No cartoon has ever conveyed the struggle for self-actualization with such an inexpressive sense of imagination as this cheap and glorified babysitter.
Jeremy Snead’s doc comes off more as a commercial for a grand, overarching product that isn’t finished being developed.
Each of these moments illustrates a slightly different shade of the films’ fluid realization of a complex visual, thematic, and emotional spectrum.
This list is likely the only one to put Nicole Kidman in the company of Lori Loughlin.
An insurmountable amount of extras comes second only to New Line’s stunning visual and audio transfer of Peter Jackson’s exhilarating and exhausting epic.
A good tech package, all in all.
The film suggests nothing more than an homage to Pretty in Pink or Some Kind of Wonderful.
Maybe you’ve heard this one before.
Horror fans should definitely take a walk down Mulberry Street and choose carefully among the rest.
Though based on a true story, this severely corny tale is, in fact, largely fiction save for its basic narrative outline.
There’s dancing all right but not a whole lot of charm.
Eleven years after Billy Madison, Click finds Adam Sandler still being tormented by freckled redheads named O’Doyle.
Some very good actors speak in some very funny voices in Marilyn Hotchkiss’ Ballroom Dancing and Charm School.
Remember: the definitive, extended DVD edition of the film is a few months away.
The film’s charm and compassion is repeatedly drowned out by completely lowbrow distractions.
Throughout, Peter Jackson’s majestic longshots and extreme close-ups will make you swoon.
Start as soon as possible or you’ll still be watching the extras here by the time The Return of the King hits theaters.
If you’re reading this, you know that the definitive, extended DVD edition of the film is still a few months away.
The film’s greatest strength is how Peter Jackson brings to life the haunting conflict between Gollum and Smeagol.
Peter Jackson emphasizes the territorial nature of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth by fascinatingly playing with lines of division.