Eisenberg’s film doesn’t embraces easy answers or platitudes.
The series offers a surprisingly novel take on its source material, even if the pieces don’t fit together as neatly as they should.
The show’s fourth and final season finds it in full Shakespearean tragedy mode.
No Sudden Move mixes an old-school 1950s noir with a modern sense of social self-consciousness.
The series demystifies the billionaire class while simultaneously painting a terrifying picture of their unstoppable momentum.
Todd Solondz fails to configure the hand-offs of the dachshund in a narratively inventive manner.
Michael Cera discusses his newfound experience as a stage actor and Brooklynite.
See which cake-loving whippersnappers we corralled for this list, a celebration of the filmic fat kid
A film that barely saw the light of day, on a Blu-ray that almost didn’t happen, with an extended cut that fans thought they’d never see.
This is a film that’s more interested in the emotions its characters’ seem subordinate to.
The film’s new DVD release will hopefully prove how long its legs are.
Edgar Wright is cinema’s most inspired mash-up artist, and Scott Pilgrim vs. the World may be his finest hybridization to date.
The film is a cross between Greenberg and The Answer Man, with a few extra helpings of quirk.
Sadists, masochists, wife beaters, and child abusers of the world rejoice.
The film is an obnoxious coming-of-age saga whose ironic characters may as well be rejects from Andy Warhol’s Factory.
The film feeds on the imagination of children and relishes the joy they find in creation.