Total Number of Movies in Joel’s Collection: 1,338 Page Number: 20 / 27
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Safe

Director: Boaz Yakin
Starring: Jason Statham, Catherine Chan, Robert John Burke, James Hong, Anson Mount
Genre: Action, Crime, Thriller
Studio: IM Global
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.5 (44,448 votes)
Release: Apr 2012
Summary: A former elite agent (Statham) takes on a two-tier mission: rescue a Chinese girl who has been abducted by the Triads, then use a highly desired safe combination to outwit the Russian Mafia, corrupt NYC officials, and the Triads themselves.
 

Safe House

Director: Daniel Espinosa
Starring: Denzel Washington, Ryan Reynolds, Vera Farmiga, Brendan Gleeson, Sam Shepard
Genre: Action, Crime, Mystery, Thriller
Studio: Universal Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.0 (24,391 votes)
Release: Feb 2012
Summary: Matt Weston ('Ryan Reynolds' ) is a CIA rookie who is manning a safe house in Cape Town, South Africa, when Tobin Frost (Denzel Washington) the CIA's most wanted rogue agent is captured and taken to the safe house. During Frost's interrogation, the safe house is overtaken by mercenaries who want Frost. Weston and Frost escape and must stay out of the gunmen's sight until they can get to another safe house.
 

Safety Not Guaranteed

Director: Colin Trevorrow
Starring: Aubrey Plaza, Basil Harris, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Jake Johnson, Karan Soni
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Big Beach Films
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.1 (42,027 votes)
Release: Oct 2012
Summary: Darius is a young intern at a Seattle-based magazine and jumps at the chance to investigate the author of a classified ad seeking someone to travel back in time with. Along with Jeff, the staff writer, and Arnau, a fellow intern, the three go on a road trip to a coastal town. While Jeff just wants to chase after his high school crush and Arnau wants some kind of life experience, Darius spends her time with Kenneth, a man who believes that he has built a time machine. The closer they become and the more they understand about each other, the less clear it becomes if Kenneth is just crazy or if he actually is going to successfully travel back in time.
 

The Saint

Director: Phillip Noyce
Starring: Val Kilmer, Elisabeth Shue, Rade Serbedzija, Valeri Nikolayev, Henry Goodman
Genre: Action, Romance, Sci-Fi
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.0 (39,501 votes)
Release: Apr 1997
Summary: Lightly enjoyable but a disappointment in the context of author Leslie Charteris's popular character, the Saint--who has been played by several actors, most notably George Sanders--this 1997 film is more in keeping with the requirements of high-octane contemporary action than it is the requirements of a particular legacy. Val Kilmer plays Simon Templar, the mercenary spy, who is hired to steal a fusion formula but falls in love with the scientist (Elisabeth Shue) who cooked it up. Kilmer's portrayal bears little resemblance to Charteris's rakish hero, and the film itself becomes increasingly improbable and ponderous the longer it goes on. "--Tom Keogh"
 

Salò (The 120 Days of Sodom)

Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
Starring: Paolo Bonacelli, Laura Betti, Giorgio Cataldi, Umberto Paolo Quintavalle, Aldo Valletti
Genre: Horror
Studio: BFI
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 6.0 (23,908 votes)
Release: Apr 2009
Summary: Set in the Nazi-controlled, northern Italian state of Salo in 1944, four dignitaries round up sixteen perfect specimens of youth and take them together with guards, servants and studs to a palace near Marzabotto. In addition, there are four middle-aged women: three of whom recount arousing stories whilst the fourth accompanies on the piano. The story is largely taken up with their recounting the stories of Dante and De Sade: the Circle of Manias, the Circle of Shit and the Circle of Blood. Following this, the youths are executed whilst each libertine takes his turn as voyeur.
 

