With tonight’s episode, the writers of Game of Thrones continue the trend of organizing each episode of season two around a different theme.
After last week’s remarkable season premiere of Game of Thrones, “The Night Lands” is a bit of a letdown.
The most exciting thing about the season-two premiere of Game of Thrones is its refreshing sense of focus.
The new season introduces an assortment of fresh environments, expertly visualized by the show’s tremendous production values and adept crew.
This Blu-ray release of Game of Thrones is the best way to field test your high-definition, DTS home entertainment system.
Following from that stunning close-up that opens the show, Game of Thrones does its best work in the close-up mode.
The film takes the audience’s homophobia as a given and then uses that bias as the springboard for a round of alleged comedy.
The film is a tone-deaf odyssey of personal discovery striving to echo Dante’s Inferno.
Andrew Adamson puts far less energy into moral dilemmas than into an unfunny talking mouse lamely reminiscent of the Shrek director’s Puss in Boots.
A film like Underdog is best defined by its complete lack of distinction.
A strained farce in which lots of one-dimensional Brits converge at the memorial service for their family’s patriarch and proceed to act like buffoons.
This storybook fable never overplays its cutesiness, but it also fails to figure out what it wants to be.
Season four has provided an almost circular feel to the series, and in a recent interview, Ryan Murphy seemed unsure as to the possibility of the series continuing.
Greg Pritikin’s mockumentary proves that satirizing reality TV is a fool’s errand.
Director Charles Sturridge performs a delicate operation with this latest Lassie movie.
It’s hard to fathom what drew Sidney Lumet to Find Me Guilty aside from the opportunity to once again immerse himself in courtroom wrangling.
The film ultimately chooses to embrace, rather than transcend via zany bawdiness, the schmaltzy genre within which it’s operating.
Make a little room on your shelf for this unassuming DVD edition of The Station Agent. Don’t worry it’ll fit.
The joy of The Station Agent is how McCarthy evokes the loneliness of Finbar’s life using simple stretches of silence.