DVD & Blu-ray review: Foxy Brown on Blu-ray (18)
Antonio Fargas, who was Huggy Bear in Starsky and Hutch, is a highlight as Foxy Brown’s lowlife younger brother in this riotous slice of blaxploitation from 1974.    Â
Antonio Fargas, who was Huggy Bear in Starsky and Hutch, is a highlight as Foxy Brown’s lowlife younger brother in this riotous slice of blaxploitation from 1974.    Â
The plot is flimsy but the songs are exquisite from the one of the finest pop albums ever: “The Night Beforeâ€, “Hide Your Love Awayâ€, and “I Need Youâ€, which is played out in front of Stonehenge.    Â
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Initial D, Evangelion: 3.33 , Maaya Sakamoto, documentary with Girls & Panzer tie-in, Genki Genki Nontan rank
Terrence Malick’s improvised reverie on love and commitment in the 21st century is one long dreamy, sun-burnished montage featuring Ben Affleck, Olga Kurylenko, and a murmured French voice-over in place of dialogue. Â Â Â Â
“I think I need to call child services and have Leslie taken away from herself,†quips Ann (Rashida Jones) to camera. Please don’t. Amy Poehler’s confused, unlucky-in-love Leslie grows to be even more adorable in this excellent US sitcom.
Terrence Malick’s meditation on love and the disintegration of a relationship wafts along to no particular purpose. Â Â Â Â
“Everybody breaks bro, it’s biology,” maintains Jason Clarke’s pitiless CIA interrogator in a gruelling opening torture scene. It sets the unsentimental and discomforting tone for this look at the decade-long manhunt for Osama bin Laden
Olivia Colman, as an aggressive relationship counsellor, tries valiantly to rescue this contrived, occasionally witty Brit romcom.
Die Hard, possibly the most satisfying of all the Eighties actioners, is granted a fifth outing and it’s sloppy.