Salt

Director: Philip Noyce
Starring: Angelina Jolie, Liev Schreiber
Genre: Action, Crime, Mystery
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.4 (156,813 votes)
Release: Dec 2010
Summary: Angelina Jolie confirms her status as action-heroine supreme in the sinewy thriller "Salt". Evelyn Salt (Jolie) is a respected high-ranking CIA agent… until a defecting Russian operative declares that she's a Russian mole in deep cover, launching her on the most delicious chase sequence since the "Bourne" movies. When the film's over you'll realize the motivations for much of what happened didn't make much sense, but while the movie's going on the pell-mell pace will brush such concerns from your mind. Director Phillip Noyce ("Patriot Games", "Dead Calm") has a gift for staging action sequences you can actually follow moment to moment, which is infinitely more engaging than frenzied editing that blurs everything into cattle-prod jolts--the movie's first third is top-notch orchestration. Jolie's star magnetism provides the cool, calm axis around which everything else revolves; the sturdy supporting performances of Liev Schreiber ("The Manchurian Candidate") and Chiwetel Ejiofor ("Inside Man", "Dirty Pretty Things") give enough heft to the plot to keep you from questioning anything. "Salt" is an old-fashioned entertainment, a skillfully made mechanism with enough grace notes to let it breathe and catch you by surprise. "--Bret Fetzer"
 

Samurai Jack: The Complete Seasons 1-4

Director: Genndy Tartakovsky
Starring: Mako, Phil LaMarr, Sab Shimono, Kevin Michael Richardson, Jeff Bennett, Jennifer Hale, Rob Paulsen, Phil LaMarr
Genre: Animation, Television
Studio: Turner Home Ent
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 5.0 (2 votes)
Release: Aug 2001
Borrowed By: Cullin Lassiter
Borrowed On: Dec 1, 2010
       
Summary: Aku, the shape-shifting master of evil, devastates a young boy's land, forcing him to travel around the world to train as a samurai. When Samurai Jack returns to free his people, he is instead flung into the far future, where he must quest to undo the future that is Aku.
 

Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town

Director: Jules Bass, Arthur Rankin Jr.
Starring: Fred Astaire, Mickey Rooney, Keenan Wynn, Paul Frees, Robie Lester, Billie Mae Richards, Harvey Korman
Genre: Animation, Family, Fantasy, Musical, Holiday
Studio: Rankin/Bass Productions
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 7.8 (2,233 votes)
Release: Feb 1970
Summary: A postman, S.D. Kluger, decides to answer some of the most common questions about Santa Claus, and tells us about a small baby named Kris who is raised by a family of elf toymakers named Kringle. When Kris grew up, he wanted to deliver toys to the children of Sombertown. But its Mayor is too mean to let that happen. And to make things worse, the Winter Warlock who lives between the Kringles and Sombertown, but Kris manages to melt the Warlock's heart and deliver his toys.
 

Savages

Director: Oliver Stone
Starring: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Taylor Kitsch, Blake Lively
Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Studio: Ixtlan
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.5 (59,464 votes)
Release: Jul 2012
Summary: Entrepreneurs Ben, a peaceful and charitable marijuana producer, and friend Chon, a former Navy SEAL, run a lucrative, homegrown industry - raising some of the best weed ever developed. They also share a one-of-a-kind love with Ophelia. Life is idyllic in their Southern California town... until the Mexican Baja Cartel decides to move in and demands that the trio partners with them. When the merciless head of the BC, Elena and her enforcer, Lado, underestimate the unbreakable bond of the three friends, Ben and Chon - with the reluctant assistance of a dirty DEA agent - wage a seemingly unwinnable war against the cartel. And so begins a series of increasingly vicious ploys and maneuvers in a high stakes, savage battle of wills.
 

Save the Date

Director: Michael Mohan
Starring: Lizzy Caplan, Alison Brie, Martin Starr, Mark Webber, Geoffrey Arend
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Studio: Gilbert Films
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.3 (1,970 votes)
Release: Dec 2012
Summary: Sarah finds herself caught in an intense postbreakup rebound with new infatuation Jonathan after tragically breaking the heart of rocker Kevin. Always one to give Sarah life advice is her sister Beth, who is diligently planning her upcoming wedding to apprehensive fiancé Andrew. Both sisters fumble through the bumpy emotional landscape of modern-day relationships, forced to relearn how to love and be loved.
 

