Actors & Directors
- Andy Serkis
- Steven Mackinstosh
- Ashley Walters
- Gary Love
Release date: 2008-01-07 Run time: 90 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £2.95
Review Sugarhouse [2007] / Contender Entertainment Group:
Actors & Directors
- Dennis Franz
- Joanna Cassidy
- Tommy Lee Jones
- Andrew Davis
- Gene Hackman
- John Heard
Release date: 2000-07-24 Run time: 103 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £3.95
Review The Package [1990] / MGM Entertainment:Gene Hackman is a career officer assigned a routine mission well beneath him: deliver a prisoner (Tommy Lee Jones) from Europe to the United States. However, the simple assignment becomes a daring cat-and-mouse game played as the last flames of the Cold War are flickering. This is the first of three films that teamed Jones with director Andrew Davis. In 1989 Jones was a wild card: an actor respected but only popping up in grade B fare. After Davis' Under Siege and The Fugitive, Jones was America's favourite gruff character actor, with an Oscar on his mantel. With a weaker script, Davis still creates the same kind of magic here. Hackman is superb as the officer, an action role similar to others that the nearly 60-year-old unexpectedly excelled at (Bat 21, Narrow Margin) during this period. Tight, tense and with no letup in the third act, The Package is a good gem for a Saturday night flick. -Doug Thomas.
Release date: 2008-01-07 Run time: 97 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £7.15
Review The Thin Blue Line [1988] / Optimum Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Steven Seagal
- Bruce Wang
- Corey Johnson
- Ozzie Yue
- Michael Oblowitz
- Tom Wu
Release date: 2003-08-18 Run time: 86 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £4.28
Review Out For A Kill [2003] / Sony Pictures Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Gloria Grahame
- Lewis Gilbert
- Laurence Harvey
- Margaret Leighton
- Joan Collins
- Stanley Baker
Release date: 2004-09-06 Run time: 94 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £0.99
Review The Good Die Young [1954] / Wienerworld Ltd:
Release date: 2004-09-13 Run time: 660 min. RRP: £34.99 Price: £8.69
Review Columbo - The Complete First Season / Playback:TV detective fans rejoice: Peter Falk's rumpled and infallible Lt. Columbo joins the DVD precinct with a five-disc set that features the detective's first nine appearances for NBC. Though Falk as Columbo (no first name) made his TV debut in 1967, the detective had actually first appeared on an episode of the 1960-61 Chevy Mystery Show (Bert Freed played the role) written by veteran TV scribes Richard Levinson and William Link (The Fugitive, Alfred Hitchcock Presents). The pair turned the episode into a stage play titled Prescription: Murder, which was adapted into a TV movie in 1967 with Falk in the lead. NBC greenlit a two-hour Columbo pilot (Ransom for a Dead Man) in 1971, and the series was launched that fall as part of the NBC Sunday Mystery Movie, a rotating 90-minute program that alternated Columbo with episodes of MacMillan and Wife and McCloud (another Levinson/Link creation). Viewers were quickly won over by Falk's shrewd performance as he matched wits with a host of exceptional guest stars (including Gene Barry, Patrick McGoohan, and others), all of whom assumed that the disheveled detective would never figure out their "perfect crimes"; the popularity and quality of the original series allows Falk to continue to don the trenchcoat some 30 years later for occasional Columbo TV movies. All seven 90-minute episodes of the 1971-72 debut season are included here, along with Prescription: Murder and Ransom for a Dead Man; unfortunately, as the lieutenant himself would say, "Oh, just one more thing"-no extras are included in the set, but having these fine TV mysteries in one set should be reward enough for armchair sleuths. -Paul Gaita.
Actors & Directors
- Bill Paxton
- Matt O'Leary
- Luke Askew
- Powers Boothe
- Bill Paxton
- Matthew McConaughey
Release date: 2003-04-07 Run time: 96 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £1.20
Review Frailty [2002] / Paramount Home Entertainment:Steeped in gloomy atmosphere,Frailty locates its horror in the tyranny of religious fanaticism. Making an assured directorial debut, actor Bill Paxton co-stars as a Texas widower who believes God has recruited him to destroy demons in human form. Feeling divinely justified in committing a series of axe murders (discreetly unseen), he urges his two young sons to assist him in the killings-a living nightmare recalled in flashback by one of the now-adult sons (Matthew McConaughey) to the FBI agent (Powers Boothe) who's investigating the murders. But mystery is of secondary importance in Brent Hanley's cleverly twisting screenplay; Frailty suggests, with unsettling subtlety, that Paxton's mission may not be delusional, thus burdening his deadly wrath with spiritually disturbing significance. It's definitely not a feel-good film, but with celebrity endorsements by Stephen King and directors James Cameron and Sam Raimi (who both made films with Paxton), Frailty gets under the skin with insidious efficiency. -Jeff Shannon.
