“BRAVEHEART” AND “GLADIATOR” now on 4K Steelbook
Two Oscar winners for best picture Gladiator 20th Anniversary and Braveheart 25th Anniversary have been released on 4K in Steelbooks that also contains the
Two Oscar winners for best picture Gladiator 20th Anniversary and Braveheart 25th Anniversary have been released on 4K in Steelbooks that also contains the
Review by John Delia One of Marvel’s smallest superhero’s Ant-Man teams up with a newcomer the Wasp in a wild and sometimes wacky
Review by John Delia, Sr. Kicking off into hyperspace Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 turns up the action and
Review by John Delia Disney’s Rogue One: A Star Wars Story blasts onto your home entertainment center in a Blu-ray/DVD box
Review by John Delia A moving romantic drama that gets taught and heartbreaking, The Light Between Oceans has been released on home
Review by John Delia The last home video release of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast in 2011 came complete with 3D Blu-ray,
Rent It Aside from serving up the first big-screen appearance of Tenacious D and a few clever jabs at trendy young environmentalists, Jason Bloom's Bio-Dome (1996) doesn't have much lasting value. A handful of dumb laughs? Sure
Skip It The Film: Somewhere out in the ether of fiction yet to come, the ideal blend of the writer's process and surreal psychological horror waits to be discovered and materialized for the big screen. Sure, some films have successfully dabbled with the possibilities in metaphors and meta-context, but we've yet to see that great first-person supernatural thriller about a mentally-imbalanced …
Skip It THE FILM: A film about the 1983 kidnapping of Heineken beer's Freddy Heineken should have been an interesting crime thriller. Actually, there is a strong, fictional retelling of this event starring Rutger Hauer: The Heineken Kidnapping . Where that Dutch film had a rich backstory to flesh out its victim's character, Kidnapping Mr.
Recommended THE FILM: Click an image to view Blu-ray screenshot with 1080p resolution. This 1983 experiment in remaking Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless is certainly more immediately accessible than the French version, with its interminable takes and jarring jump cuts. That movie is a film-studies classic, of course, but Jim McBride's update is stylish, energetic and – dare I say – more entertaining …