Saving Mr. Banks (screener)

Director: John Lee Hancock
Starring: Tom Hanks, Colin Farrell, Emma Thompson, Paul Giamatti, Jason Schwartzman, Bradley Whitford, Kathy Baker, Rachel Griffiths, Ruth Wilson, B. J. Novak, Annie Rose Buckley, Lily Bigham, Melanie Paxson, Andy McPhee
Genre: Comedy, Drama, History, Music, Family
Studio: Ruby Films
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Release: Dec 2013
Summary: When Walt Disney's daughters begged him to make a movie of their favorite book, P.L. Travers' "Mary Poppins," he made them a promise - one that he didn't realize would take 20 years to keep. In his quest to obtain the rights, Walt comes up against a curmudgeonly, uncompromising writer who has absolutely no intention of letting her beloved magical nanny get mauled by the Hollywood machine. But, as the books stop selling and money grows short, Travers reluctantly agrees to go to Los Angeles to hear Disney's plans for the adaptation. For those two short weeks in 1961, Walt Disney pulls out all the stops. Armed with imaginative storyboards and chirpy songs from the talented Sherman brothers, Walt launches an all-out onslaught on P.L. Travers, but the prickly author doesn't budge. He soon begins to watch helplessly as Travers becomes increasingly immovable and the rights begin to move further away from his grasp.
 

Saving Private Ryan

Director: Steven Spielberg
Starring: Tom Hanks, Tom Sizemore, Edward Burns, Barry Pepper, Adam Goldberg
Genre: Action, Drama, War
Studio: Dreamworks Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Jul 1998
Summary: When Steven Spielberg was an adolescent, his first home movie was abackyard war film. When he toured Europe with "Duel" in his 20s, he saw old men crumble in front of headstones at Omaha Beach. That image became the opening scene of "Saving Private Ryan", his film of a mission following the D-day invasion that many have called the most realistic--and maybe the best--war film ever. With 1998 production standards, Spielberg has been able to create a stunning, unparalleled view of war as hell. We are at Omaha Beach as troops are slaughtered by Germans yet overcome the almost insurmountable odds.
A stalwart Tom Hanks plays Captain Miller, a soldier's soldier, who takes a small band of troops behind enemy lines to retrieve a private whose three brothers have recently been killed in action. It's a public relations move for the Army, but it has historical precedent dating back to the Civil War. Some critics of the film have labeled the central characters stereotypes. If that is so, this movie gives stereotypes a good name: Tom Sizemore as the deft sergeant, Edward Burns as the hotheaded Private Reiben, Barry Pepper as the religious sniper, Adam Goldberg as the lone Jew, Vin Diesel as the oversize Private Caparzo, Giovanni Ribisi as the soulful medic, and Jeremy Davies, who as a meek corporal gives the film its most memorable performance.
The movie is as heavy and realistic as Spielberg's Oscar-winning "Schindler's List", but it's more kinetic. Spielberg and his ace technicians (the film won five Oscars: editing (Michael Kahn), cinematography (Janusz Kaminski), sound, sound effects, and directing) deliver battle sequences that wash over the eyes and hit the gut. The violence is extreme but never gratuitous. The final battle, a dizzying display of gusto, empathy, and chaos, leads to a profound repose. "Saving Private Ryan" touches us deeper than "Schindler" because it succinctly links the past with how we should feel today. It's the film Spielberg was destined to make. "--Doug Thomas"
 

Saw

Director: James Wan
Starring: Leigh Whannell, Cary Elwes, Danny Glover, Ken Leung, Dina Meyer, Mike Butters, Paul Gutrecht, Michael Emerson, Benito Martinez, Shawnee Smith, Makenzie Vega, Monica Potter, Ned Bellamy, Alexandra Bokyun Chun, Avner Garbi, Tobin Bell
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.7 (194,402 votes)
Release: Jan 2004
Summary: Would you kill to live? That's what two men, Adam and Gordon, have to ask themselves when they're abducted by a serial killer and paired up in a deadly situation -- holed up in a prison constructed with such ingenuity that escape seems impossible. Attempting to break free might kill them, but their captor could decide at any moment that it's time to dismantle their bodies in his signature way
 

