Hulk is a surprisingly thorny exploration of the rotten heart of the military-industrial complex.
Criterion’s Blu-ray provides a comprehensive window into Streisand’s creative process.
Angel Has Fallen Review: Rick Roman Waugh Paints an Incoherent Picture of an Action Hero
The film seems to have cobbled its set pieces together from a series of close-ups edited as if by random selection.
The film’s sporadic intensity springs from the filmmaker’s implicative complicity with his main character.
The kind of wholly misconceived thriller that begs asking precisely what its filmmakers were seeking to accomplish.
Stone’s most underrated movie is a dark comic fantasy of sin and futility as well as one of the craziest and most beautiful of all noirs.
It ultimately offers little more than another opportunity for famous actors to indulge their fetishistic, inadvertently condescending impressions of “everyday” people.
It’s hard to avoid feeling that the film would have worked better with Danko flying solo.
Robert Redford’s film is blindly cocooned by its own nostalgic self-regard.
Parker’s not so much broad or inclusive as weirdly schizophrenic.
Gangster Squad is a perfect example of Hollywood hypocrisy.
What very good company Robert Redford keeps indeed.
Go back to the first episode of Luck and you’ll see how much is made of a little goat (known for his giant testicles) that hangs out in Turo’s barn.
Sopranos director Allen Coulter gives us a taste of what the darker Luck many of us had been wishing for might have been like.
As in creator David Milch’s previous HBO shows, one of Luck’s central themes concerns the building of a community.
There’s no getting around the fact that this week’s episode of Luck was overstuffed with exposition.
Lots of folks go missing in the movies, and some of the most memorable are right here in this list.
Milch-speak, as it’s referred to, is made more impenetrable in Luck than it is in his period-accurate Deadwood.
These horses aren’t just lucky talismans; they also possess a purity of spirit that rehabilitates many of the show’s jaded characters.
Christopher Plummer has earned this year’s “It’s time” with absolutely no resistance.