DVD Review: Lynch fans hit the Mother Lode with 'Eraserhead' release
The cover shot from the DVD of David Lynch's Eraserhead.
The cover shot from the DVD of David Lynch's Eraserhead.
Please walk away, slowly, from this steaming pile of a film.
It can be a Happy New Year for Blu-ray collectors. You have your gift cards from Christmas; you have your favourite films and television shows to consider; now you have your choices to make.
There were noir films before and during World War II, but the genre didn't really come into its own until 1945. Smack dab in the middle of that first (and arguably best) decade is 1950, whose roster of greats included The Asphalt Jungle, In a Lonely Place, Caged and Gun Crazy. With such company it's easy to see why a solid, second-tier entry like Union Station would fall between the cracks.
There are movies that everyone watches this time of year that are very Christmas-centric or Christmas-themed. Christmas Vacation. Home Alone.
There are no better experts on truly terrible movies than the guys behind Mystery Science Theater: 3000, who now take on horrible A movies as well as awful B movies with Rifftrax.
An east Cork parish has compiled its entire history on three DVDs.
Left to right: Emma Stone, director Woody Allen and Colin Firth in a scene from “Magic in the Moonlight.” ( Courtesy of Sony Picture Classics )
And now it's time to talk about the significant other we wish our families would accept as our one true love when we go home for the holidays: Netflix. Our love is as pure and true and real as…
Elliott Gould in the Robert Altman's “The Long Goodbye.” ( Courtesy of Indie Strategy )