Saw 3D: The Final Chapter

Director: Kevin Greutert
Starring: Tobin Bell, Cary Elwes, Costas Mandylor, Betsy Russell, Sean Patrick Flanery, Gina Holden
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: NR
Rating: 5.5 (41,967 votes)
Release: Oct 2010
Summary: Insane, intense cruelty is the calling card of the Jigsaw killer, whose twisted spirit and terrifying human traps -- recalled in flashbacks following his death in Saw III -- inspire another installment of the hugely successful gore franchise. Led by fellow survivor Bobby Dagen, Jigsaw's past victims band together to support each other.
 

Saw II

Director: Darren Lynn Bousman
Starring: Tobin Bell, Shawnee Smith, Donnie Wahlberg, Erik Knudsen, Franky G, Glenn Plummer, Emmanuelle Vaugier, Beverley Mitchell, Tim Burd, Dina Meyer, Lyriq Bent, Noam Jenkins, Tony Nappo, Kelly Jones, Vincent Rother
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.5 (129,503 votes)
Release: Oct 2008
Summary: Detective Eric Matthews desperately tries to catch notorious killer Jigsaw in this suspenseful sequel that finds Jigsaw staying true to his bloodthirsty M.O. of creating devious plans in which people are forced to kill each other. This time, he kidnaps eight supposed strangers and locks them all up in one room, and it's up to Matthews to find the demented killer before his bloody plan is complete.
 

Saw III

Director: Darren Lynn Bousman
Starring: Tobin Bell, Angus Macfadyen, Dina Meyer, Kim Roberts, Shawnee Smith, Bahar Soomekh
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.1 (96,253 votes)
Release: Oct 2006
Summary: After eluding the cops, psychopathic killer Jigsaw turns an abandoned warehouse on the edge of town into a gruesome torture chamber in this third installment of the horror series. His new protégée Amanda kidnaps a doctor who's forced to keep the evil master alive. Barely clinging to life, Jigsaw begins to carry out his grotesque plans for the lady doc and another helpless victim.
 

Saw IV

Director: Darren Lynn Bousman
Starring: Tobin Bell, Scott Patterson, Betsy Russell, Costas Mandylor, Lyriq Bent, Justin Louis, Athena Karkanis, Simon Reynolds, Mike Realba, Marty Adams, Sarain Boylan, Billy Otis, Niamh Wilson, Julian Richings, Joanne Boland
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.8 (73,608 votes)
Release: Oct 2007
Summary: Picking up where its grisly predecessor left off, this Saw finds Jeff Reinhart searching for his missing daughter, but a videotape from the dead serial killer Jigsaw is Jeff's only lead in his frantic hunt. The film switches back and forth in time throughout previous Saw films and ties up some lingering -- and bloody -- loose ends.
 

Saw V

Director: David Hackl
Starring: Julie Benz, Meagan Good, Shawnee Smith, Tobin Bell
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.6 (56,287 votes)
Release: Oct 2008
Summary: When Hoffman learns that his secret connection to Jigsaw will be exposed, the forensics detective embarks on a hunt to eradicate everything that links him to the serial killer.
 

Saw VI

Director: Kevin Greutert
Starring: Tobin Bell, Costas Mandylor, Betsy Russell, Mark Rolston, Peter Outerbridge, Shawnee Smith, George Newbern, James Gilbert
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Lionsgate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.9 (46,165 votes)
Release: Oct 2009
Summary: Special Agent Strahm is long gone, and Det. Hoffman is now the heir to John Jigsaw's terrifying legacy. Meanwhile, FBI Agent Erickson is hot on his trail, but Hoffman is about to reveal Jigsaw's grand plot.
 

Say Anything...

