The show is predicated on a concept, rather than a plot, that has never allowed a fully realized exploration of its many devices.
The next-best thing to hanging out at the Bing.
A must-see film in a DVD package for die-hards and Truffaut completists.
It represents some of the first and most essential steps into a new age of filmmaking.
The film endeavors to airmail the middle-aged suburban angst made fashionable by American Beauty safely back to cynicism-free sitcom territory.
Portraying tragedy without a meaningful point of view is a sticky situation for a movie to find itself in.
It’s determined to seal off such perceived gaps while trading John Carpenter’s precision for conservative blandness.
Do…I…sound…like…a…musical…robot?
For tango lovers and homicidal maniacs that like to dance before killing.
This DVD of Chaos is purely for fans of Serreau’s high-energy film.
Too bad that the crummy cover art may deter some prospective buyers.
Malkovich ultimately pushes the film so far into an emotional void as to render it completely useless.
A low-profile DVD for sure, but you’re probably just buying this disc for yet another Christopher Walken scenery-chewing smackdown, aren’t you?
Jordan’s remarkable scripted dialogue is trumped only by the sadness of Nick Nolte’s performance.
Too bad the disc’s video transfer doesn’t do Tim Orr’s gorgeous cinematography justice.
This competent but disposable action thriller should appeal most to Friedkin enthusiasts.
Basic is just that: a mundane military thriller whose only goal is to appeal to an audience’s basic desire to be tricked into multiple corners.
Laurel Canyon will make you wish that your mother liked to smoked pot.
Joe Carnahan’s genre pic gets an equally nifty sound and video transfer on this DVD edition.
Few will believe that Jim Carrey himself favors this warmed-over pap over a more challenging project.