Total Number of Movies in Joel’s Collection: 1,338 Page Number: 13 / 27
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L.A. Confidential

Director: Curtis Hanson
Starring: Kevin Spacey, Russell Crowe, Guy Pearce, Kim Basinger, James Cromwell
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.4 (269,627 votes)
Release: Apr 1998
Summary: In a time when it seems that every other movie makes some claim to being a film noir, "L.A. Confidential" is the real thing--a gritty, sordid tale of sex, scandal, betrayal, and corruption of all sorts (police, political, press--and, of course, very personal) in 1940s Hollywood. The Oscar-winning screenplay is actually based on several titles in James Ellroy's series of chronological thriller novels (including the title volume, "The Big Nowhere", and "White Jazz")--a compelling blend of L.A. history and pulp fiction that has earned it comparisons to the greatest of all Technicolor noir films, "Chinatown". Kim Basinger richly deserved her Supporting Actress Oscar for her portrayal of a conflicted femme fatale; unfortunately, her male costars are so uniformly fine that they may have canceled each other out with the Academy voters: Russell Crowe, Guy Pearce, Kevin Spacey, and James Cromwell play LAPD officers of varying stripes. Pearce's character is a particularly intriguing study in Hollywood amorality and ambition, a strait-laced "hero" (and son of a departmental legend) whose career goals outweigh all other moral, ethical, and legal considerations. If he's a good guy, it's only because he sees it as the quickest route to a promotion. "--Jim Emerson"
 

Lady and the Tramp

Director: Hamilton Luske
Starring: Peggy Lee, Barbara Luddy, Larry Roberts, Bill Thompson, Bill Baucom, Stan Freberg, Verna Felton, Alan Reed, George Givot, Dal McKennon, Lee Millar, The Mellomen
Genre: Animation, Family
Studio: Walt Disney Video
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 7
Release: Jun 1955
Summary: Lady, a golden cocker spaniel, meets up with a mongrel dog who calls himself the Tramp. He is obviously from the wrong side of town, but happenings at Lady's home make her decide to travel with him for a while.
 

Laid to Rest

Director: Robert Hall
Starring: Bobbi Sue Luther, Kevin Gage, Lena Headey, Sean Whalen, Richard Lynch
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.2 (4,309 votes)
Release: Apr 2009
Summary: A terrifying story of a young girl who wakes up in a casket with a traumatic head injury and no memory of her identity. She quickly realizes she was abducted by a Deranged Serial Murderer and in an isolated rural town she must survive the night and outsmart the technologically inclined killer who is hellbent on finishing what he started.
 

Lars and the Real Girl

Director: Craig Gillespie
Starring: Ryan Gosling, Emily Mortimer, Paul Schneider, R.D. Reid, Kelli Garner
Genre: Comedy, Indie, Romance
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.4 (76,337 votes)
Release: Oct 2007
Summary: Sometimes you find love where you'd least expect it. Just ask Lars (Academy Award Nominee, Ryan Gosling), a sweet but quirky guy who thinks he's found the girl of his dreams in a life-sized doll named Bianca. Lars is completely content with his artificial girlfriend, but when he develops feelings for Margo, an attractive co-worker, Lars finds himself lost in a hilariously unique love triangle, hoping to somehow discover the real meaning of true love. You'll be swept off your feet by Lars And The Real Girl, hailed as "One of the Year's 10 Best" by The Associated Press.
 

Last Chance Harvey

Director: Joel Hopkins
Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Kathy Baker, James Brolin
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Anchor Bay - ITN
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.7 (13,661 votes)
Release: May 2009
Summary: Anyone who’s seen the trailer for Last Chance Harvey can easily guess how it ends. In fact, the title alone is a clue. But the destination is hardly the point with movies like this; it’s the journey that counts, and this one is pretty entertaining. You could call director-writer Joel Hopkins’ film a romantic comedy, but it’s not especially robust in either of those departments. This is more of a character study, and veteran lead actors Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thompson are well up to the task of bringing theirs to life. Both are awkward, lonely, social misfits. Hoffman’s Harvey Shine is a bit of a schlub; his gig as a jingle composer in jeopardy, estranged from his ex-wife (Kathy Baker) and daughter (Liane Balaban), he flies to London for the latter’s wedding, only to have her tell him that she has chosen her step-father (James Brolin) rather than him to give her away. Meanwhile, Kate Walker (Thompson) spends her days trying to survey harried travelers at Heathrow Airport, answering her meddling mother’s constant stream of cell phone calls, and awaiting the all-to-inevitable onset of spinsterhood. Harvey has already brushed her off once when, having put in a humiliating appearance at the wedding and missed his return flight to America, he runs into her in an airport bar. What ensues--the initial repartee and sarcastic snarking, the gradual breaking of the ice, the burgeoning attraction, the complications and misunderstandings--is entirely predictable. But it’s also well done. These are people one might actually identify with; when Kate tells him, "I’m more comfortable with being disappointed. I’m angry with you for trying to take that away," one senses a real person in there, which helps raise Last Chance Harvey above its conventions. --Sam Graham
 

Last Night

Director: Massy Tadjedin
Starring: Don McKellar, Sandra Oh, Roberta Maxwell, Robin Gammell, Sarah Polley
Genre: Drama
Studio: Lions Gate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6
Release: Aug 2003
Summary: It's 18:00 in a somewhat deserted Toronto on the last day before the scheduled end of the world at midnight, the end which has been known now for months. Most people are treating midnight as a matter-of-fact event with little sense of panic. In fact, many are celebrating this last day. Most have very specific wants for this last day and will do whatever they need to to make those wants happen. And some, such as Duncan and Donna with the gas company, are working, ensuring that the masses are served and comfortable during the final hours. The Wheeler family are marking the last day by having a Christmas party, although sullen adult son Patrick, his thoughts in part stemming from being recently widowed, has made it clear he wants to be alone in his own home at the end. Patrick's wants may be in jeopardy when a woman named Sandra - Duncan's wife - lands on his doorstep. Sandra is stranded...
 

The Last Samurai

Director: Edward Zwick
Starring: Tom Cruise, Ken Watanabe, Billy Connolly, William Atherton, Chad Lindberg
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.7 (205,803 votes)
Release: May 2004
Summary: While Japan undergoes tumultuous transition to a more Westernized society in 1876-77, "The Last Samurai" gives epic sweep to an intimate story of cultures at a crossroads. In America, tormented Civil War veteran Capt. Nathan Algren (Tom Cruise) is coerced by a mercenary officer (Tony Goldwyn) to train the Japanese Emperor's troops in the use of modern weaponry. Opposing this "progress" is a rebellion of samurai warriors, holding fast to their traditions of honor despite strategic disadvantage. As a captive of the samurai leader (Ken Watanabe), Algren learns, appreciates, and adopts the samurai code, switching sides for a climactic battle that will put everyone's honor to the ultimate test. All of which makes director Edward Zwick's noble epic eminently worthwhile, even if its Hollywood trappings (including an all-too-conventional ending) prevent it from being the masterpiece that Zwick and screenwriter John Logan clearly wanted it to be. Instead, "The Last Samurai" is an elegant mainstream adventure, impressive in all aspects of its production. It may not engage the emotions as effectively as Logan's script for "Gladiator", but like Cruise's character, it finds its own quality of honor. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Lawless

Director: John Hillcoat
Starring: Tom Hardy, Jason Clarke, Shia LaBeouf, Guy Pearce
Genre: Crime, Drama
Studio: Benaroya Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.3 (86,178 votes)
Release: Aug 2012
Summary: The three Bondurant brothers run a bootlegging operation during the depression, up in the mountains of Franklin County, Virginia. Crooked Special Deputy Charles Rakes is after a share of the brothers' profits. Compounding their troubles, the local competition is elbowing in on their activities. Forrest's boisterous defiance and Cricket's knack for moonshine production help the brothers gain a local monopoly. When Forrest is wounded as tension with Rakes escalates, Jack, initially the timid one, must prove his worth against gangster Floyd Banner's mob, and we see him metamorphose into a cocky exhibitionist in his attempts to woo the off-limits preacher's daughter, Bertha.
 