Actors & Directors
- Nadia Farès
- Dominique Sanda
- Mathieu Kassovitz
- Jean Reno
- Karim Belkhadra
- Vincent Cassel
Release date: 2001-11-26 Run time: 101 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £5.97
Review The Crimson Rivers [2001] / Sony Pictures Home Entertainment:The Crimson Rivers is an openly acknowledged French attempt to make a big Hollywood-style serial-killer thriller. Jean-Ronin(1997)-Reno is Niemans, who while investigating the case of a horrifically mutilated body finds himself partnered with Kerkerian, a younger detective played by Vincent Cassell, (La Haine). Set in beautiful mountain country and shot in CinemaScope by Thierry Arbogast (Leon), it looks fabulous. Kassovitz packs the frame with stylish flourishes from a breathtaking helicopter shot in homage to The Shining (1980), to a lavish stairwell tracking shot inspired by Vertigo (1958). With a sumptuously layered score and some superbly achieved special effects The Crimson Rivers has all the expensive sheen of the American movies it imitates. Unfortunately it also proves Europeans can make films as technically accomplished but ludicrously plotted as Hollywood can: for what begins as a tense and unsettling police procedural, mutates into an action movie where the details make no sense. Even the Boys From Brazil inspired plot is ludicrous. Demonstrating Kassovitz has seen plenty of Brian De Palma and Dario Argento movies, The Crimson Rivers entertains despite its own absurdity, and should see the director following Luc Besson to Hollywood to make even bigger and dumber blockbusters. On the DVD: Despite not being labelled a special edition this two disc set is one of the most impressive releases on DVD this year; all the more remarkable for being a French film barely seen in UK cinemas. The 2. [+]
35-1 anamorphically enhanced transfer is virtually flawless while the Dolby Digital 5. 1 sound is superb. Apart from the original French soundtrack there are English and Spanish dubbed versions, and subtitles in 20 languages (including English and French). The first disc includes three trailers, plus three more for other Columbia releases, and two commentary tracks. The first features Reno, Cassel and Kassovitz-all talking at full speed providing a wealth of information. The second-a commentary by composer Bruno Coulais-offers a real insight into the use of music in film as he explains his approach to specific scenes and his overall philosophy of film scoring. This track also features the score isolated in Dolby Digital 5. 1, though Colais does talk over the beginning of some cues. The second disc contains over two hours of documentary material. First is a serious 52-minute making-of, in which cast and director explain how the film was constantly re-written, going so far as to admit it makes no sense. Further documentaries are on "The Scalpel Scene" (26 min) and the "making of the corpse" (9 min) used in the opening scenes. There is seven minutes on shooting the martial arts fight, with or without commentary, nine minutes on shooting the car chase and a section playing the chase alongside the original storyboards, with or without commentary. A documentary on filming the mountain climax (10 min) and a further documentary on creating a digital avalanche (15 min), plus a multi-angle feature presenting the scene as storyboards, edited rushes, special effects or outtakes. The Production Designer archives (13 min) covers the sets. Additionally there is footage from the Far East promotional tour, a poster gallery, filmographies of Cassel, Reno and Kassovitz, the complete storyboards for four sequences, including the never-filmed originally planned opening and a gallery of on-set still photographs. It's a veritable "how to make a blockbuster" on two shiny discs. -Gary S Dalkin.
Actors & Directors
- Robert Schwentke
- Haley Ramm
- Sean Bean
- Forrest Landis
- Peter Sarsgaard
- Jodie Foster
Release date: 2007-03-19 Run time: 94 min. RRP: £26.99 Price: £17.19
Review Flight Plan [Blu-ray] [2005] / Buena Vista Home Entertainment:If you can forgive plot holes that you could drive the airliner of your choice through the middle of, then Flightplan is an effective, pacey Hollywood thriller, that somehow manages to hold everything together in spite of its challenging plausibility. Credit for that must go to its lead actress. In the hands of a lesser talent, this is just the kind of movie that could descend into obscurity. But Jodie Foster, as always, injects her character with a believability and a drive that's hard to resist, and here is no different. The plot sees Foster flying her late husband's body back home on a commercial flight. As her and her six year old daughter settle down, Foster soon falls asleep, awaking to find no sign of her child, and no one who can even remember her being on the flight. Has someone taken her? Is it all in Foster's mind? These are the questions the film circles, and for a good hour of its running time, it is compelling Hollywood-style entertainment. The cracks soon appear when you examine the film more closely though, and it's as if Flightplan is just as aware of that as everyone else. The decision, therefore, to keep the film moving at a good pace is a wise one, leaving the viewer free to switch their brain off and just enjoy the ride, without querying too much the glabrous script that rarely makes as good use of the premise as you'd hope. Yet the film still works. [+]
It may, after the credits have rolled, have failed to live up to its potential, and there's a good hour of dissection waiting to happen afterwards. Yet, crucially, there's also the best part of a couple of hours of good, solid entertainment in it for you too. -Jon Foster.
