All that’s missing from Arrow Video’s stellar release of Ridley Scott’s cult fantasy is an accompanying unicorn horn.
Category fraud didn’t begin with the Oscars. It began when the Razzies awarded Aileen Quinn worst supporting actress of 1982.
Clue arrives on Blu-ray with little in the way of extras to sort out its brilliant showcase of comedic performances.
Be crazy. And by crazy, I mean unhinged, unpredictable and inspired.
Fly Me to the Moon is in 3D because, without the glasses-required effects, not even a three-year-old would sit through it.
Queer Duck: The Movie has the homespun charm of an early season of The Simpsons.
It’s hard to ask for much from this movie, what with it being digitally drawn in basic, web-friendly cartoon animation.
Valiant is the DVD of the year for parents who hate their children.
The slapdash construction and narrative inconsistencies aren’t nearly as damaging to the film as the mediocrity of its animation.
When you take interactive sex questionnaires, do you easily become sexually aroused?
Bill Condon’s provocative, problematic biopic takes an unapologetically reverential stance in its portrayal of the 1940s sex research pioneer.
Since the odors on the accompanying Scratch and Sniff card aren’t very strong, make sure your baby’s bottom is clean before watching the film.
Mercifully, there’s no offending sermon to talk down to the film’s demographic.
The Hunt for Red October is a thrilling edge-of-your-seat trifle that has admirably withstood the test of time.
Free of Harrison Ford’s noble-beyond-belief portrayal of Jack Ryan, The Hunt for Red October remains the best Tom Clancy adaptation to date.
The lack of features makes for a disappointing package.
Despite the 2D animation, the film makes for a surprisingly cinematic experience.
The folks at Universal have given Scott’s cult classic a legendary DVD treatment.
If you love ’80s relics, none come more gorgeously artificial than Ridley Scott’s faerie-tale Legend.
The quality of Scary Movie 2 can only be measured by the ratio between what jokes work and what jokes don’t.