This week's Blu-ray/ DVD review stars sharks, robots, dead poets and a house from hell
Tired of sitting through blue Smurfs and singing chipmunks on family movie night?
Tired of sitting through blue Smurfs and singing chipmunks on family movie night?
Rise of the Planet of the Apes hits Blu-ray and DVD on Tuesday, December 13th and Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment has brought online an interactive trailer as well as a feature in which you can see if your area is at threat from the apes! You can click here to watch the trailer and a behind-the-scenes feature and you can find where the apes are now by clicking here !
Fans of Westeros and the world beyond the Narrow Sea, start getting excited for spring, because “Game of Thrones” season one is coming to DVD and Blu-Ray on March 6. Entertainment Weekly has the whole scoop on the upcoming home video release of HBO’s hit show, including the whole slew of special features that will be
“Almost Famous: The Bootleg Cut” features a high-definition (HD) package of Cameron Crowe’s quasi-autobiographical ode to his life in the 1970s. This particular release offers a substantially longer film than the original theatrical cut. “Almost Famous” follows the life of a teenager about to graduate from high school and his opportunity to write for Rolling Stone.
LONDON, November 8, 2011 /PRNewswire/ Sky today unveils a free Sky Movies app [http://corporate.sky.com/skyviews.htm ] for iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad which offers Sky TV customers a quick and easy way to find the movies they love. The new …
The two “Halloween” movies directed by Rob Zombie were eviscerated not just by critics but by fans as well.
It’s hard to argue that one of the most badass breakout characters in “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2” is Professor Minerva McGonagall. And author J.K. Rowling fought to keep it that way.
For all Tuesdays in November, Las Vegas locals and guests are invited to special screenings of classic movies adapted from stage pieces.
The true story behind the composition of Mary Shelley’s novel “Frankenstein” has captured the imagination of filmmakers since at least “The Bride of Frankenstein.” That sequel to the original Universal Studios horror classic opens with a framing device in which Mary, Percy Shelley, and Lord Byron sit around while Mary tells them her story.