|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mr. 3000 (widescreen)
Mr. 3000 (full screen)
Bernie Mac is all swaggers and sneers as an ego-driven baseball hitter who returns to the field at age 47 to secure his place in Hall of Fame history in this lighthearted (and somewhat lightheaded) entry in the sports mythos of humbled heroes on a journey of redemption. Mac's Stan Ross is every conceited sports superstar rolled into one beefy, ego-driven heavy hitter. He makes insolence funny and still looks convincingly pained as a hero wounded when finally faced with his own mortality, but director Charles Stone III, who directs with impersonal professionalism, makes his lessons.... Read Full Review
Ray (widescreen): Read Full Review
The Grudge: Read Full Review
La Ciénaga: Read Full Review
...MORE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Raging Bull: Special Edition
Due next week: Martin Scorsese's brutal, idiosyncratic take on Jake La Motta's autobiography has been called the greatest film of the 1980s. It is certainly one of the most searing and daring films to come out of Hollywood in that time, a piece of street poetry written in blood and painted in punches. It was a labor of love for Robert De Niro, who built up a boxer's taut body and then famously put on 40 pounds to play the heavyweight champ in decline, and it was his passion that inspired Scorsese to make the most stylistically stark and visually startling film to that time. The.... Read Full Review
The Notebook
Bright Young Things
P.S.
...MORE
|
|
Video/DVD Update by Sean Axmaker -- Special to the IMDb
|