Kids won’t get Surf’s Up, and adults may smell a con.
Bridge to Terabithia is a film most children should see, but it’s so dully aestheticized they may not care to.
It didn’t fail at the box office, but there’s no reason you should help launch its DVD afterlife.
Failure to Launch is a not-so-distant cousin of those happy-go-lucky herpes commercials that play on television.
The film delivers nothing more than a familiar Sundance-style brand of stagy, small-scale drama.
The interactive menus and nature of the supplemental materials are witty, cute, and oftentimes frustrating.
The film is worse than being simply a lame book adaptation because of its infuriating smugness.
Eulogy’s spectacle of nastiness doesn’t indicate a family’s greater, largely unspoken love for one another.
It shouldn’t come as a surprise that Will Ferrell’s insane performance almost saves the show.
Too bad the disc’s video transfer doesn’t do Tim Orr’s gorgeous cinematography justice.
Here’s a textbook example of a film that can still put you to sleep despite being well photographed.
The elations and agonies of love between young people approach new heights of strident authenticity in David Gordon Green’s film.
This week’s Angel Eyes Much Ado About Nothing Award goes to Stephen Gaghan’s feature film debut.