 | | 1. Sicko | | | Starring: Michael Moore Director: Michael Moore | | Format: DVD Release Date: 5/20/2008 | User Rating: 5 | | Video Reviews Available: 4 |  | Sicko - DVD Review By: Margaret Williams - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 11/6/2007 7:34 AM | | The strength of the film Sicko lies in the editing, music, and humorous narration by Moore himself. It is full of intense interviews, saddening life stories, and certainly builds on the frustrations and sympathy for people who have lost their homes and their hope, all because the government won't step in to regulate the ripping off of citizens by corporations. Sicko is to health care as Supersize Me is to the fast food industry. Moore is asking for the government to realize that, "all men are created equal," no matter how much medical need they have. read the full review | |
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 | | 7. Gathering | | | Starring: Christina Ricci Director: Brian Gilbert | | Format: DVD Release Date: 5/8/2007 |  | The Gathering - DVD By: Christopher Null - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 1/28/2007 4:01 AM | |
I'm always fascinated by those movies that get shot, cut, and finished... then sit "in the can" for years and years, unreleased. Why not just throw them to the theater world and see what happens? Well, spend a few quality minutes with The Gathering and you'll see, in short order, just how bad one of these canned atrocities can be. Despite starring Christina Ricci, this genre pic is dead from its very first frames, wholly unwatchable at any point during its running time.
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 | | 8. School For Scoundrels (Unrated Fullscreen) coming soon! | | | Starring: Billy Bob Thornton Jon Heder Director: Todd Phillips | | Format: DVD Release Date: 9/16/2008 |  | School for Scoundrels (Unrated Ballbuster Edition) - DVD By: Rafe Telsch - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 2/14/2007 8:35 PM | | Todd Phillips just might be the best comedic director to appear on the scene for years. First he revived the road trip and frat-house comedy sub-genres (Road Trip and Old School respectively). Then he made one of those rare television to film adaptations that was actually pretty good (Starsky & Hutch). For his latest trick, School for Scoundrels, he manages to accomplish something that was previously thought impossible: getting a decent performance out of Jon Heder, an actor whose fifteen minutes of fame should have ended after Napoleon Dynamite. read the full review | |
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