 | | Batman- The Dark Knight (Blu-ray) coming soon! | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | | | Video Reviews Available: 1 |  | The Dark Knight - Blu-Ray DVD Review By: Matt Paprocki - Blogcritics.org Reviews Published on: 12/1/2008 8:06 PM | | It’s hard to fathom a movie with more hype behind it than The Dark Knight. This is the point where the comic book movie has truly come into its own, surpassing the usual boundaries to become something more. It’s impossible to give full credit to anyone here, although names can certainly be tossed out as to who made this more special than it would have been without them. It’s not a perfect film by any stretch, but it’s a great thrill ride. read the full review | |
|
|
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | | Children of Men (Widescreen) | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | |  | Children of Men - DVD By: Chris Beaumont - Blogcritics.org Reviews Published on: 3/26/2007 7:18 PM | | The best of 2006 arrives on DVD. It is time to see what you missed. Children of Men topped my best of 2006 list, and I am happy to report that it has successfully made the translation to the small screen with its impact intact. Alfonso Cuaron's film thrusts you into a dangerous and brutal world, yet brings hope for the future. This vision of the future is bleak and grim and there is a distinct feeling of hopelessness. Cuarón delivers a daring future world that takes you on a journey through the despair to the dawn of a new hope. read the full review | |
|
|
 | | Eastern Promises (Widescreen) | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | |  | Eastern Promises - DVD Review By: Ed Perkis - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 1/3/2008 6:39 AM | | Watching Eastern Promises is often a frustrating experience. The performances by all of the leads, Viggo Mortensen, Naomi Watts, Vincent Cassell, and Armin Mueller-Stahl, are great and the plot is engrossing. At times, though, it feels like director David Cronenberg is trying to add some additional, deeper, meaning to the story that just doesn't want to stick. read the full review | |
|
|
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | | The Departed (2-Disc Special Edition) new! | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | | User Rating: 5 |  | The Departed (Two-Disc Special Edition) - DVD By: Edward Perkis - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 2/17/2007 6:55 PM | | The cat and mouse game played by the two leads under the eye of Nicholson and using cell phones as a key plot point is masterful and in Scorsese's assured hands, scenes pop off the screen with tension. He also uses classic rock songs in his trademark manner, impressively setting time, place, or mood. However, his use of "I'm Shipping Up To Boston" a ferocious song by the celtic punk band The Dropkick Murphys during the title card sequence (following an 18 minute prologue) really kicks the movie into high gear and is a brilliant choice. read the full review | |
|
|
 | |
 | | The Kingdom (Widescreen) | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | |  | The Kingdom (2007) - DVD Review By: Chris Cabin - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 12/18/2007 12:41 AM | |
Peter Berg's The Kingdom will either rally those in the theater or piss off every single ticket holder in sight. It's gonna be awesome. Indeed, sardonic catcalls of "kill all the towelheads!" were shouted at the press screening I attended while the rest of the theater applauded with rigorous aplomb as Jennifer Garner jammed a knife into a Saudi terrorist's nether regions. This was all preceded by some daft bollock yammering on his cellphone during the opening credits while another patron quietly threatened castration. Only in New York, ladies and gents. Why will people be so divisive, you ask? Well, in The Kingdom, a compound of Americans in the Saudi Arabia capital of Riyadh are bombed. read the full review | |
|
|
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | | Bourne Ultimatum (Widescreen) | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | | User Rating: 5 |  | The Bourne Ultimatum - DVD Review By: Chris Barsanti - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 11/3/2008 7:31 AM | |
It would be ludicrous to say that The Bourne Ultimatum is not a thriller worth notice. Greengrass's hyperfluid direction and Oliver Wood's documentary-style cinematography make for an addictive mix, a pared-down action series for the post-9/11 era, where it's more about speed, lethality, and moral grey zones and less about cartoonish villains and sarcastic quips. But there's a limit to how far you can push this style, and this film flirts with that limit quite seriously. read the full review | |
|
|
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | |
 | | Bank Job (Widescreen) | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | | | Video Reviews Available: 1 |  | The Bank Job - DVD Review By: Chris Cabin - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 7/4/2008 7:34 PM | |
Based on some unspeakable, super classified bank robbery that took place in 1971 London, the investigation of which yielded no recovered money nor any arrests, Roger Donaldson's The Bank Job throttles its engines and tosses in just enough criminal bottom-dwellers to keep the viewers' minds away from the fact that it's still just another heist flick with a cockney accent and a taste for pints.
Names changed (get this) to protect the guilty, the whole mess breaks out when political revolutionary Michael X (Peter De Jersey) snaps some shots of Princess Margaret getting double teamed by two young men on a secluded island. read the full review | |
|
|
 | |
 | | Sunshine | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | |  | Sunshine - DVD Review By: Brian Holcomb - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 1/3/2008 11:01 PM | | Garland and director Danny Boyle (Trainspotting, 28 Days Later) are nothing if not ambitious. They want us to consider the Big Questions about the importance or inconsequence of mankind as well as the argument of science versus fundamentalism. It is said that there are no atheists in a foxhole. But what about space' If you were to look into the center of the sun, would you see the face of God' read the full review | |
|
|
 | |
 | |
 | | To Catch a Thief | | Videos/DVDs: See more matches | |  | To Catch a Thief - DVD By: Christopher Null - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 4/27/2007 7:26 PM | |
Alfred Hitchcock went a little soft in 1955, giving Cary Grant a largely throwaway role as a reformed cat burglar living incognito in the south of France. Hitch would really put Grant through the ringer in 1959's North by Northwest. Here, though, Grant's enjoying a day in the sun -- and night -- as he tries to track down the villain that's giving him a bad name. You see, John Robie (Grant) is retired. But some young upstart is stealing his M.O. -- and the new cat's eyes are on Robie's new would-be girlfriend, Frances (Grace Kelly), and her mom (Jessie Royce Landis). read the full review | |
|
|
 | |
 | |