Lawrence of Arabia

Director: David Lean
Starring: Peter O'Toole, Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn, Jack Hawkins, Omar Sharif
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Columbia Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 7.0 (47 votes)
Release: Jan 1963
Summary: There's no getting around a simple, basic truth: watching "Lawrence of Arabia" in any home-video format represents a compromise. There's no better way to appreciate this epic biographical adventure than to see it projected in 70 millimeter onto a huge theater screen. That caveat aside, David Lean's masterful "desert classic" is still enjoyable on the small screen, especially if viewed in widescreen format. (If your only option is to view a "pan & scan" version, it's best not to bother; this is a film for which the widescreen format is utterly mandatory.) Peter O'Toole gives a star-making performance as T.E. Lawrence, the eccentric British officer who united the desert tribes of Arabia against the Turks during World War I. Lean orchestrates sweeping battle sequences and breathtaking action, but the film is really about the adventures and trials that transform Lawrence into a legendary man of the desert. Lean traces this transformation on a vast canvas of awesome physicality; no other movie has captured the expanse of the desert with such scope and grandeur. Equally important is the psychology of Lawrence, who remains an enigma even as we grasp his identification with the desert. Perhaps the greatest triumph of this landmark film is that Lean has conveyed the romance, danger, and allure of the desert with such physical and emotional power. It's a film about a man who leads one life but is irresistibly drawn to another, where his greatness and mystery are allowed to flourish in equal measure. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Layer Cake

Director: Matthew Vaughn
Starring: Daniel Craig, Kenneth Cranham, Dexter Fletcher, Michael Gambon, Colm Meaney
Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.3 (89,015 votes)
Release: Oct 2004
Summary: As its title suggests, "Layer Cake" is a crime thriller that cuts into several levels of its treacherous criminal underworld. The title is actually one character's definition of the drug-trade hierarchy, but it's also an apt metaphor for the separate layers of deception, death, and betrayal experienced by the film's unnamed protagonist, a cocaine traffic middle-man played with smooth appeal by Daniel Craig (rumored at the time of this film's release to be on the short list for consideration as the next James Bond). Listed in the credits only as "XXXX," the character is trapped into doing a favor for his volatile boss, only to have tables turned by his boss's boss (Michael Gambon) in a twisting plot involving a stolen shipment of Ecstasy, a missing girl, duplicitous dealers, murderous Serbian gangsters, and a variety of lowlifes with their own deadly agendas. As adapted by J.J. Connolly (from his own novel) and directed by Matthew Vaughan (who earned his genre chops as producer of Guy Ritchie's "Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels" and "Snatch"), "Layer Cake" improves upon those earlier British gangland hits with assured pacing, intelligent plotting, and an admirable emphasis on plot-moving dialogue over routine action. Sure, it's violent (that's to be expected) and not always involving, but it's smarter than most thrillers, and Vaughan's directorial debut has a confident style that's flashy without being flamboyant. This could be the start of an impressive career. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Leaves of Grass

Director: Tim Blake Nelson
Starring: Edward Norton, Susan Sarandon, Tim Blake Nelson
Genre: Comedy, Crime, Drama
Studio: First Look Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.5 (17,750 votes)
Release: Oct 2010
Summary: "Leaves of Grass" as a title, referring here to both Walt Whitman and marijuana, is indicative of this film's hybridity in regards to genre--half comedy and half brutal crime drama--and tone, which is at once irreverent and highly philosophical. Directed by Tim Blake Nelson, who also costars as the redneck pothead Bolger, "Leaves of Grass" is about the troubles that follow two identical twins, philosophy professor Bill Kincaid and his marijuana-growing brother Brady, both skillfully played by Edward Norton. When Brady, the man with a criminal mind but an open heart, convinces Bill to return home to their small Oklahoma town, Bill becomes inadvertently embroiled in more than either sibling can handle. While their schemes get complicated, one meets the zany women in their lives, including Daisy (Susan Sarandon), their ex-hippie mom who at a very young age has relinquished herself to a retirement home; Brady's teen sweetheart, Colleen (Melanie Lynskey); and Bill's fling, high school teacher and poet Janet (Keri Russell), who has turned her back on the rigors of New England academic life for one of catfish noodling and Whitman's poetry. Absurd plot lines make up the comedic bulk of this film, ushered along by druggie investor Pug Rothbaum (Richard Dreyfuss), who seems to exist so that clever jokes about Jews populating Tulsa, Oklahoma, can pepper this witty satire. While many shots recall Coen brothers classics like "Raising Arizona", "Leaves of Grass" still manages to distinguish itself from its obvious influences. Hilarious sets and situations, as when Bill stumbles into Brady's black-light-poster-decorated waterbed room, give this film unique style. The strangest aspects of this movie, including its waffling between comedy and drama so that one knows not, at times, when to laugh and when to squirm, become a source of its ambition. "Leaves of Grass" is also well written and juggles a highly complex, almost slapstick essence with ingenuity. --"Trinie Dalton"
 

Lebanon, PA

Director: Ben Hickernell
Starring: Josh Hopkins, Mary Beth Hurt, Samantha Mathis, Rachel Kitson, Ian Merrill Peakes
Genre: Drama
Studio: Monarch Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.9 (6,638 votes)
Release: Jun 2011
Summary: Urbane Philadelphia ad man Will (Josh Hopkins) heads to small-town Lebanon for his father's funeral, and the road leads not only to closure but to a revelation when the 35-year-old meets his precocious teenage cousin, CJ (Rachel Kitson), and her winsome teacher, Vicki (Samantha Mathis). As his friendship with CJ deepens and his warmth for the married Vicki grows, Will comes to realize that life can't always be summed up in a catchphrase.
 

Lee Daniels' The Butler

Director: Lee Daniels
Starring: Alex Pettyfer, John Cusack, Robin Williams, James Marsden, Alan Rickman, Minka Kelly, Liev Schreiber, Jesse Williams, Lenny Kravitz, Forest Whitaker, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Terrence Howard, Jane Fonda, Mariah Carey, Oprah Winfrey, David Banner, Vanessa Redgrave, Michael Rainey Jr., David Oyelowo, Ami Ameen, LaJessie Smith, Yaya DaCosta, Xosha Roquemore, Clarence Williams III, John P. Fertitta, Jim Gleason
Genre: Drama, Biography
Studio: Follow Through Productions
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Release: Aug 2013
Summary: Cecil Gaines was a sharecropper's son who grew up in the 1920s as a domestic servant for the white family who casually destroyed his. Eventually striking out on his own, Cecil becomes a hotel valet of such efficiency and discreteness in the 1950s that he becomes a butler in the White House itself. There, Cecil would serve numerous US Presidents over the decades as a passive witness of history with the American Civil Rights Movement gaining momentum even as his family has troubles of its own. As his wife, Gloria, struggles with her addictions and his defiant eldest son, Louis, strives for a just world, Cecil must decide whether he should take action in his own way.
 

Legally Blonde

Director: Robert Luketic
Starring: Reese Witherspoon, Luke Wilson, Selma Blair, Matthew Davis, Victor Garber
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.1 (78,099 votes)
Release: Jul 2001
Summary: If you've ever doubted how much a star can carry a movie, look no further than "Legally Blonde", Robert Luketic's pop fluff about a sorority girl who becomes the reigning brain at Harvard Law School. The film tries way too hard to "be" pop fluff, but thankfully it also understands the comic glories of Reese Witherspoon. As Elle Woods, the supposedly dimwitted heroine, Witherspoon gives a high-wattage performance that somehow comes across as both lusciously cartoonish and warmly human. It's a radiant comic turn worthy of Marilyn Monroe, and Luketic throws the whole movie at her, even though its intentional kitsch and sledgehammer contrivances don't trust you enough to figure out on your own what might be guilty fun about it. It's a lame movie, essentially, that redeems itself by knowing just enough to keep things sunny and moving right along. The film is content to follow several steps behind the regal Witherspoon, carrying her train. You probably will be, too. "--Steve Wiecking"
 

LEGO Batman: The Movie - DC Super Heroes Unite

Director: Jon Burton
Starring: Clancy Brown, Rob Paulsen, Brian Bloom, Laura Bailey, Troy Baker, Kari Wahlgren, Charlie Schlatter, Travis Willingham, Christopher Corey Smith, Katherine Von Till, Erin Shanagher
Genre: Animation, Action, Adventure
Studio: DC Comics
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 6.7 (1,029 votes)
Release: May 2013
Summary: Joker will team with Lex Luthor to destroy the world one brick at a time. It's up to Batman, Superman and the rest of the Justice League to stop them.
 

