 | | 1. Volver | | | Starring: Carmen Maura Penélope Cruz Director: Pedro Almodóvar | | Format: DVD Release Date: 7/1/2008 |  | Volver - DVD By: Franck Tabouring - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 4/11/2007 9:12 PM | | Throughout it all, director Pedro Almodóvar does a phenomenal job at dodging formulaic dialogue and corny situations, while combining tragedy with dark comedy to create an unconventional melodrama. Volver is as subtle as a movie of this genre can get, and presents its spectators with an array of memorable truths about the challenges of everyday life. read the full review | |
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 | | 5. Fubar | | | | Format: DVD Release Date: 8/23/2005 |
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 | | 6. Rudo Y Cursi | | | Starring: Gael Garcia Bernal Diego Luna Director: Carlos Cuaron | | Format: DVD Release Date: 8/25/2009 |  | Rudo y Cursi - DVD Review By: Chris Cabin - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 8/14/2009 4:48 PM | |
Already a massive hit in its home country of Mexico, Carlos Cuarn's Rudo y Cursi is a film about doomed half-brothers, made by exceedingly successful siblings. The director is the younger sibling of Alfonso Cuarn, director of the excellent Children of Men and Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, who serves as producer here in his capacity as one of the heads of Cha Cha Cha Films, along with Guillermo del Toro and Alejandro Gonzalez Irritu. read the full review | |
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 | | 11. Pans Labyrinth (Single Disc) | | | Starring: Doug Jones Ivana Baquero Director: Guillermo Del Toro | | Format: DVD Release Date: 5/5/2009 | | Video Reviews Available: 1 |  | Pan's Labyrinth - DVD By: Chris Barsanti - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 5/4/2007 4:41 PM | |
Unfolding before viewers' eyes like luxuriantly blooming nightshade, Guillermo del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth is a dark treat that delivers a powerful sting. The nightmare conventions are here in his story of a young girl whose moorings to the real world have been quite effectively cut, everything from mysterious forests and exaggeratedly evil father figures to subterranean monsters and a fairy world existing quite close to our own. But instead of losing himself in the otherworldly, del Toro bases this fantasia in the deadliest of realities.
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