Director: Cameron Crowe
Starring: John Cusack, Ione Skye
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Release: Apr 1989
Summary: Seven years after he earned his first screen credit as the writer of "Fast Times at Ridgemont High", former "Rolling Stone" writer Cameron Crowe made his directorial debut with this acclaimed romantic comedy starring John Cusack and Ione Skye as unlikely lovers on the cusp of adulthood. The casting is perfect, and Crowe's rookie direction is appropriately unobtrusive, no doubt influenced by his actor-loving, Oscar®-winning mentor, James L. Brooks. But the real strength of Crowe's work is his exceptional writing, his timely grasp of contemporary rhythms and language (he's frequently called "the voice of a generation"), and the rich humor and depth of his fully developed characters. In "Say Anything..." Cusack and Skye play recent high school graduates enjoying one final summer before leaping into a lifetime of adult responsibilities. Lloyd (Cusack) is an aspiring kickboxer with no definite plans; Diane (Skye) is a valedictorian with intentions to further her education in Europe. Together they find unlikely bliss, but there's also turbulence when Diane's father (John Mahoney)--who only wants what's best for his daughter--is charged with fraud and tax evasion. Favoring strong performances over obtrusive visual style, Crowe focuses on his unique characters and the ambitions and fears that define them; the movie's a treasure trove of quiet, often humorous revelations of personality. Lili Taylor and Eric Stoltz score high marks for memorable supporting roles, and Cusack's own sister Joan is perfect in scenes with her onscreen and offscreen brother. A rare romantic comedy that's as funny as it is dramatically honest, "Say Anything..." marked the arrival of a gifted writer-director who followed up with the underrated "Singles" before scoring his first box-office smash with "Jerry Maguire". "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Scarface

Director: Brian De Palma
Starring: Al Pacino, Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Robert Loggia
Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.3 (309,871 votes)
Release: Dec 1983
Summary: This sprawling epic of bloodshed and excess, Brian De Palma's update of the classic 1932 crime drama by Howard Hawks, sparked controversy over its outrageous violence when released in 1983. "Scarface" is a wretched, fascinating car wreck of a movie, starring Al Pacino as a Cuban refugee who rises to the top of Miami's cocaine-driven underworld, only to fall hard into his own deadly trap of addiction and inevitable assassination. Scripted by Oliver Stone and running nearly three hours, it's the kind of film that can simultaneously disgust and amaze you (critic Pauline Kael wrote "this may be the only action picture that turns into an allegory of impotence"), with vivid supporting roles for Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, and Robert Loggia. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Schindler's List

Director: Steven Spielberg
Starring: Liam Neeson, Ralph Fiennes, Ben Kingsley, Caroline Goodall, Jonathan Sagall
Genre: Biography, Drama, History
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.0 (31 votes)
Release: Mar 2004
Summary: Steven Spielberg had a banner year in 1993. He scored one of his biggest commercial hits that summer with the mega-hit "Jurassic Park", but it was the artistic and critical triumph of "Schindler's List" that Spielberg called "the most satisfying experience of my career." Adapted from the best-selling book by Thomas Keneally and filmed in Poland with an emphasis on absolute authenticity, Spielberg's masterpiece ranks among the greatest films ever made about the Holocaust during World War II. It's a film about heroism with an unlikely hero at its center--Catholic war profiteer Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), who risked his life and went bankrupt to save more than 1,000 Jews from certain death in concentration camps.
By employing Jews in his crockery factory manufacturing goods for the German army, Schindler ensures their survival against terrifying odds. At the same time, he must remain solvent with the help of a Jewish accountant (Ben Kingsley) and negotiate business with a vicious, obstinate Nazi commandant (Ralph Fiennes) who enjoys shooting Jews as target practice from the balcony of his villa overlooking a prison camp. "Schindler's List" gains much of its power not by trying to explain Schindler's motivations, but by dramatizing the delicate diplomacy and determination with which he carried out his generous deeds.
As a drinker and womanizer who thought nothing of associating with Nazis, Schindler was hardly a model of decency; the film is largely about his transformation in response to the horror around him. Spielberg doesn't flinch from that horror, and the result is a film that combines remarkable humanity with abhorrent inhumanity--a film that functions as a powerful history lesson and a testament to the resilience of the human spirit in the context of a living nightmare. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World

Director: Edgar Wright
Starring: Michael Cera, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Kieran Culkin, Chris Evans, Anna Kendrick
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.5 (166,635 votes)
Release: Nov 2010
Summary: Scott Pilgrim plays in a band which aspires to success. He dates Knives Chau, a high-school girl five years younger, and he hasn't recovered from being dumped by his former girlfriend, now a success with her own band. When Scott falls for Ramona Flowers, he has trouble breaking up with Knives and tries to romance Ramona. As if juggling two women wasn't enough, Ramona comes with baggage: seven ex-lovers, with each of whom Scott must do battle to the death in order to win Ramona.
 