Les Misérables

Director: Tom Hooper
Starring: Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Anne Hathaway, Amanda Seyfried, Sacha Baron Cohen
Genre: Drama, Musical, Romance
Studio: Universal Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.9 (94,498 votes)
Release: Dec 2012
Summary: Jean Valjean, known as Prisoner 24601, is released from prison and breaks parole to create a new life for himself while evading the grip of the persistent Inspector Javert. Set in post-revolutionary France, the story reaches resolution against the background of the June Rebellion.
 

Let Me In

Director: Matt Reeves
Starring: Kodi Smit-McPhee, Richard Jenkins, Elias Koteas, Sasha Barrese, Dylan Kenin, Dylan Minnette, Jimmy "Jax" Pinchak, Nicolai Dorian, Seth Adkins, Chloë Grace Moretz
Genre: Drama, Horror, Mystery
Studio: Hammer Film Productions, EFTI
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.2 (55,463 votes)
Release: Oct 2010
Summary: This is a remake of the movie "Let The Right One In" which was a movie adaptation of a book. A story of a young boy who is frequently bullied and a young girl that moves in next door with her caretaker. It is established that she is a vampire and, after losing her caretaker, must leave in order to survive. A story of innocent love entangled in murder, mystery, and horror.
 

Let the Right One In

Director: Tomas Alfredson
Starring: Kåre Hedebrant, Lina Leandersson, Per Ragnar, Henrik Dahl, Karin Bergquist
Genre: Drama, Horror
Studio: Momentum Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6
Release: Oct 2008
Summary: Oskar, a bullied 12-year old, dreams of revenge. He falls in love with Eli, a peculiar girl. She can't stand the sun or food and to come into a room she needs to be invited. Eli gives Oskar the strength to hit back but when he realizes that Eli needs to drink other people's blood to live he's faced with a choice. How much can love forgive? Set in the Stockholm suburb of Blackeberg in 1982.
 

Lethal Weapon

Director: Richard Donner
Starring: Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Gary Busey, Mitch Ryan, Tom Atkins, Darlene Love, Traci Wolfe, Jackie Swanson, Damon Hines, Ebonie Smith, Gilles Kohler, Lycia Naff, Jack Thibeau, Ed O'Ross, Don Gordon, Patrick Cameron
Genre: Adventure, Action, Comedy, Thriller, Crime
Studio: Warner Bros.
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.6 (127,451 votes)
Release: May 1987
Summary: Veteran buttoned-down LAPD detective Roger Murtaugh is partnered with unhinged cop Martin Riggs, who -- distraught after his wife's death -- has a death wish and takes unnecessary risks with criminals at every turn. The odd couple embark on their first homicide investigation as partners, involving a young woman known to Murtaugh with ties to a drug and prostitution ring.
 

Lethal Weapon 2

Director: Richard Donner
Starring: Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Joe Pesci, Joss Ackland, Derrick O'Connor, Patsy Kensit, Darlene Love, Steve Kahan, Mark Rolston, Jenette Goldstein, Dean Norris, Juney Smith, Nestor Serrano, Philip Suriano, Grand L. Bush, Allan Dean Moore, Jack McGee
Genre: Adventure, Action, Comedy, Thriller, Crime
Studio: Warner Bros.
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.1 (82,854 votes)
Release: Jul 1989
Summary: In the opening chase, Martin Riggs and Roger Murtaugh stumble across a trunk full of Krugerrands. They follow the trail to a South African diplomat who's using his immunity to conceal a smuggling operation. When he plants a bomb under Murtaugh's toilet, the action explodes!
 

Lethal Weapon 3

Director: Richard Donner
Starring: Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Joe Pesci, Rene Russo, Stuart Wilson, Steve Kahan
Genre: Adventure, Action, Comedy, Thriller, Crime
Studio: Warner Bros.
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.6 (87,192 votes)
Release: May 1992
Summary: Archetypal buddy cops Riggs and Murtaugh are back for another round of high-stakes action, this time setting their collective sights on bringing down a former Los Angeles police lieutenant turned black market weapons dealer. Lorna Cole joins as the beautiful yet hardnosed internal affairs sergeant who catches Riggs's eye.
 

Lethal Weapon 4

Director: Richard Donner
Starring: Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Joe Pesci, Rene Russo, Jet Li, Darlene Love, Traci Wolfe, Kim Chan, Steve Kahan, Damon Hines, Ebonie Smith, Michael Chow, Danny Arroyo, Elizabeth Sung, Chris Rock, Bob Jennings, Jeanne Chinn, Conan Lee
Genre: Adventure, Action, Comedy, Thriller, Crime
Studio: Warner Bros.
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.5 (89,768 votes)
Release: Jul 1998
Summary: In the combustible action franchise's final installment, maverick detectives Martin Riggs and Roger Murtaugh square off against Asian mobster Wah Sing Ku, who's up to his neck in slave trading and counterfeit currency. With help from gumshoe Leo Getz and smart-aleck rookie cop Lee Butters, Riggs and Murtaugh aim to take down Ku and his gang.
 

Letters from Iwo Jima

Director: Clint Eastwood
Starring: Ken Watanabe, Kazunari Ninomiya, Tsuyoshi Ihara, Ryo Kase, Shidô Nakamura, Hiroshi Watanabe, Eijiro Ozaki, Luke Eberl, Hiro Abe, Sonny Saito, Steve Santa Sekiyoshi, Yuki Matsuzaki
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 4.0 (150 votes)
Release: Dec 2006
Summary: The story of the battle of Iwo Jima between the United States and Imperial Japan during World War II, as told from the perspective of the Japanese who fought it.
 

Leviathan

Director: Lucien Castaing-Taylor, Verena Paravel
Starring: Declan Conneely, Johnny Gatcombe, Adrian Guillette, Brian Jannelle, Clyde Lee
Genre: Documentary
Studio: Arrete Ton Cinema
My Rating:
Rated: Not Rated
Rating: 6.5 (948 votes)
Summary: A documentary shot in the North Atlantic and focused on the commercial fishing industry.
 

Liberal Arts

Director: Josh Radnor
Starring: Zac Efron, Josh Radnor, Elizabeth Olsen, Richard Jenkins, Allison Janney, Elizabeth Reaser, Kate Burton
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Studio: Strategic Motion Ventures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.7 (11,323 votes)
Release: Sep 2012
Summary: Thirty-five year old Jesse Fisher, an admissions officer at a New York City post-secondary institution he who loves English and literature, has somewhat lost his passion in life, which includes recently being unceremoniously dumped by his latest girlfriend, who could no longer be the person to prop him up emotionally. He has a chance to find that passion again when he is invited to the retirement dinner of his second favorite Ohio University college professor, Peter Hoberg, as his time there was when his life held the most passion. Jesse's encounters with five people there may determine if he does find that passion again. They are: Hoberg, who is resisting the notion of retirement; Judith Fairfield, Jesse's favorite professor, although for a different reason than his like of Hoberg; Nat, a free spirit who navigates life at the institution on his own terms; undergraduate student Dean, who Jesse sees as a younger more destructive version of himself; and nineteen year old undergraduate ...
 

Life

Starring: Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Adam Arkin, Brent Sexton, Donal Logue
Genre: Crime, Drama, Mystery
Studio: NBC Universal Television
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.1 (13,777 votes)
Summary: Brilliant LAPD detective Charlie Crews has survived the extreme abuse befalling an innocent cop in prison, and was exonerated for the murders and released after 12 years of hell in jail. He could retire on his settlement, but chooses to resume police work. Nevertheless, the grim experience has made him more philosophical and tempted to put justice - especially for the innocent - above chasing the presumably guilty and legally by-the-book, as his new partner Dani Reese must experience and learn to cope with.
 

