This is an outstanding 4K release of one of Romero’s most pleasurably rewatchable films.
The second season of Rod Serling’s horror anthology series looks downright cinematic in HD.
Paramount’s newly remastered 4K transfer ensures that the film looks better than it ever has on home video.
Shout! Factory’s impressive disc honors the film with a restoration transfer and a slew of meaty extras.
David Zucker and the Freeing of the Id: Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell of Fear and 33 1/3: The Final Insult
Thankfully, on the whole, the irksome traces of David Zucker’s political worldview get outpaced by some of the most winning slapstick inanity in American cinema.
Stan Helsing’s satire-on-satire approach is little more than a crutch for newfound levels of brazen stupidity and filmmaking laziness.
There’s one defining moment in An American Carol that assures you this is a David Zucker film.
The film panders to those short on memory as if its central inspiration, Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man, were just released last week.
The film is scary all right, usually for all the wrong reasons.
Producer Irwin Allen’s first of a neverending cycle of disaster epics is a guilty pleasure to end all guilty pleasures.
The new edition of The Poseidon Adventure is as hefty as Shelly Winters.
The Scary Movie franchise seems well on its way to becoming as indestructible as Jason Voorhees or Freddy Krueger.
Once the film’s fanatics find out that this edition is mostly a gussied-up replay of the previous one, the shit’ll really hit the fan.
The films of Frank Tashlin, Jerry Lewis, and Hope and Crosby all worked the same territory, ZAZ just took it as far as it would go without snapping.
Okay, so the scene where Pamela Anderson talks to Jennie McCarthy’s severed head is kind of funny, but that’s about it.
Even the usually reliable Leslie Nielsen looks baffled by his involvement in this dud.