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Sources
• DVDTown.com
• HollywoodinHiDef.com
• Reel.com
Total Reviews: 1291
James Plath
James Plath
James Plath

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7/10
     (1970)      "the pacing is '70s leisure-suit casual, and Altman goes for black comedy, not the snappy patter and rapid-fire one-liners that boob-tube audiences have come to relish" [dvd review]      Reel.com   
  
6/10
     (2004)      "Despite Dench's dynamic performance, unless you really love Shakespeare, at 146 minutes this stylized interpretation will seem interminably long and dry." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
8/10
     (2004)      "A breath of fresh sitcom air for fans of the genre who had been overwhelmed by contrived situations, pack o' friends shows, or families with overly cutesy kids." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
6/10
     (2008)      "Made of Honor is entertaining, but no revelation." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
6/10
          "It's still above-average cartoon fare, despite the awful hillbilly cat and mouse nonsense that dragged the show down." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (1965)      "Major Dundee never reached the heights of Peckinpah's imagination, but it's still a very solid western in the revisionist, realistic mode." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
8/10
     (2005)      "Watch this DVD and you'll be all but convinced that this is a city that will bounce back—with plenty of funky style." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (1958)      "A solid presentation of a strong season from a classic sitcom." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
4/4
     (1941)      "A study in human desire and imperfection, and a textbook example of how all the elements can come together in a film to create a unified effect. In the end, it's the noir treatment that makes the biggest difference." [dvd review]      Reel.com   
  
2.5/4
     (1964)      "The type of military investigative drama that's handled better in films like Courage Under Fire and A Few Good Men." [dvd review]      Reel.com   
  
5/10
     (2005)      "Despite the Stetson, Man of the House is old-hat, and you'd better check your sense of reality at the door." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
6/10
     (1987)      "Man on Fire works as a bloody popcorn movie, but it isn't deep enough or original enough to be much more than that." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
2.5/4
     (2004)      "If only they had launched a grenade in the direction of those hokey clichés. . . ." [dvd review]      Reel.com   
  
3/4
     (2004)      "It's an almost guilty pleasure enjoying Washington, Streep, and Schreiber when they're playing such disturbed characters." [dvd review]      Reel.com   
  
5/10
     (2002)      "Malick's character quips, 'I'd hate to be a diabetic with all the sweetness floating around this joint,' and that's essentially one of the biggest problems." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
4/10
     (2005)      "If you separate loyalty and politics and just consider the humor and the comedian's technique, Assassin isn't the killer it pretends to be." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (2006)      "Coppola gives us a fun new take on an old genre." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
5/10
     (2006)      "This is perhaps John Goodman's worst performance." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
8/10
     (2003)      "the lives of Iranian and Iraqi Kurds expand far beyond the reports and headlines in a film that’s surprisingly upbeat. And unforgettable." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (2008)      "While you never feeling you're seeing something for the first time, what's done here is done well." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
6/10
     (1993)      "A milestone (funny how close that word comes to "millstone") in television entertainment." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
6/10
     (1987)      "It's played over-the-top, like bad dinner theater, exaggerated with raunchy flair." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
4/10
     (1989)      "If Jerry Springer made a sitcom, it'd be something like the fourth season of Married with Children—more pathetic and tiresome than interesting or funny." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
5/10
     (1992)      "This is the season that gave us 'Kelly Goes to Hollywood,' and for some fans that will be enough." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
5/10
     (1988)      "Fans of Married With Children will love the third season the way parents love an ugly baby, but it's just not as funny as the first two seasons." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
5/10
     (1976)      "It has nowhere near the clever writing, funny jokes, or perfect pacing of Lear's flagship sitcom, All in the Family." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
9/10
     (1964)      "A wonderful, magical journey, still." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
8/10
     (1994)      "I'm inclined to give it an 8 now. The more you watch, the more you appreciate how Branagh was able to faithfully retell Shelley's novel while still managing to make it fresh and make it relevant." [movie review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (1994)      "Gorgeous scenery (including one inexplicable Sound of Music picnic scene), superior acting, and inventive takes on the legend breathe new life into an old monster film." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
3/4
     (1971)      "Though the second season doesn't pack the same punch as the first, most sitcoms would kill for a sophomore slump like The Mary Tyler Moore Show had." [dvd review]      Reel.com   
  
9/10
     (1970)      "features on-camera interviews with all the principle actors from the first season, except for the late Ted Knight" [dvd review]      Reel.com   
  
9/10
     (2002)      "Serry manages to tell an engrossing and subtly complex coming-of-age story that involves not just a high school girl, but her whole family." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (1998)      "It's self-consciously stylized and unapologetically escapist, but a fun film as a result." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
9/10
     (2003)      "Master and Commander offers the most meticulously researched and realistic depiction of life at sea ever shown on film." [movie review]      Reel.com   
  
7/10
     (2005)      "Though they don't do much to advance the genre, these Masters of Horror episodes are done so well that they're really entertaining." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (2005)      "Richard Shepard's dark comedy is so far from 007 that it's not even in the same area code." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
3/4
     (2005)      "Casting Greg Kinnear (As Good As It Gets) to play the straight man to Brosnan's wacked-out whack-man was a stroke of genius." [movie review]      Reel.com   
  
5/10
     (2003)      "Characterization, plot, and speculations on life and reality take a backseat to the martial arts shoot ‘em up sequences, which seem overly long and decidedly ho-hum." [movie review]      Reel.com   
  
6/10
     (1972)      "As gruff and blustery as Archie could be, there was still something in his eyes, or in his manner that made him slightly lovable in spit of his prejudices. I had a hard time finding anything in Maude's character besides an abrasiveness that gets old." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (1964)      "Even the supporting cast on McHale's Navy was fun to watch." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (1963)      "Season two was every bit as strong as the first, with only a few turkeys in the bunch." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
5/10
     (2007)      "This season the writing really stands out . . . like a sore middle finger." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (2005)      "Miranda July is a name that I expect we'll be hearing a lot in the future. Her first feature film has both heart and audacity." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
6/10
     (2000)      "Some of the scenes are so funny you can't help but laugh out loud . . . and wonder why there aren't more of them." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
6/10
     (2007)      "If only the middle of the film didn't misfire as badly as one of Lewis's inventions." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
1/10
     (2001)      "This is a morality play, in the tradition of 14th century church-sponsored entertainments, delivered with the all the turgid virtuosity of daytime soaps" [dvd review]      Reel.com   
  
8/10
     (2001)      "There are plenty of questions swirling around to make this little snow globe fascinating. Even moments in the narrative that could be obvious are given an interesting twist because of the main character's condition." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
7/10
     (2005)      "Sayuri's journey was just interesting enough to make it enjoyable, but the visual style was the true marvel." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
8/10
     (1997)      "The fun is in the believing, and Sonnenfeld makes it easy to do that." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
  
5/10
     (1999)      "Without Besson's style, this film would be a real disaster. As it is, it's just a middle-of-the-road picture." [dvd review]      DVDTown.com   
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