Mike White’s series remains TV’s most intriguing and precise murder mystery-cum-social satire.
You could say that the real message that sums up the film is that no humans are bad.
Brad’s Status resonates because Mike White clearly sees Brad’s faults but refuses to judge him for them.
Despite its gestures toward nuance, the very broadness of the dichotomies in the film prove to be its undoing.
Third time’s the charm for Shout! Factory, whose new Blu-ray box set marks the show’s most definitive home-video release yet.
The film uses its male-on-male boundary-leaping to give the shopworn man-boy narrative a refresh.
Throughout, Helen Hunt obsequiously tends to her character’s evolution as a parent through a flagrant indulgence of sitcom-ish scenarios.
Unremarkable films propped up by exceptional lead performances are as much a certainty of the autumnal season as yellow leaves and pumpkin patches.
That Enlightened’s propagandist and activist message is tinged with irony only makes it more perfectly tooled to our times.
Laura Dern’s performance deftly encapsulates every facet of Amy’s sadness, anger, and buffoonishness.
Jared Hess still seems to see his characters as little more than objects of comedic fun.
Minor but moving, it’s a story about, and for, outsiders—and PETA members as well.
Throughout, Jack Black’s accented delivery is consistently and hilariously passionate.
Yes, it’s an excellent DVD package, but most importantly: Now you can watch VH1’s “Save the Music” PSA whenever you want.
For those responsible for the joyous School of Rock, we salute you.
Good for a Saturday night with friends, though not one for the permanent collection.
Randall Wallace does great things with Native American myth yet there’s no real flair to his visual palette.
Mike White’s jokes are genuinely cutting, especially when boredom and drugs give way to slippery sexuality.