The script doesn’t contain many lines that ring true, and a few clang wildly off-key.
What’s ultimately chilling about Storage 24 isn’t the horror of the alien’s close-quarters assault.
Jim Sturgess sweats, pants, and emotes with abandon, but Heartless is as witless as its protagonist.
The extras are plentiful, enthusiastic, and, in the typical DVD tradition, mostly redundant.
Though seemingly content to be a B-movie director, Neil Marshall heads further into C-list territory with Centurion.
At some point the Season Four finale of Doctor Who, “Journey’s End,” will stand on its own.
The intersection of the alien and the human is front and center in “Combat,” as disaffected young men seek meaning, Fight Club-style.
The idea that Rose’s travels with the Doctor in some bizarre way brought her family back together is potent stuff.
“The Girl in the Fireplace” may be the crowning achievement of Doctor Who’s second season.
If ever there was any debate about the new series of Doctor Who being an extension of the classic series, tonight’s installment, “School Reunion,” puts an end to it.
Doctor Who isn’t just a TV show, it’s a way of life.
Mike Hodges’s sleek, bleak film may be the year’s nastiest noir, but its low profile won’t improve via Paramount’s perfunctory DVD.
In film noir, you’re doomed if you do and doomed if you don’t.