The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou

Director: Wes Anderson
Starring: Bill Murray, Anjelica Huston, Cate Blanchett, Willem Dafoe, Owen Wilson, Jeff Goldblum, Michael Gambon, Noah Taylor, Bud Cort, Seu Jorge, Matthew Gray Gubler, Antonio Monda, Isabella Blow, Seymour Cassel, Rob Cohen
Genre: Adventure, Comedy, Drama
Studio: Touchstone Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Dec 2004
Summary: Internationally famous oceanographer Steve Zissou (Bill Murray) and his crew -- Team Zissou -- set sail on a expedition to hunt down the mysterious, elusive -- possibly nonexistent -- Jaguar Shark that killed Zissou's partner during the documentary filming of their latest adventure. They are joined on their voyage by a young airline co-pilot who may or may not be Zissou's son (Owen Wilson), a beautiful journalist (Cate Blanchett) assigned to write a profile of Zissou, and his estranged wife and co-producer, Eleanor (Anjelica Huston). They face overwhelming complications including pirates, kidnapping, and bankruptcy.
 

Life of Pi

Director: Ang Lee
Starring: Suraj Sharma, Irrfan Khan, Ayush Tandon, Gautam Belur, Adil Hussain
Genre: Adventure film, Drama
Studio: Fox 2000 Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 8.1 (187,330 votes)
Release: Nov 2012
Summary: Life of Pi is a 2012 adventure film written by David Magee and directed by Ang Lee.
 

Lilo & Stitch

Director: Chris Sanders, Dean DeBlois
Starring: Daveigh Chase, Chris Sanders, Tia Carrere, David Ogden Stiers, Kevin McDonald
Genre: Animation, Family, Comedy
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7.0 (60,204 votes)
Release: Jun 2002
Summary: A lonely Hawaiian girl named Lilo is being raised by her older sister, Nani, after their parents die -- under the watch of social worker Cobra Bubbles. When Lilo adopts a funny-looking dog and names him "Stitch," she doesn't realize her new best friend is a wacky alien created by mad scientist Dr. Jumba.
 

Lincoln

Director: Steven Spielberg
Starring: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sally Field, David Strathairn, Tommy Lee Jones
Genre: Biography, Drama, History, War
Studio: DreamWorks SKG
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.7 (64,597 votes)
Release: Nov 2012
Summary: In 1865, as the American Civil War winds inexorably toward conclusion, U.S. president Abraham Lincoln endeavors to achieve passage of the landmark constitutional amendment which will forever ban slavery from the United States. However, his task is a race against time, for peace may come at any time, and if it comes before the amendment is passed, the returning southern states will stop it before it can become law. Lincoln must, by almost any means possible, obtain enough votes from a recalcitrant Congress before peace arrives and it is too late. Yet the president is torn, as an early peace would save thousands of lives. As the nation confronts its conscience over the freedom of its entire population, Lincoln faces his own crisis of conscience -- end slavery or end the war.
 

The Lincoln Lawyer

Director: Brad Furman
Starring: Marisa Tomei, Matthew McConaughey
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.3 (100,654 votes)
Release: Jul 2011
Summary: Smooth operator Mickey Haller (Matthew McConaughey) zips around Los Angeles in his chauffeured Lincoln town car, cutting deals and finding clients on the road. Then he lands a doozy: a rich real-estate heir (Ryan Phillippe) accused of the brutal assault of an escort. At first, the case looks like a breeze, but odd details start nagging at Haller until he recognizes an ugly connection to an earlier case--and realizes he's been set up in the strangest way. There are some deep implausibilities in "The Lincoln Lawyer", but they hardly matter. This is a movie that cruises on charm and smart casting, from McConaughey as a man whose glib polish is betrayed by a streak of doubt, down to the detectives (solid performances from Bryan Cranston, Michael Paré, Michaela Conlin, and others) and lowlifes (Katherine Moennig as an unlucky hooker, Shea Whigham as a lazy snitch) that flesh out the legal world. Every character pops out, clean and distinct; this sort of web-of-deceit story line, full of twists and turns, depends on the audience clearly connecting all the players. Some moments get overstated or maybe don't make complete sense, but the zippy pace carries the audience over those bumps. "The Lincoln Lawyer" could easily turn into a television series, a sort of "Rockford Files"-esque mixture of procedure and puzzle making. Also starring Marisa Tomei, William H. Macy, Frances Fisher, John Leguizamo, and Josh Lucas as the prosecuting attorney who gives McConaughey some competition in the chiseled-looks department. "--Bret Fetzer"
 

The Lion King

Director: Roger Allers, Rob Minkoff
Starring: Matthew Broderick, Niketa Calame, Jim Cummings, James Earl Jones, Nathan Lane
Genre: Adventure, Animation, Comedy, Drama, Family, Musical
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 8.4 (322,811 votes)
Release: Jun 1994
Summary: A young lion cub named Simba can't wait to be king. But his uncle craves the title for himself and will stop at nothing -- even killing his own brother -- to get it.
 

The Little Drummer Boy

Director: Jules Bass, Arthur Rankin Jr.
Starring: José Ferrer, Paul Frees, June Foray, Ted Eccles, Greer Garson
Genre: Animation, Adventure, Family
Studio: Rankin/Bass Productions
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 7.1 (794 votes)
Release: Feb 1968
Summary: Animated film version of the legendary song of a boy who lets out all his frustrations on a drum, little knowing how significant this drum will be in the birth of the newborn Jesus.
 

The Little Mermaid

Director: Ron Clements, John Musker
Starring: Rene Auberjonois, Christopher Daniel Barnes, Jodi Benson, Pat Carroll, Paddi Edwards, Buddy Hackett, Jason Marin, Kenneth Mars, Edie McClurg, Will Ryan, Ben Wright, Samuel E. Wright
Genre: Fantasy, Animation, Drama, Comedy, Science Fiction, Romance, Family
Studio: Walt Disney Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 8
Release: Nov 1989
Summary: This colorful adventure tells the story of an impetuous mermaid princess named Ariel who falls in love with the very human Prince Eric and puts everything on the line for the chance to be with him. Memorable songs and characters -- including the villainous sea witch Ursula.
 

Little Miss Sunshine

Director: Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris
Starring: Abigail Breslin, Greg Kinnear, Paul Dano, Alan Arkin, Toni Collette
Genre: Adventure, Comedy, Drama
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.9 (241,499 votes)
Release: Aug 2006
Summary: Pile together a blue-ribbon cast, a screenplay high in quirkiness, and the Sundance stamp of approval, and you've got yourself a crossover indie hit. That formula worked for "Little Miss Sunshine", a frequently hilarious study of family dysfunction. Meet the Hoovers, an Albuquerque clan riddled with depression, hostility, and the tattered remnants of the American Dream; despite their flakiness, they manage to pile into a VW van for a weekend trek to L.A. in order to get moppet daughter Olive (Abigail Breslin) into the Little Miss Sunshine beauty pageant. Much of the pleasure of this journey comes from watching some skillful comic actors doing their thing: Greg Kinnear and Toni Collette as the parents (he's hoping to become a self-help authority), Alan Arkin as a grandfather all too willing to give uproariously inappropriate advice to a sullen teenage grandson (Paul Dano), and a subdued Steve Carell as a jilted gay professor on the verge of suicide. The film is a crowd-pleaser, and if anything is a little too eager to bend itself in the direction of quirk-loving Sundance audiences; it can feel forced. But the breezy momentum and the ingenious actors help push the material over any bumps in the road.-- "Robert Horton"
 

Live Free or Die Hard

Director: Len Wiseman
Starring: Bruce Willis
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.3 (239,890 votes)
Release: Jan 2007
Summary: Twelve years after "Die Hard with a Vengeance", "Live Free or Die Hard" finds John McClane (Bruce Willis) a few years older, not any happier, and just as kick-ass as ever. Right after he has a fight with his college-age daughter (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), a call comes in to pick up a hacker (Justin Long, a.k.a. the "Apple guy") who might help the FBI learn something about a brief security blip in their systems. Now any "Die Hard" fan knows that this is when the assassins with foreign accents and high-powered weaponry show up, telling McClane that once again he's stumbled into an assignment that's anything but routine. Once that wreckage has cleared, it is revealed that the hacker is only one of many hackers who are being targeted for extermination after they helped set up a "fire sale," a three-pronged cyberattack designed to bring down the entire country by crippling its transportation, finances, and utilities. That plan is now being put into action by a mysterious team (Timothy Olyphant, "Deadwood", and Maggie Q, "Mission: Impossible 3") that seems to be operating under the government's noses.
 

Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels

Director: Guy Ritchie
Starring: Jason Flemyng, Dexter Fletcher, Nick Moran, Jason Statham, Steven Mackintosh
Genre: Crime, Thriller
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.2 (250,312 votes)
Release: Nov 2002
Summary: Cockney boys Tom, Soap, Eddie, and Bacon are in a bind; they owe seedy criminal and porn king "Hatchet" Harry a sizable amount of cash after Eddie loses half a million in a rigged game of poker. Hot on their tails is a thug named Big Chris who intends to send them all to the hospital if they don't come up with the cash in the allotted time. Add into the mix an incompetent set of ganja cultivators, two dimwitted robbers, a "madman" with an afro, and a ruthless band of drug dealers and you have an astonishing movie called "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels". Before the boys can blink, they are caught up in a labyrinth of double-crosses that lead to a multitude of dead bodies, copious amounts of drugs, and two antique rifles.
Written and directed by talented newcomer Guy Ritchie, this is one of those movies that was destined to become an instant cult classic à la "Reservoir Dogs". Although some comparisons were drawn between Ritchie and Quentin Tarantino, it would be unfair to discount the brilliant wit of the story and the innovative camerawork that the director brings to his debut feature. Not since "The Krays" has there been such an accurate depiction of the East End and its more colorful characters. Indicative of the social stratosphere in London, Ritchie's movie is a hilarious and at times touching account of friendships and loyalty. The director and his mates (who make up most of the cast) clearly are enjoying themselves here. This comes across in some shining performances, in particular from ex-footballer Vinnie Jones (Big Chris) and an over-the-top Vas Blackwood (as Rory Breaker), who very nearly steals the show. Full of quirky vernacular and clever tension-packed action sequences, "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels" is a triumph--a perfect blend of intelligence, humor, and suspense. "--Jeremy Storey"
 

Lockout

Director: James Mather, Stephen St. Leger
Starring: Guy Pearce, Maggie Grace, Vincent Regan, Joseph Gilgun, Lennie James
Genre: Thriller, Action, Sci-Fi
Studio: Europa Corp.
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.2 (8,267 votes)
Release: Jul 2012
Summary: Set in the near future, a falsely convicted ex-government agent has one chance at obtaining freedom. He must undertake a dangerous mission to rescue the President's daughter from rioting convicts at an outer space maximum-security prison.
 

The Lone Ranger

Director: Gore Verbinski
Starring: Johnny Depp, Armie Hammer, James Badge Dale, Tom Wilkinson, Helena Bonham Carter, William Fichtner, Barry Pepper, James Frain, Mason Cook, Ruth Wilson, Matt O'Leary, Leon Rippy, Harry Treadaway, Damon Herriman, William Earl Brown, Matthew Page
Genre: Action, Adventure, Western
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.6 (64,008 votes)
Release: Jul 2013
Summary: In the 1930s, an elderly Tonto tells a young boy the tale of John Reid, the Lone Ranger. An idealistic lawyer, he rides with his brother and fellow Texas Rangers in pursuit of the notorious Butch Cavendish. Ambushed by the outlaw and left for dead, John Reid is rescued by the renegade Comanche, Tonto, at the insistence of a mysterious white horse and offers to help him to bring Cavendish to justice. Becoming a reluctant masked rider with a seemingly incomprehensible partner, Reid pursues the criminal against all obstacles. However, John and Tonto learn that Cavendish is only part of a far greater injustice and the pair must fight it in an adventure that would make them a legend.
 

Lone Survivor (screener)

Director: Peter Berg
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch, Eric Bana, Emile Hirsch, Ben Foster, Alexander Ludwig, Scott Elrod, Ali Suliman, Rich Ting, Dan Bilzerian, Yousuf Azami, Jerry Ferrara, Rick Vargas, Gregory Rockwood, Ryan Kay, Patrick Griffin, Josh Berry, Eric Steinig, David Shepard, Justin Tade, Sterling Jones, Jason Riggins, Matthew Page, Johnny Bautista, Sammy Sheik, Nicholas Patel, Daniel Arroyo, Zarin Rahimi, Rohan Chand, Anthony McKenzie, Brian Call, Ishmael Antonio, Samuel Cloud, Perparim 'Peter' Bici, Henry Penzi, Robert Loerke, Kurt Carlson, Daniel Fulcoly, Michael P. Herrmann, Paul Craig, Zabiullah Mirzai, John Hocker, Robert H. Doudell, Hillel Michael Shamam, Edmund Blanchet, Jim Cusic, Corey Large
Genre: Action, Drama, Thriller, War
Studio: Emmett/Furla Films
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Jan 2014
Summary: Based on the failed mission "Operation Red Wings" which tasked four members of SEAL Team 10 on June 28, 2005 to kill Taliban leader Ahmad Shah. They were quickly compromised and under attack, Marcus Luttrell being the only member to survive and evade capture.
 

The Lookout

Director: Scott Frank
Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Jeff Daniels, Matthew Goode, Isla Fisher, Carla Gugino
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Miramax
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.1 (37,989 votes)
Release: Aug 2007
Summary: An unpredictable thriller, "The Lookout" stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt ("Brick", "Mysterious Skin") as Chris, a young man who had everything ahead of him--until a car accident killed two of his friends and left him with brain damage. Now reduced to being a janitor at a bank, Chris struggles to maintain some semblance of order in his life. When a guy he meets at a bar turns out to be an old classmate, Chris succumbs to his flattery, not suspecting that the guy's intentions are criminal. "The Lookout" was probably sold as "Memento" meets "Inside Man", but its rewards are more modest than either. Though the plot is never obvious, the characters are never surprising--and in this kind of thriller, the payoff is when characters exceed what they (and the audience) believe they are. Still, the writing, acting, and directing are all solid, and from moment to moment the movie proves compelling. Jeff Daniels ("The Purple Rose of Cairo") is particularly good as Chris's blind roommate, who smells a rat but can't persuade Chris to do something about it. "--Bret Fetzer"
 

Looney Tunes: Golden Collection

Director: Abe Levitow, Arthur Davis, Chuck Jones, Constantine Nasr, Friz Freleng
Starring: Mel Blanc, Arthur Q. Bryan, Vincent Price, Billy Bletcher, Stan Freberg
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: G
Release: Oct 2003
Summary: For years, animation buffs have waited impatiently for the Warner Bros. cartoons to appear on DVD. The Warner shorts never commanded the budgets and prestige of the Disney and MGM films, and won fewer Oscars than they deserved. But decades after the best ones were created, they remain the quintessential Hollywood cartoons: brash, fast-paced, aggressively funny and uniquely American. Virtually everyone in the U.S. under the age of 60 grew up on these films, in theaters and on TV. The 56 cartoons in the set (out of a studio output of over 1,000) were transferred from good prints--which means the viewer can see dust, scratches, and occasional mistakes by the cel painters. The films are all presented uncut, in defiance of the killjoys who have insisted on censoring alleged "violence" in the versions shown on television. Warner Bros. is obviously testing consumer response with this set. Although the erratic selection includes many classics, purists will argue (correctly) that it offers neither a fair representation of the directors' "oeuvres", nor anything approaching a coherent history of the characters or studio style. (Nearly half the films were directed by Chuck Jones; only three are by Bob Clampett, and there's nothing by Tex Avery or Frank Tashlin.) But it seems petty to carp about omissions and biases when the discs offer excellent, uncensored prints of some of the funniest films ever made in the U.S.--or anywhere else. (Rated G, suitable for all ages: cartoon violence) "--Charles Solomon"
 

Looper

Director: Rian Johnson
Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Bruce Willis, Emily Blunt, Piper Perabo, Jeff Daniels
Genre: Action, Sci-Fi
Studio: Endgame Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.6 (218,254 votes)
Release: Sep 2012
Summary: In the year 2042, a man working for a group of killers called "Loopers" (they work for the mob and kill people who are sent blindfolded back in time from the year 2072 by their bosses) recognizes a victim as himself. He hesitates resulting in the escape of his older self.
 

