
You have to get past certain goofy elements, like the vampire on the football team bit, but then the show decides it has to stop introducing you to its story, and actually start having a story, and there really is some meat to the thing.

You have to get past certain goofy elements, like the vampire on the football team bit, but then the show decides it has to stop introducing you to its story, and actually start having a story, and there really is some meat to the thing.

It’s a WWII-fest, with five films starring the legendary Errol Flynn. These adventures from 1942-1945 are a solid showcase of not only the star, but era itself, and the DVD set adds to the effect with some great bonuses.

The title may call this a review, and I’ll give you my take on the bonuses, but a true review at this point is only trumped in meaninglessness by a review of the complete series, also out on DVD. No positive or negative commentary on the show, or its final season, is going to sway anyone about anything.

In partnership with the latest edition of The Rough Guide To Cult Movies, which you should check out when you get a chance, because it’s a great work, 20th Century Fox and MGM recently kicked out a slew of cult classics on Blu-Ray.

The Last Song, a treacly affair that is virtually unwatchable outside its target demographic (which is about 5 years younger than the film thinks it is), is the next great bit of glorious banality for both Nicholas Sparks and Miley Cyrus. Sparks, who really likes himself, aims at a somewhat younger crowd this time around, apparently in the hopes of proving that the laughably nonsensical appeals to a more diverse age range than was previously believed.

Diary of a Wimpy Kid, based on the successful children’s book series of the same name, is an amusing effort, but one which is perhaps fighting a losing battle from the start. While a decent helping of fun, and sure to provide a handful of laughs for the appropriate audience, something seems lost is translation here, and it may be a result of the book’s specific imagination-friendly positives.

There are many difficult things to do in the realm of television, but taking a show I can’t stand, and turning into something I’m looking forward to (statistically speaking) is about the hardest thing there is.

Few shows on television have so far surpassed that from which they were spun off, while at the same time rendering that statement so meaningless.
TNT‘s hit series The Closer is now available (seasons 1-5) in HD for download via iTunes. In celebration of this release, the first availability to own the show in HD, Kyra has picked out her favorite 15 episodes, which you can see and own as one collection.

It’s easily one of the best things that has hit summer television this year, and you’ll want to be caught up as we move forward.

Few rock documentaries to come along in the last several decades have come close to matching the intensity, interest, and amazing footage found in Elvis On Tour.

There is a very odd feel to the remake of the awesome bit of cult ridiculousness that is Clash of the Titans, and it seems to stem, curiously, from some kind of insecurity on the part of director Louis Leterrier.

In direct contrast to the way things might play out on paper, I find myself rather enjoying TNT’s new spin on buddy cop adventure, Rizzoli & Isles.

The past several years have seen a resurgence in interest in the Film Noir genre, not just in recreations via a host of films, but in the classics that started it all.

White Collar is kicking off its second season just as strongly as the first, building nicely on the long-arc spins it threw at us at the end of the first season. I have some special treats for you today. A Q & A with Tiffani Thiessen, who was sadly uninvolved in the first couple of episodes, and a Complete First Season DVD giveaway.

Few films have sparked as much odd controversy as Kevin Smith’s Cop Out, especially considering the overall merits and theory of the movie. Hitting theaters on the back of some less than stellar reviews, one of recent memories strangest firestorms

During Trey Parker and Matt Stone‘s guest commentary on one of the episodes of Look Around You, they are pretty clear that the show is either something you find hilarious, and something you can’t understand watching at all. It’s hard to argue with that assessment.

Providing some hope for the Hollywood machine, Christopher Nolan found his way to the high-profile remake Insomnia with, all things considered, very little on his resume. Small-budget hits Following and Memento have become such cult favorites that they’ve transcended “cult,”