Fright Night fearlessly blends horror and comedy into one fetching confection.
Season one of Rod Serling’s horror and fantasy anthology series gets a stunning 2K makeover, backed by a roster of informative extras.
Olive Films continues their upgraded Signature series with yet another impressive repackaging of a prior release.
The Legend of Hell House is a regrettably just-competent adaptation of a great American horror novel.
Dirty Mary Crazy Larry boasts its fair share of quotable dialogue ranging between wistful philosophizing, off-the-cuff calumny, and cornball caricature.
The film tackles the perpetually diminishing rights of the proletariat, and whether human dignity itself is its own reward.
Olive Films offers the long cut with the Scottish accents intact, and in 1080p, it looks, well, it looks really, really depressing.
Planet of the Apes addresses racial animus with a boldness unusual for a Hollywood entertainment produced in the strife-torn America of 1968.
Some long overdue appreciation is due for the best American example of a cinematic tale of the undead from the 1980s.
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.
An allegory in which the subtext out-bullhorns the text itself, this punk trend-hitching, teen actioneer skimps on little.
If Lester really believes Class of 1984 prefigured Columbine, then he must truly believe some kids really do deserve to get taken out. Sick.