DVD OF THE WEEK: Fury
Fury. See PA Feature DVD DVD Reviews. Picture credit should read: PA Photo/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Fury. See PA Feature DVD DVD Reviews. Picture credit should read: PA Photo/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
In the latest installment of Geek's Guide to the Galaxy a panel of sci-fi fans discusses whether or not geeks should go out and see films like Jupiter Ascending . The post Should Sci-Fi Fans Support Bad Movies Like Jupiter Ascending
For those who saw “Alexander And The Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day,” and those who haven't, the Blu-ray is a perfect pickup for a family movie night. It is rated PG, so make sure kids are an age to handle this kind of comedy.
Watching movies was once the cheapest form of entertainment. Is that still true today
So who has actually seen the top Oscar movies? Take the two frontrunners: “Birdman” was written, produced and directed by Mexican Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu for some $18 million, while “Boyhood” cost only $4 million to make — over 12 years.
After a genuinely terrific cinematic year in 2013, we were probably due for a letdown in 2014, and we got it. There were of course many very good movies last year, but almost all were flawed in one way or another: too narrow, too unfocused, too emotionally remote, or what have you. I’m not sure whether a single one would have cracked my top five of the previous year.
Foo Fighters will release their HBO series, Sonic Highways, on DVD/Blu-ray and digital on April 7.
Foo Fighters have announced that a DVD version of the “Sonic Highways” miniseries is on the way, building on the success the distinctly American recording project has seen at home and abroad. Earlier this week, the band led by Dave Grohl was voted Best International Act at the UK's NME Awards, and the same night they announced a headlining spot at the Glastonbury Festival — an elusive goal even …
I've seen most movies based on games, and the quality ranges from passable to terrible. You can argue for a few good ones, but taking even great games and turning them into films has proven much harder than it seems like it should be.
Sky Movies says three times as many watch next-day highlights as stay up for live awards
