Thelma & Louise is a legitimately unique rethinking of genre structure.
Byrne’s affectionate comedy of funhouse Americana is one of the most ahead-of-its-time films of the 1980s.
The flimsy extras verge on making this a barebones release.
This is a cerebral, 25-year-old film that follows the blueprint for today’s endless glut of superhero movies.
Silicon Valley constantly draws on and deepens our understanding of its characters.
This is a beautifully constructed bottle rocket of an episode, shooting out a cascading shower of comic sparks.
Silicon Valley’s humor springs organically from the relationships between its well-rounded characters.
The latest episode of the show takes a satiric look at the all-important yet elusive concept of intellectual property.
The episode is full of wonderfully wooden nerd-boy stabs at what Donald Trump calls locker-room talk.
The latest episode of Silicon Valley skewers the industry’s social mores and morals with precision.
Silicon Valley remains a complicated, heartfelt, and intensely uproarious articulation of the struggle to freely realize one’s creative yearnings.
The premise is undermined by the film’s tendency to soft-pedal the dangerous situations it sets up.
The film spent roughly a dozen years in development, and unfortunately it shows.
One of the most accomplished American dramas of the 1990s arrives on Blu-ray sporting a suitably exceptional A/V transfer.
The season’s contrived storyline is a forced and inelegant string of events that tries to come across as serendipitous.
The Mindy Project is upfront about its flimsy vanity, but that doesn’t make it any better.
To believe in the objectivity of the image and the word is to be lead into darkness in Nolan’s extraordinary meta-noir.
Scott has always had a certain reticence to embrace the urgency of the current day.
Rodrigo Cortés puts enough genuine craft and thoughtful execution into it to make his big breakthrough a smart little B movie.
To swoon over Rachel McAdams or Eric Bana is easy, but doing so requires willful blindness to the sloppy nonsensicality of the film’s love story.