Blu-ray Review: 'The Hobbit: The Battle Of The Five Armies'
Does Peter Jackson's final trip to Middle-Earth deliver an irresistible Blu-ray? Does it keep the 3D flag flying? Um, actually, no, it doesn't.
Does Peter Jackson's final trip to Middle-Earth deliver an irresistible Blu-ray? Does it keep the 3D flag flying? Um, actually, no, it doesn't.
Highly Recommended Reviewed by Glenn Erickson When I die and they lay me to rest / Gonna go to the place that's the best When I lay me down to die / Goin' up to the spirit in the sky. I can't believe that it's been 25 years since I watched a cohort back at the trailer boutique Film Impressions put together the great trailer for this Orion Pictures gem.
Recommended Its title suggests a film noir, but in fact Stranger at My Door (1956) is a Western drama with religious overtones, a very offbeat film for B-movie studio Republic Pictures, which specialized in far more routine oaters. It's a strange movie, on one hand filmed in Republic's usual flat style for the most part, and the religious aspects are heavy-handed, annoying, and at times …
New releases on DVD, Blu-ray and/or VOD: 'Into the Woods,' 'The Thin Blue Line,' 'Unbroken,' 'The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies,' and more.
The items stolen included a smart TV, a Wi-Fi Blu-ray and laptop.
Recommended NOTE: The photos accompanying this review are taken from various internet sources and do not represent the quality of the Blu-ray under review. The Movie: The 1967 folk song “The Alice's Restaurant Massacree” is essentially a shaggy-dog story set to ragtime guitar, in which singer-songwriter Arlo Guthrie recounts his run-in with small-town law over illegally dumping a bunch of post …
Skip It The Movie: Directed by Belgian filmmaker Emmanuel Kervyn and picked up and distributed domestically by Troma, 1989's Rabid Grannies is as goofy and as dumb as you'd expect a movie titled Rabid Grannies to be.
On March 19, 2015, DVDFab Media Player, the industry leader when it comes to Blu-ray playback solution, released an updated ver.
Recommended Without a Clue (1988), a comedy suggesting Dr. Watson was the real brains behind Sherlock Holmes's crime-solving, should be totally delightful but just isn't. The picture has everything going for it: a strong cast, handsome production values, a score by Henry Mancini, and a screenplay written by Holmes experts with obvious affection.
Highly Recommended The Movie: Chris Rock joined the upper echelons of the stand-up comedy game nearly twenty years ago, and even though he hasn't released an hour-long special in seven years, it's that work onstage that defines his career.