Release date: 2007-02-26 Run time: 755 min. RRP: £34.99 Price: £24.50
Review The Early Hitchcock Collection [1929] / Optimum Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Sandra Cassel
- Jeramie Rain
- David Hess
- Lucy Grantham
- Fred J. Lincoln
- Wes Craven
Release date: 2003-05-26 Run time: 84 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £9.98
Review Last House On The Left (2 Disc Special Edition) [1972] / Anchor Bay Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Emmanuelle Riva
- Jean-Paul Belmondo
- Gisele Grimm
- Nicole Mirel
- Irene Tunc
- Jean-Pierre Melville
Release date: 2004-04-26 Run time: 115 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £8.83
Review Leon Morin, Pretre [1961] / Bfi Video:
Release date: 2007-02-27 Run time: 1695 min. Price: £12.07
Review The Ultimate Hitchcock Collection / ST Clair Vision:
Actors & Directors
- Tom Bell
- Peter Capaldi
- Ciaran Hinds
- David Drury
- Andrew Woodall
- Helen Mirren
Release date: 2006-11-06 Run time: 205 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £4.32
Review Prime Suspect 3 [1993] / ITV DVD:
Actors & Directors
- Peter Bogdanovich
- James Gandolfini
- Katherine Narducci
- Vincent Pastore
- Steven Van Zandt
Release date: 2001-06-25 Run time: 720 min. RRP: £59.99 Price: £45.00
Review The Sopranos: Complete Series 2 [1999] / Warner Home Video:The second series of The Sopranos, David Chase's ultra-cool and ultra-modern take on New Jersey gangster life, matches the brilliance of the first, although it's marginally less violent, with more emphasis given to the stories and obsessions of supporting characters. Sadly, the programme makers were forced to throttle back on the appalling struggle between gang boss Tony Soprano and his Gorgon-like Mother Livia, the very stuff of Greek theatre, following actress Nancy Marchand's unsuccessful battle against cancer. Taking up her slack, however, is Tony's big sister Janice, a New Age victim and arrant schemer and sponger, who takes up with the twitchy, Scarface-wannabe Richie Aprile, brother of former boss Jackie, out of prison and a minor pain in Tony's ass. Other running sub-plots include soldier Chris (Michael Imperioli) hapless efforts to sell his real-life Mafia story to Hollywood, the return and treachery of Big Pussy and Tony's wife Carmela's ruthlessness in placing daughter Meadow in the right college. Even with the action so dispersed, however, James Gandofini is still toweringly dominant as Tony. The genius of his performance, and of the programme makers, is that, despite Tony being a whoring, unscrupulous, sexist boor, a crime boss and a murderer, we somehow end up feeling and rooting for him, because he's also a family man with a bratty brood to feed, who's getting his balls busted on all sides, to say nothing of keeping the Government off his back. He's the kind of crime boss we'd like to feel we would be. Tony's decent Italian-American therapist Dr Melfi's (Loraine Bracco) perverse attraction with her gangster-patient reflects our own and, in her case, causes her to lose her first series cool and turn to drink this time around. Effortlessly multi-dimensional, funny and frightening, devoid of the sentimentality that afflicts even great American TV like The West Wing, The Sopranos is boss of bosses in its televisual era. -David Stubbs.
