John Michael McDonagh’s comedy-thriller stars Brendan Gleeson as a dissolute Irish copper who breaks more laws than he enforces, and Don Cheadle as a slick American agent who’s forced to work with him.
“He’s reported to be slightly mad but wily as a fox,” is how Lieutenant Case (Ronald Lewis) describes Oliver Reed’s tribal leader, Ali Khan, and ripe language, rousing music and dodgy politics/accents abound in this Hammer production from 1965.
Netflix Inc. (NFLX) agreed to a 56-day moratorium on rentals of new DVD releases from Warner Bros., doubling the current 28-day delay as rival rental service Redbox balked at the film studio’s demands.
LAS VEGAS , Jan. 9, 2012 /PRNewswire/ –Â Panasonic today announced that it has been named an International CES Innovations 2012 Design and Engineering Awards Best of Innovations winner for the Panasonic …
LAS VEGAS , Jan. 9, 2012 /PRNewswire/ –Â Panasonic Corporation of North America (NYSE: PC – News), a major developer and contributor to the success of the Blu-ray format, today introduced an expanded Blu-ray …
“Too many trolls are out and about,” says Hans (the comedian Otto Jespersen) to three wide-eyed Norwegian students keen on filming reported bear sightings in the mountains.
The 1967 film by Jim McBride, now available on DVD from Kino, is one of the funniest underground movies ever made. It’s also a marvelous time capsule capturing the look and feel of New York City in the late 1960s.
Once the presents are open and the meal is done, many Christian families will hit the movie theaters.
Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein are firmly booted into the gothic shade by Pedro Almodóvar’s fantastically bonkers plastic-surgery horror.