitably touches everyone and everything, reverberating throughout a community now readying itself for its first legal elections.
As Deadwood has acquired more and more of civilization’s trappings, Merrick has come increasingly to the fore.
HBO’s Deadwood, which begins its second season tonight, is the greatest dramatic series in the history of American television.
The Hunt for Red October is a thrilling edge-of-your-seat trifle that has admirably withstood the test of time.
Free of Harrison Ford’s noble-beyond-belief portrayal of Jack Ryan, The Hunt for Red October remains the best Tom Clancy adaptation to date.