John Landis’s landmark horror-comedy takes another bite out of Blu-ray, this time with a colorful new 4K HDR transfer.
Landis’s landmark horror-comedy gets a colorful new transfer, as well as a pack of new bonus materials.
One of the festival’s genuine, if lower-key highlights, which lent focus to its literary origins as well as to its filmmakers, was Intruder in the Dust.
This one begins like a pleasantly hazy post-pubescent fever dream.
Few directors are as enamored with the passage of time and the preservation of memory as Richard Linklater.
The Kentucky Fried Movie proves the maxim, “comedy is in the eye of the beholder.”
One of my most memorable and, in a way, profound early movie-watching experiences happened the first time I saw Eddie Murphy in Coming to America.
Burke and Hare is essentially a series of multiplex-ready clichés adorning a weakly scandalous premise.
It’s weird to think that this category has only been around since 1981, when Rick Baker won for his iconic makeup effects for An American Werewolf in London.
It seems to miss the irony of what the recent proliferation of faux-exploitation films actually partially represents.
John Landis directs the whole thing as though it were a pleasant distraction.
In the film’s doting view, there’s no great subtext, no great mystery, to Rickles’s success or appeal.
Greg Pritikin’s mockumentary proves that satirizing reality TV is a fool’s errand.