JFK still stands as possibly the purest camp artifact of American political cinema.
A cult film receives a sterling A/V transfer, while its miscalculation of a sequel makes its high-def debut.
Kino’s release should help bring new eyes to this wonderfully offbeat Canadian thriller.
To movie fans, JFK is the centerpiece for any defense of the persuasive powers of the medium.
Howard Deutch’s film is about manufactured nostalgia, bordering on revisionism, bordering on delusion.
With the exception of a feature-length making-of doc, this release is identical to the previous Blu-ray edition of the classic comedy.
The original version of Little Shop of Horrors is finally allowed to run rampant over expectations and popular discretion, as intended.
Brooks’s spoof is, at least in part, about more than just Star Wars.
These shacks have giddily opened their doors to audiences through the years.
An audio-visual tour de force, and perhaps the purest example of Stone’s greatest strengths as a director.
There’s something almost quaint about JFK now.
SCTV’s portrayal of a world obsessed with the culture of mass media is in full bloom here.
Perhaps SCTV at its peak, this set is also essential for John Candy’s vinegary impersonation of Divine singing raunchy Christmas carols.
We’re afraid this set might have priced itself clear out of range of anyone but die-hard SCTV fans.