The Lorax

Director: Chris Renaud
Starring: Danny DeVito, Ed Helms, Zac Efron, Taylor Swift, Betty White
Genre: Animación
Studio: Paramount Spain S.L. Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 6.3 (44,281 votes)
Release: Mar 2012
Summary: El imaginativo mundo del Dr. Seuss cobra vida como nunca antes en esta aventura espectacular de los creadores de Gru, Mi Villano Favorito. Ted, de doce años, hará cualquier cosa para encontrar el Árbol de la Trúfula y así conquistar a la chica de sus sueños. Según comienza su búsqueda Ted descubre la increíble historia de Lorax, una malhumorada aunque encantadora criatura que lucha por proteger a los árboles. Con las voces (en la versión original) de Danny DeVito, Ed Helms, Zac Efron, Taylor Swift y Betty White, se trata de una divertida aventura para todos los públicos.
 

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring

Director: Joel Gallen, Michael Pellerin, Peter Jackson
Starring: Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen, Sean Bean, Orlando Bloom, Viggo Mortensen
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: New Line Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 8.8 (713,703 votes)
Release: Nov 2002
Summary: In every aspect, the extended-edition DVD of Peter Jackson's epic fantasy "The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring" blows away the theatrical-version DVD. No one who cares at all about the film should ever need to watch the original version again. Well, maybe the impatient and the squeamish will still prefer the theatrical version, because the extended edition makes a long film 30 minutes longer and there's a bit more violence (though both versions are rated PG-13). But the changes--sometimes whole scenes, sometimes merely a few seconds--make for a richer film. There's more of the spirit of J.R.R. Tolkien, embodied in more songs and a longer opening focusing on Hobbiton. There's more character development, and more background into what is to come in the two subsequent films, such as Galadriel's gifts to the Fellowship and Aragorn's burden of lineage. And some additions make more sense to the plot, or are merely worth seeing, such as the wood elves leaving Middle-earth or the view of Caras Galadhon (but sorry, there's still no Tom Bombadil). Extremely useful are the chapter menus that indicate which scenes are new or extended.
Of the "four" commentary tracks, the ones with the greatest general appeal are the one by Jackson and cowriters Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens, and the one by 10 cast members, but the more technically oriented commentaries by the creative and production staff are also worth hearing. The bonus features (encompassing two complete DVDs) are far superior to the largely promotional materials included on the theatrical release, delving into such matters as script development, casting, and visual effects. The only drawback is that the film is now spread over two discs, with a somewhat abrupt break following the council at Rivendell, due to the storage capacity required for the longer running time, the added DTS ES 6.1 audio, and the commentary tracks. But that's a minor inconvenience. Whether in this four-disc set or in the collector's gift set (which adds Argonath bookends and a DVD of "National Geographic Beyond the Movie: The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring"), the extended-edition DVD is the "Fellowship" DVD to rule them all. "--David Horiuchi"
 

The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

Director: Peter Jackson
Starring: Viggo Mortensen, Liv Tyler
Genre: Sci-Fi, Fantasy
Studio: New Line Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 8.9 (689,017 votes)
Release: Dec 2004
Summary: The greatest trilogy in film history, presented in the most ambitious sets in DVD history, comes to a grand conclusion with the extended edition of "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King". Not only is the third and final installment of Peter Jackson's adaptation of the works of J.R.R. Tolkien the longest of the three, but a full 50 minutes of new material pushes the running time to a whopping 4 hours and 10 minutes. The new scenes are welcome, and the bonus features maintain the high bar set by the first two films, "The Fellowship of the Ring" and "The Two Towers".
What's New?
One of the scenes cut from the theatrical release but included here, the resolution of the Saruman storyline, generated a lot of publicity when the movie opened, as actor Christopher Lee complained in the press about losing his only appearance. It's an excellent scene, one Jackson calls "pure Tolkien," and provides better context for Pippin to find the wizard's palantir in the water, but it's not critical to the film. In fact, "valuable but not critical" might sum up the "ROTK" extended edition. It's evident that Jackson made the right cuts for the theatrical run, but the extra material provides depth and ties up a number of loose ends, and for those sorry to see the trilogy end (and who isn't?) it's a welcome chance to spend another hour in Middle-earth. Some choice moments are Gandalf's (Ian McKellen) confrontation with the Witch King (we find out what happened to the wizard's staff), the chilling Mouth of Sauron at the gates of Mordor, and Frodo (Elijah Wood) and Sam (Sean Astin) being mistaken for Orc soldiers. We get to see more of Éowyn (Miranda Otto), both with Aragorn and on the battlefield, even fighting the hideously deformed Orc lieutenant, Gothmog. We also see her in one of the most anticipated new scenes, the Houses of Healing after the battle of the Pelennor Fields. It doesn't present Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen) as a savior as the book did, but it shows the initial meeting between Éowyn and Faramir (David Wenham), a relationship that received only a meaningful glance in the theatrical cut.
If you want to completely immerse yourself in Peter Jackson's marvelous and massive achievement, only the extended edition will do.
And for those who complained, no, there are no new endings, not even the scouring of the Shire, which many fans were hoping to see. Nor is there a scene of Denethor (John Noble) with the palantir, which would have better explained both his foresight and his madness. As Jackson notes, when cuts are made, the secondary characters are the first to go, so there is a new scene of Aragorn finding the palantir in Denethor's robes. Another big difference is Aragorn's confrontation with the King of the Dead. In the theatrical version, we didn't know whether the King had accepted Aragorn's offer when the pirate ships pulled into the harbor; here Jackson assumes that viewers have already experienced that tension, and instead has the army of the dead join the battle in an earlier scene (an extended cameo for Jackson). One can debate which is more effective, but that's why the film is available in both versions. If you feel like watching the relatively shorter version you saw in the theaters, you can. If you want to completely immerse yourself in Peter Jackson's marvelous and massive achievement, only the extended edition will do.
How Are the Bonus Features?
To complete the experience, "The Return of the King" provides the same sprawling set of features as the previous extended editions: four commentary tracks, sharp picture and thrilling sound, and two discs of excellent documentary material far superior to the recycled material in the theatrical edition. Those who have listened to the seven hours of commentary for the first two extended editions may wonder if they need to hear more, but there was no commentary for the earlier "ROTK" DVD, so it's still entertaining to hear Jackson break down the film (he says the beacon scene is one of his favorites), discuss differences from the book, point out cameos, and poke fun at himself and the extended-edition concept ("So this is the complete full strangulation, never seen before, here exclusively on DVD!"). The documentaries (some lasting 30 minutes or longer) are of their usual outstanding quality, and there's a riveting storyboard/animatic sequence of the climactic scene, which includes a one-on-one battle between Aragorn and Sauron.
One DVD Set to Rule Them All
Peter Jackson's trilogy has set the standard for fantasy films by adapting the Holy Grail of fantasy stories with a combination of fidelity to the original source and his own vision, supplemented by outstanding writing, near-perfect casting, glorious special effects, and evocative New Zealand locales. The extended editions without exception have set the standard for the DVD medium by providing a richer film experience that pulls the three films together and further embraces Tolkien's world, a reference-quality home theater experience, and generous, intelligent, and engrossing bonus features. "--David Horiuchi"
 

