Chopra discusses the joys of reappraisal, and why she doubts John Hughes could believe in the universes he created on screen.
It’s been a while since Criterion fanatics have gotten to decry a new, cash-grabbing title sullying the purity of their home-movie shelves.
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.
My ’80s adolescence was filled with movies about zombies, aliens, exploding heads, and axe murderers.
What I once hailed as the best movie in the history of the world (I was 13) is an uncomfortable thing that doesn’t rank with its creator’s best.
Funny People is unfocused and very repetitive, both overall and in individual scenes
I know. I can hardly believe the headline either.
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.
Jon Hughes’s frustrated sarcasm branded a generation.
Hey, there’s a reason they call the new DVD the Everything’s Duckie Edition.