Fox Home Ent., $39.98.
The Science Fiction Museum frames the past and present of glitzy and gritty futures.
On the new documentary Neil Young: Heart of Gold.
Polanski’s Holocaust saga is more vérité than cinema.
Miramax Home Ent., $29.99.
Co-written by Tim Firth of Calendar Girls fame/infamy, here comes another allegedly fact-based, timidly titillating Britcom to tickle middlebrow Anglophiles…
Opens at Uptown, Fri., March 10. Rated R. 98 minutes.
Why Michael Moore and Michael Savage are the defining characters, and caricatures, of our political times.
Playing with life, death, and reality, Cronenberg and No頰roduce the feel-bad movies of the year.
This new Batman gains psychological depth, even if he loses a bit of his old static grandeur.
TH!NKFilm, $29.99.
The mysteries of Yes.
David Cronenberg on madness.
Denzel’s directorial debut is smooth sailing.
Opens at Harvard Exit, Fri., April 14. Rated PG-13. 99 minutes.
Spielberg is smooth, Hanks is sweet, and The Terminal is . . . well, diverting.
A former millionaire surveys what once might have been hisand might be again.
Of great food and fantastic theater at Teatro ZinZanni.
Director, Town Hall.
Biopic tells us too much about America’s sexual habits, too little about what motivated its erotic expert.