The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

Director: Peter Jackson
Starring: Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen, Viggo Mortensen, Bruce Allpress, Sean Astin
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: New Line Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 8.7 (618,551 votes)
Release: Nov 2003
Summary: The extended edition of "The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring" was perhaps the most comprehensive DVD release to date, and its follow-up proves a similarly colossal achievement, with significant extra footage and a multitude of worthwhile bonus features. The extended version of "The Two Towers" adds 43 minutes to the theatrical version's 179-minute running time, and there are valuable additions to the film. Two new scenes might appease those who feel that the characterization of Faramir was the film's most egregious departure from the book, and fans will appreciate an appearance of the Huorns at Helm's Deep plus a nod to the absence of Tom Bombadil. Seeing a little more interplay between the gorgeous Eowyn and Aragorn is welcome, as is a grim introduction to Eomer and Theoden's son. And among the many other additions, there's an extended epilogue that might not have worked in the theater, but is more effective here in setting up "The Return of the King". While the 30 minutes added to "The Fellowship of the Ring" felt just right in enriching the film, the extra footage in "The Two Towers" at times seems a bit extraneous--we "see" moments that in the theatrical version we had been told about, and some fleshed-out conversations and incidents are rather minor. But director Peter Jackson's vision of J.R.R. Tolkien's world is so marvelous that it's hard to complain about any extra time we can spend there.
While it may seem that there would be nothing left to say after the bevy of features on the extended "Fellowship", the four commentary tracks and two discs of supplements on "The Two Towers" remain informative, fascinating, and funny, far surpassing the recycled materials on the two-disc theatrical version. Highlights of the 6.5 hours' worth of documentaries offer insight on the stunts, the design work, the locations, and the creation of Gollum, and--most intriguing for rabid fans--the film's writers (including Jackson) discuss why they created events that weren't in the book. Providing variety are animatics, rough footage, countless sketches, and a sound-mixing demonstration. Again, the most interesting commentary tracks are by Jackson and writers Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens and by 16 members of the cast (eight of whom didn't appear in the first film, and even including John Noble, whose Denethor character only appears in this extended cut). The first two installments of Peter Jackson's trilogy have established themselves as the best fantasy films of all time, and among the best film trilogies of all time, and their extended-edition DVD sets have set a new standard for expanding on the already-epic films and providing comprehensive bonus features. "--David Horiuchi"
 

Lore

Director: Cate Shortland
Starring: Saskia Rosendahl, Kai-Peter Malina, Nele Trebs, Ursina Lardi, Hans-Jochen Wagner, André Frid, Mika Seidel, Eva-Maria Hagen, Katrin Pollitt, Philip Wiegratz, Sven Pippig, Friederike Frerichs, Hendrik Arnst, Claudia Geisler, Antonia Cäcilia Holfelder
Genre: Drama, Thriller, War
Studio: Rohfilm
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.1 (3,422 votes)
Release: Dec 2012
Summary: After her Nazi parents are imprisoned, Lore leads her younger siblings across a war-torn Germany in 1945. Amidst the chaos, she encounters mysterious Jewish refugee Thomas, who shatters her fragile reality with hatred and desire. To live, she must trust someone she was taught to hate and face the darkness within herself.
 

The Losers

Director: Sylvain White
Starring: Zoe Saldana, Jeffrey Dean Morgan
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.3 (53,355 votes)
Release: Jul 2010
Summary: "The Losers" provides nonstop and pretty thrilling action, with a stellar cast, doing the comic book series from which it was adapted proud in the process. The movie may not have an airtight plot line, but its enthusiastic, talented actors--Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Zoe Saldana, Chris Evans, and the underappreciated Jason Patric--and the crisp, punch-packing direction by Sylvain White more than make up for it. "The Losers" follows the gambits of a team of U.S. Special Forces, with appropriately comic-bookish names like Clay (Morgan), Roque (Idris Elba), Jensen (Evans), Pooch (Columbus Short), and Cougar (Óscar Jaenada). They're sent to Bolivia, where they are double-crossed and presumed dead--with a big bad evil guy, Max (Patric), hot on their trail. In the jungle, they join up with a mystery woman (Saldana, a confident, believable action hero) with her own agenda--and perhaps not the most trustworthy of intentions. The action is nonstop, with plenty of great special effects, as the team continues mostly under the radar with both its mission and trying to stay one step ahead of the shadowy Max. Morgan is terrific as a budding action star, self-deprecating in the manner of George Clooney, and a man who (almost always) gets the job done. And he'd be nowhere without his crew of sidekicks, all of whom have great chemistry and repartee, though it's Evans's Jensen who gets the best comic-relief lines. "I'm warning you, I am a lethal killing machine," Jensen intones to a mocking disbeliever. "In the words of ancient Taoist masters, 'Don't start none… Won't be none.'" Saldana brings great sex appeal to her role as the mystery ally. The comic-book nonstop action in "The Losers" makes it the perfect movie escape--a true winner for fans of action, humor, and a little extra kick in the pants. --"A.T. Hurley"
 

Louis C.K.: Chewed Up

Director: Louis C.K., Shannon Hartman
Starring: Louis C.K.
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Art & Industry
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.4 (1,488 votes)
Release: Oct 2008
 

Louis C.K.: Hilarious

Director: Louis C.K.
Starring: Louis C.K.
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Comedy Central
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.1 (2,118 votes)
Release: Jan 2011
Summary: In this unique and dynamic live concert experience, Louis C.K.'s exploration of life after 40 destroys politically correct images of modern life with thoughts we have all had... but would rarely admit to. Louis C.K.: Hilarious, premiered at The Sundance Film Festival as the first stand-up concert film presented at Sundance and has received rave reviews confirming why Louis C.K. is the most respected comedic voice of his generation.
 

Louis C.K.: Live at the Beacon Theater

Director: Louis C.K.
Starring: Louis C.K.
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Pig Newton
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.2 (452 votes)
Release: Dec 2011
 

Louis C.K.: Oh My God

Director: Louis C.K.
Starring: Louis C.K.
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Pig Newton
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.8 (825 votes)
Release: Apr 2013
Summary: Filmed at the Celebrity Theatre in Phoenix, AZ on February 15th and 16th, 2013, Oh My God is Louis C.K.'s fifth stand-up special, his first for HBO since 2007's Shameless, and his first since winning a Emmy Award for writing on his acclaimed show on FX, Louie. Performed in the round in front of a live audience, he discusses such topics as the food chain, animals, divorce, strange anecdotes, broken morality, murder and mortality.
 

Louis C.K.: One Night Stand

Director: Steven J. Santos, Sue Wolf, Robin Shlien, David Grossman (III), John Fortenberry
Starring: Louis C.K.
Genre: Comedy
Studio: HBO Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 6.3 (99,721 votes)
Release: Jun 2006
Summary: If you?re a fan of late-night talk shows then, whether you know it or not, you know Emmy? Award-winning Louis CK. That?s because he has written hilarious bits for all the titans of late-night comedy. Now he?s becoming a household name in his own right. Filmed live and uncensored before a raucous One Night Stand audience, CK riffs on the absurdities of married life and countless other everyday observations with a skewed vision and often apocalyptic sense of wisdom that is earning him a cult following among fans of standup. See why he made Entertainment Weekly?s ?It List,? and was selected by Variety in 2000 as one of the ?Ten Comics to Watch.? Spend an evening with CK, the comedian who is putting the ?f-u? back in funny.
 

Louis C.K.: Shameless

Director: Steven J. Santos
Starring: Louis C.K.
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Hbo Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.3 (2,170 votes)
Release: Jun 2007
Summary: Lucky for your customers, Louis C.K. is back on HBO in an ALL-NEW hour of raw no-holds-barred stand-up comedy! The creator and star of the 2006 comedy series Lucky Louie, performs in front of a live audience in LA at the Henry Fonda Theater. Louis C.K. covers issues near and dear to his heart like marriage, lying to your spouse, having kids and losing your privacy, and obligatory sex among husbands and wives.
 