Actors & Directors
- Joseph Losey
- Michael Redgrave and Leo McKern
Release date: 2008-04-21 Run time: 85 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £5.98
Review Time Without Pity [1957] / Odeon Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Stephen Tobolowsky
- Barbet Schroeder
- Peter Friedman
- Steven Weber
- Bridget Fonda
- Jennifer Jason Leigh
Release date: 1998-10-12 Run time: 103 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £1.87
Review Single White Female [1992] / Sony Pictures Home Entertainment:You can take this 1992 thriller one of two ways: it's either a highly suspenseful movie about an unfortunate young woman's psychological breakdown, or it's a glossy slasher movie starring two of Hollywood's best young actresses. Or maybe it's both at the same time-or perhaps it's the clever and well-acted thriller for its first hour before resorting to the routine shocks of a cheap horror flick. However you look at it, there's no denying that this is a dynamite showcase for Jennifer Jason Leigh as the flatmate from hell who becomes the bane of Bridget Fonda's existence. First she picks up Fonda's mannerisms, then starts to borrow her wardrobe, cuts her hair to resemble Fonda's, and even "borrows" her roommate's boyfriend for a deceitful night of lovemaking. By that point Fonda's totally freaking out (wouldn't you?), and, well, that's when the whole thing gets a little too silly. Still, this is a nifty little shocker, and director Barbet Schroeder brings more intelligence and style to the material than it really deserves. Add that to the fine performances by the battling roommates and you've got a movie that will make you think twice before inviting total strangers to live with you. -Jeff Shannon, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Sam Shepard
- Michael Apted
- Val Kilmer
- Fred Dalton Thompson
- Fred Ward
- Graham Greene (II)
Release date: 2004-03-08 Run time: 114 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £4.20
Review Thunderheart [1992] / Uca:Tough but moving, Thunderheart is an unusual story about an arrogant FBI agent (Val Kilmer) who participates in a federal investigation of a murder on an Oglala Sioux reservation. Kilmer's character is part Sioux himself, a detail that leaves him cold as he sets about pushing his way through the community to find facts on the case. In time, however, he begins to feel an ethnic tug and grows increasingly sympathetic to the locals and hostile toward his fellow G-men, much to the dismay of his agency mentor (Sam Shepard). The script is based on real events that occurred on the Pine Ridge Reservation in 1975 in South Dakota (involving an armed stand-off between Indian activists and the FBI, an event that prompted Thunderheart director Michael Apted to make a companion documentary, Incident at Oglala). The conclusion of Thunderheart feels like politically charged whimsy, but the real strength of the film is Kilmer's outstanding performance as a man in transformation. Apted's clear-eyed depiction of the Sioux's spiritual and cultural continuity with the past has none of the cloying romanticism of other films about Indians. Produced by Robert De Niro. -Tom Keogh, Amazon. com -This text refers to the VHS edition of this video.
Actors & Directors
- John Travolta
- Giovanni Ribisi
- Connie Nielsen
- Samuel L. Jackson
- John McTiernan
- Tim Daly
Release date: 2004-01-19 Run time: 98 min. RRP: £13.99 Price: £1.60
Review Basic [2003] / Warner Home Video (Icon):Basic is a military mystery that offers multi-layered deception as its dramatic raison d'etre, but with plenty of machismo attitude as befitting a semi-effective thriller from Die Hard director John McTiernan. John Travolta stars as an ex-Army Ranger-turned-DEA agent, recruited by an Army investigator (Connie Nielsen) to solve the fratricide of a reviled Sergeant (Samuel L Jackson) who was allegedly killed while commanding a Special Forces training mission in the hurricane-swept rainforests of Panama. Two survivors (Giovanni Ribisi in a showboat role and Brian Van Holt) recall the ill-fated mission as the truth unfolds, Rashomon-style, in a series of repetitive flashbacks. Tricky enough to hold one's attention as it grows increasingly irrelevant, Basic is so enamoured of its bogus ingenuity that its ultimate twist is a letdown. A second viewing might prove rewarding, if only to confirm that it all holds together. -Jeff Shannon.
Actors & Directors
- Tim Roth
- Vanessa Williams (VII)
- Laurence Fishburne
- Andy Garcia
- Cicely Tyson
- Bill Duke
Release date: 2001-03-19 Run time: 125 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £4.46
Review Hoodlum [1997] / MGM Entertainment:Hoodlum, Bill Duke's interesting but flawed blaxploitation take on the classic gangster movie, usefully redresses a balance. It is all too easy to see the criminal underworld of the 1920s as an all-white affair, in which Harlem is an exotic locale where occasionally white gangsters patronise the black performers of the Cotton Club, from which black audiences were specifically barred. Yet one of the principal sources of illegal revenue was the numbers racket in Harlem-gambling on stock market closing figures-revenue on which the likes of Dutch Schultz and Lucky Luciano were keen to lay their hands. Lawrence Fishburne is an impressive "Bumpy" Johnson, the street enforcer turned strategist for the matriarchal Queen (Cicely Tyson), gradually learning a ruthlessness that forfeits him the love of a good woman, Francine (Vanessa Williams). Tim Roth as Schultz and Andy Garcia as Luciano are essentially melodramatic turns-the foul-mouthed punk and the reptilian smoothy-and both turn in enjoyably full-blooded unsubtle performances. -Roz Kaveney.
| Browse Crime, Thrillers & Mystery:
Models & Brands: Sugarhouse [2007], The Package [1990], The Thin Blue Line [1988], Out For A Kill [2003], The Good Die Young [1954], Columbo - The Complete First Season, Frailty [2002], The Crimson Rivers [2001], Flight Plan [Blu-ray] [2005], The Early Hitchcock Collection [1929], Last House On The Left (2 Disc Special Edition) [1972], Leon Morin, Pretre [1961], The Ultimate Hitchcock Collection, Prime Suspect 3 [1993], The Sopranos: Complete Series 2 [1999], Time Without Pity [1957], Single White Female [1992], Thunderheart [1992], Basic [2003], Hoodlum [1997] |