Hopefully not the last train to Clarksville.
You'll shoot your eye out again... but you'll love it.
As re-created by Tim Burton and Johnny Depp, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street is macabre-ly marvelous. They’ve taken what is arguably Stephen Sondheim’s best musical and made it into a disturbingly fabulous film. As Sondheim himself notes on the disc, it’s not a movie of Sweeney Todd the stage musical, it’s a musical film based on that stage play.Quick synopsis for those not famil...[Read More]
Roger Moore starred as James Bond in 1981 in For Your Eyes Only. This is one of several 007 films release this week for the first time on Blu-ray. Does this one deserve a spot in your collection? Let's take a closer look.
Roger Moore takes the reins as James Bond in 1973's Live And Let Die. The film has been released on Blu-ray for the first time this week along with five other classic Bond films that we've reviewed on the site.
As the release date for the newest James Bond film draws ever near, the first batch of Bond films on Blu-ray have come to retail. Part of this batch includes the very first James Bond motion picture, Dr. No. Let's get to the review.
Best Bond film ever... just got better.
This is the end.... my only friend... the end....
The fourth film in the Bond franchise is a brutal one.
The second outing for the Bond franchise certainly nearly pulled a 180 from Dr. No. Come find out how and why!
Oh, we forgive you.
Perhaps the sins of the father aren't always the sins of the son, at least not for George Jung (Johnny Depp). George had a great father (Ray Liotta) who always did what was best for George and George's Mother (Rachel Griffiths). He was a hard working, honest man who commanded respect and worked an honest day for an honest day's wage. No, George Jung's sins were all his own... and George was a very...[Read More]