Love Actually

Director: Richard Curtis
Starring: Bill Nighy, Gregor Fisher, Rory MacGregor, Colin Firth, Sienna Guillory, Liam Neeson, Emma Thompson, Lulu Popplewell, Kris Marshall, Heike Makatsch, Martin Freeman, Joanna Page, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Andrew Lincoln, Keira Knightley, Hugh Grant, Nina Sosanya, Billy Bob Thornton, Alan Rickman, Martine McCutcheon, Laura Linney, Rodrigo Santoro, Rowan Atkinson, Claudia Schiffer, Ivana Miličević, January Jones, Elisha Cuthbert, Shannon Elizabeth, Denise Richards, Thomas Sangster, Sheila Allen
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance, Holiday
Studio: Universal Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8
Release: Nov 2004
Summary: The characters are falling in love, falling out of love, some are with right people, some are with the wrong people, some are looking to have an affair, some are in the period of mourning; a capsule summary of reality. Love begins and love ends. They flirt a lot. They are all flirting with love. At all ages and social levels, love is the theme. Romantic love and brotherly love is the hotchpotch through out the movie. Most of the movie is filmed in London, during Christmas and the characters all ended up at Heathrow airport a very uplifting note.
 

The Loved Ones

Director: Sean Byrne
Starring: Xavier Samuel, Robin McLeavy, Victoria Thaine, Jessica McNamee, Richard Wilson
Genre: Drama, Horror, Thriller
Studio: StudioCanal
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8
Release: Nov 2010
Summary: Brent (Xavier Samuel) is driving home late one night with his father when he swerves after seeing something in the road. The car spins out of control, and moments later Brent's dad is dead. Brent is wracked with guilt over the incident, and sinks into a deep depression, only beginning to sort out his feelings when he begins dating one of his classmates, a pretty and nurturing girl named Holly (Victoria Thaine). However, another young woman at school, Lola (Robin McLeavy), has taken an interest in Brent, going so far as to ask him to escort her to an upcoming dance. Loyal Brent turns Lola down, but he learns the hard way she doesn't handle disappointment well. Lola and her wealthy father (John Brumpton) force Brent to attend a private party at a cottage in the woods, where he's the only guest and Lola and her dad mete out brutal punishment for daring to hurt her feelings.
 

The Lovely Bones

Director: Peter Jackson
Starring: Saoirse Ronan, Mark Wahlberg, Rachel Weisz, Stanley Tucci, Susan Sarandon
Genre: Drama, Fantasy, Thriller
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.6 (81,620 votes)
Release: Apr 2010
Summary: Director Peter Jackson takes a personal, risky leap in his direction of the film version of Alice Sebold's bestselling novel "The Lovely Bones". Yet the leap pays off, in emotional depth and riveting visuals that transport the viewer to other worlds--even ones the viewer may not want to visit. "The Lovely Bones" is lofted by its star-making performance by the young Saoirse Ronan ("Atonement"), who plays Susie Salmon, the 14-year-old girl who is murdered early in the film, and who narrates the action from her "in-between place" after dying but before going to heaven. Ronan makes Susie as earthy and awkward as any young teen, yet her presence, and her gorgeous pale eyes, remind viewers that she's otherworldly too. "The Lovely Bones" takes some big departures from the book, as many critics have pointed out, but it works well on its own merits. The drama involves how (even whether) Susie's family will recover after her ghastly murder, and what happens to her killer and the futile-seeming search for justice and closure. The entire cast is stellar, including Mark Wahlberg and Rachel Weisz as Susie's nearly destroyed parents; the composed young New Zealand actress Rose McIver, who plays Susie's younger sister, whom Susie watches grow up to be the young woman that Susie will never get to be; and Susan Sarandon, the boozy, wisecracking grandmother who may or may not be able to help keep the family from splintering into a million pieces. The other true standout is Stanley Tucci, almost unrecognizable as the quiet, creepy neighbor who kills Susie, obsessing over every detail and perhaps having left a whole trail of gruesome murders in his shambling wake. Jackson's deft direction keeps the mourning humans moving along believably, numbly, and gives breathtaking life to the afterlife, in scenes of fantasy and dread that recall his "Heavenly Creatures". The film is rated PG-13 but is not recommended for younger teenagers because of its intense subject matter, though handled delicately. --"A.T. Hurley"
 

Lovely Molly

Director: Eduardo Sánchez
Starring: Alexandra Holden, Johnny Lewis, Gretchen Lodge, Ken Arnold, Shane Tunney
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Amber Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.2 (3,964 votes)
Release: May 2012
Summary: A horror/thriller centered on one troubled young woman and the evil power that exists inside of her.
 

Lucky Louie: The Complete First Season

Director: Ivan Reitman
Starring: Louis C.K.
Genre: Television
Studio: Hbo Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 6.8 (29,877 votes)
Summary: Take the regular ingredients for a run-of-the-mill TV sitcom: an overweight and unattractive husband, a wife that seems way out of his league, their adorable but bratty child, and some whimsical neighbors. Add in the plethora of expletives folks have come to expect from HBO television, some occasional male nudity, and terribly raunchy one-liners. Mix those up with a live studio audience, cheap sets, and an overall low budget look, and "Lucky Louie" is what comes out. That being said--the show is intelligent and hilarious.
"Lucky" Louie (Louis C.K.) is a stay-at-home dad who works part-time at a muffler shop. His wife, Kim (Pamela Adlon), is the breadwinner of the household, but her meager wages can barely provide them with a run-down apartment in a bad neighborhood. Louie has the moral support of his friends Mike (Mike Hagerty, "Friends") and Rich (Jim Norton), who provide some of the show's funniest and most disgusting moments. To only make things more inappropriate, Louie is constantly trying to cultivate a relationship with his African American neighbor Walter (Jerry Minor)--only because he is dying to have a black friend. This very adult sitcom takes a refreshing step back from the regular "one-hour conflict resolution" depiction of family, and instead suggests that healthy relationships are full of constant discord. C.K. and Adlon, who build off each other superbly, give an honest love-hate portrayal of marriage and parenting. For those who enjoy listening to NPR "and" the most vulgar of stand up comedy, this show is sure to please. "--Jordan Thompson"
 

Lucky Number Slevin

Director: Paul McGuigan
Starring: Josh Hartnett, Lucy Liu, Morgan Freeman, Ben Kingsley, Stanley Tucci, Bruce Willis
Genre: Drama, Action, Thriller, Crime, Mystery
Studio: Weinstein Company
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.7 (181,535 votes)
Release: Sep 2006
Summary: Slevin is mistakenly put in the middle of a personal war between the city’s biggest criminal bosses. Under constant watch, Slevin must try not to get killed by an infamous assassin and come up with an idea of how to get out of his current dilemma. A film with many twists and turns.
 

Luther

Starring: Idris Elba, Steven Mackintosh, Warren Brown, Indira Varma, Paul McGann
Genre: Crime, Drama, Mystery
Studio: BBC Warner
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.4 (18,289 votes)
Release: Nov 2010
Summary: Idris Elba is the magnetic star of the thrilling BBC police series "Luther", a gritty, captivating drama that will impress fans of British TV, police procedurals, and knotty character studies. Elba ("The Wire", "The Big C", "The Office", "28 Days Later") is a nuanced, tortured presence as DCI John Luther, a detective focused on understanding the most horrifying criminal mind. Luther also has sacrificed a normal personal life for his work, and "Luther" focuses on his back-story as much as on the plot at hand. The supporting cast is as brilliant as Elba, especially Indira Varma as his estranged wife, Zoe, and Ruth Wilson as the fragile-seeming but only marginally sane Alice, with whom Luther has been having a secret affair. The episodes are fairly straightforward police procedurals, including serial killers and other creepy bad guys. But what keeps "Luther" extra engaging is the superior writing, direction, and production design--making watching "Luther" an immersive experience for the viewer. And it's not always a comfortable one--this is not the cleaned-up New York of "Law & Order", where most bad things happen off screen. "Luther"'s bad guys (and gals) commit their evil deeds on camera and sometimes in slow motion--which only heightens the suspense and deep feeling of immersion. "Luther" and its focus on its leading character's personal life owes a lot to Helen Mirren's "Prime Suspect", but Elba and the supporting cast of "Luther" do even more to make the viewer feel a part of the imperfect British law-enforcement system. The boxed set includes an excellent documentary with interviews with series creator Neil Cross and the directors and cast members discussing how they deliberately designed the series to be more "impressionistic" than "realistic" in terms of plot. (The interviews would have more impact if they weren't streamed onto a computer screen, but that's a small quibble.) Catch "Luther" while he tries to catch the bad blokes, and enjoy every twisted step of the journey. --"A.T. Hurley"