Karate-Robo Zaborgar (Blu-ray)
Skip It Note: The pictures included in this review are not taken from the Blu-Ray and should not be considered representative of the picture quality on the disc itself.
Skip It Note: The pictures included in this review are not taken from the Blu-Ray and should not be considered representative of the picture quality on the disc itself.
DVD Talk Collector Series THE MOVIE: Please Note: The stills used here are taken from promotional materials, not the Blu-ray edition under review. PART ONE: MY ORIGINAL REVIEW, SEPTEMBER 2012 Writing about time travel movies can often be a challenge. Not only are they usually difficult to explain, but the very thing that makes them difficult is what also makes them a kick to watch
Highly Recommended I must have first seen Dark Star in 1978 or ’79, four or five years its original theatrical release. Star Wars (1977), of course, had been a big hit, and probably distributor Jack H. Harris thought Dark Star could attract college-age kids starved for more space swashbuckling, or something.
Highly Recommended THE FILM: Please Note: The images used here are from stills provided by The Criterion Collection and promotional materials, and are not taken from the Blu-ray edition under review. It starts off as postcards and lulls you, with its eye-popping, rich ‘n warm views of Old-World Italy and the Mediterranean, into a wide-open tourist mode — all the better to guide you to some …
Highly Recommended Gypsy Blu-ray Review Click onimage to view Blu-ray screenshot with1080p resolution Gypsy Read the entire review
Highly Recommended Odd Life of Timothy Green Blu-ray Revew Click onimage to view Blu-ray screenshot with1080p resolution Th… Read the entire review
Highly Recommended Rarely imitated and never duplicated, The Qatsi Trilogy (1982-2002) offers an indispensable look at the world around us. My first exposure to the films was a decade ago, when Naqoyqatsi debuted theatrically and MGM released Koyaanisqatsi (1982) and Powaqqatsi (1988) on DVD.
Highly Recommended THE FILM: Click an image to view Blu-ray screenshot with 1080p resolution. French thriller Tell No One stays two steps ahead of its audience, twisting and turning through revelations that are unexpected but never unearned. A rare modern mystery with emotional heft and complex characters to complement its thrills, Tell No One recalls classic works by Alfred Hitchcock and Carol …
Highly Recommended THE FILMS: This Francis Ford Coppola: 5-Film Collection is the result of a recent collaboration between Lionsgate Films and Francis Ford Coppola’s American Zoetrope studio. Coppola and George Lucas founded the San Francisco film studio in 1969, and each film in this collection bears the studio’s distinctive corner-building logo