The documentary offers a profound glimpse of one of the greatest and most influential voices in modern music.
With this classic Hollywood thriller, Altman proved that career rehabilitation can spring from stylishly biting the hand that feeds you.
It serves as one of the definitive American explorations of the weird and precarious relationship that exists between actor and director.
Olive’s high-def release of Pollack’s slickly oppression-conscious debut is an unfortunately slender package.
How do I loathe the soul-crushingly predictable Made of Honor? Let me count the ways.
Misunderstood as a psychosexual thriller, the film is actually more of an acidic comedy about how Tom Cruise fails to get laid.
Stanley Kubrick’s final film merits reevaluation and reappraisal.
A George Clooney-headlined drama that, for a time, effectively taps into a contemporary disgust with amoral corporate profiteering.
The film adds up to nothing more than an innocuous paint-by-numbers lesson about embracing opportunities and enjoying life to its fullest.
Sketches of Frank Gehry, Sydney Pollack’s first stab at documentary filmmaking, is itself something of a rough draft.
The Interpreter wants nothing more than to be tasteful.
Few films of this kind boast such an edgy, luxuriant sound design.
An unfortunately lightweight DVD package for one of Allen’s greatest moments.
Woody Allen understands the emotionally fragile and confusing period after a breakup.
By film’s end, Changing Lanes questions the effects of individual morality on a collective consciousness.