Blu-ray Movie Reviews

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Rad Bennett  |  Dec 09, 2005  | 
DreamWorks
Movie •••• Picture/Sound •••• Extras •••
To coincide with the theatrical release of Wallace & Gromit's first feature, The Curse of the Were-Rabbit<
Rad Bennett  |  Oct 02, 2005  | 
Koch Vision
Series ••½ Picture/Sound •••• Extras ••
Dr.
Ken Korman  |  Dec 09, 2005  | 
Hart Sharp
Movie •••• Picture/Sound •••• Extras •••½
He never worked for a studio, and he only had a hand in the c
Steve Simels  |  Feb 03, 2002  | 
Ken Korman  |  Feb 03, 2006  | 
March of the Penguins Warner/National Geographic
Movie •••• Picture/Sound ••• Extras<
Ken Korman  |  May 09, 2006  | 

The most surprising Oscar winner for Best Picture in decades, Crash (Lionsgate; Movie •••½, Picture/Sound •••½, Extras ••½) has a couple of secret weapons that quietly recommended it to members of the Academy. First, it captures the true look and feel of Los Angeles, where the majority of Oscar voters live.

Mel Neuhaus  |  Apr 03, 2006  | 

Like John Ford, Sam Peckinpah was a rambunctious, self-destructive, cinematic poet who idolized the American West. His work is generally discussed in terms of graphic violence, sadism, and perversion, and these aberrant forms of human behavior do appear throughout his work.

 |  Dec 09, 2005  | 

Alfred Hitchcock The Masterpiece Collection (Universal, 15 DVDs, $120) Saboteur, Shadow of a Doubt, Rope, Rear Window, The Trouble with Harry, The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956), Vertigo, Psycho, The Birds, Marnie, Torn Curtain, Topaz, Frenzy, Family P

Al Griffin  |  Jun 09, 2006  | 

So much fuss has been made about Brokeback Mountain (Lionsgate; Movie ••••½, Picture/Sound ••••, Extras •••), especially after it was nominated for eight Oscars (winning three), that it's not worth rehashing the details here.

Rad Bennett  |  Apr 03, 2006  | 
Hill Street Blues Season 1 20th Century Fox
Series •••½ Picture/Sound •••
Josef Krebs  |  Oct 02, 2005  | 

From the late 1960s through the early '70s, Americans saw the crumbling of the old morality, which gave way to the new twin blights of urban decay and bad hair. If this golden age of anti-heroes and the stars who played them is your bag - if you take your detectives tough, your streets mean, and your realism gritty - then you'll want to add some of these movies to your collection.

Sol Louis Siegel  |  Dec 06, 2005  | 

Nicolas Roeg's 1976 film THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH (The Criterion Collection; Movie •••½, Picture/Sound •••, Extras ••) is a poetic, visually resplendent work that gains resonance with repeat viewings. David Bowie (below) is the alien on a mission to save his dying race.

Josef Krebs  |  Nov 09, 2006  | 

When he first landed in the U.S. in 1961, British agent John Drake went mostly unnoticed. But when this Danger Man reappeared 4 years later - with a new name, a new theme song, and a visa extended from 30 minutes to an hour - he made quite a stir.

Ken Korman  |  Jan 14, 2006  | 
Hammett Paramount
Movie •••• Picture/Sound •• Extras None
FlightPlan Touchstone
Movie ••½ Picture/Sound ••• Extras ••

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