FOR RENT | DVD Report Card
Brad Pitt is shown in a scene from “The Tree of Life.†Published: Friday, October 14, 2011 at 3:30 a.m. Last Modified: Thursday, October 13, 2011 at 6:47 p.m.
Brad Pitt is shown in a scene from “The Tree of Life.†Published: Friday, October 14, 2011 at 3:30 a.m. Last Modified: Thursday, October 13, 2011 at 6:47 p.m.
French documentarian Francoise Romand turns her interest in unusual lives on herself in this imaginative self-portrait.
Apple is in talks with Hollywood studios about offering a system that would allow people to buy movies on iTunes and watch them on multiple Apple-made devices without the need to transfer or save files, according to two people…
Tech Adviser Jim Rossman looks at playback options for Blu-ray movies on the Macintosh with mixed results.
As 3D has moved out of theme parks and into story-driven movies like the game-changing Avatar , their presence in theatres has grown exponentially. Early arrivers like 2005’s Chicken Little and 2007’s Beowulf grew into around five 3D films in 2008, ten in 2009, and over 20 scheduled for 2010. 2011 already has over 30 films planned for 3D release—and those are only the ones that have been …
It’s safe to say that Green Lantern is a bit of a tonal mess. At first it was advertised like Warner’s next Dark Knight, even though the narrative played a lot more like a moody, but kid friendly Star Wars-style fantasy adventure. But someone behind the lens (Warner, the producers, the director?) se…
ICLOUD FOR MOVIES: Apple is in talks with Hollywood studios about allowing people to buy movies on iTunes using multiple Apple-made devices without needing to transfer files, according to people familiar with the matter.
RATING: (ALERT VIEWER) Beautiful Boy Parents deal with grief at their son’s death and horror at finding out that he is a mass murderer in this well-acted (Michael Sheen and Maria Bello) but ultimately compromised…
LOS ANGELES — Apple is in talks with Hollywood studios about offering its new iCloud services for movies. That would allow people to buy movies on iTunes and then watch them on any Apple-made device without needing to transfer or save files.
LOS ANGELES — Apple Inc. is in talks with Hollywood studios about offering a system that would allow people to buy movies on iTunes and watch them on multiple Apple-made devices without the need to transfer or save files, according to two people familiar with the matter. Movies were a big omission from Apple’s so-called iCloud service, which launched on Wednesday