Se7en

Director: David Fincher
Starring: Brad Pitt, Morgan Freeman, Gwyneth Paltrow, R. Lee Ermey, Andrew Kevin Walker
Genre: Crime, Mystery, Thriller
Studio: New Line Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.7 (561,686 votes)
Release: Sep 1995
Summary: The most viscerally frightening and disturbing homicidal-maniac picture since "The Silence of the Lambs", "Seven" is based on an idea that's both gruesome and ingenious. A serial killer forces each of his victims to die by acting out one of the seven deadly sins. The murder scene is then artfully arranged into a grotesque tableau, a graphic illustration of each mortal vice. From the jittery opening credits to the horrifying (and seemingly inescapable) concluding twist, director David Fincher immerses us in a murky urban twilight where everything seems to be rotting, rusting, or molding; the air is cold and heavy with dread. Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt are the detectives who skillfully track down the killer--all the while unaware that he has been closing in on them, as well. Gwyneth Paltrow and Kevin Spacey are also featured, but it is director Fincher and the ominous, overwhelmingly oppressive atmosphere of doom that he creates that are the real stars of the film. It's a terrific date movie--for vampires. "--Jim Emerson"
 

Seabiscuit

Director: Gary Ross
Starring: Tobey Maguire, Jeff Bridges, Chris Cooper, Cameron Bowen, Mariah Bess
Genre: Drama, History
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.3 (44,437 votes)
Release: Jul 2003
Summary: Proving that truth is often greater than fiction, the handsome production of "Seabiscuit" offers a healthy alternative to Hollywood's staple diet of mayhem. With superior production values at his disposal, writer-director Gary Ross ("Pleasantville") is a bit too reverent toward Laura Hillenbrand's captivating bestseller, unnecessarily using archival material--and David McCullough's familiar PBS-styled narration--to pay Ken Burns-like tribute to Hillenbrand's acclaimed history of Seabiscuit, the knobby-kneed thoroughbred who "came from behind" in the late 1930s to win the hearts of Depression-weary Americans. That caveat aside, Ross's adaptation retains much of the horse-and-human heroism that Hillenbrand so effectively conveyed; this is a classically styled "legend" movie like "The Natural", which was also heightened by a lushly sentimental Randy Newman score. Led by Tobey Maguire as Seabiscuit's hard-luck jockey, the film's first-rate cast is uniformly excellent, including William H. Macy as a wacky trackside announcer who fills this earnest film with a much-needed spirit of fun. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Searching for Sugar Man

Director: Malik Bendjelloul
Starring: Rodriguez, Stephen 'Sugar' Segerman, Dennis Coffey, Mike Theodore, Dan DiMaggio
Genre: Documentary
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.6 (5 votes)
Release: Jan 2013
Summary: SEARCHING FOR SUGAR MAN tells the incredible true story of Rodriguez the greatest '70s rock icon who never was. After being discovered in a Detroit bar Rodriguez's sound struck 2 renowned producers and they signed a recording deal. But when the album bombed the singer disappeared into obscurity. A bootleg recording found its way into apartheid South Africa and over the next two decades he became a phenomenon. The film follows the story of two South African fans who set out to find out what really happened to their hero.
 

The Seasoning House

Director: Paul Hyett
Starring: Rosie Day, Sean Pertwee, Kevin Howarth, Anna Walton, Jemma Powell, Alec Utgoff, David Lemberg, Dominique Provost-Chalkley
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Studio: Sterling Pictures Ltd.
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.0 (3,017 votes)
Release: Aug 2012
Summary: In 1996, in the Balkans, the population of a small town is slaughtered by a militia under the command of the inhuman Goran that abducts young girls for prostitution in a brothel owned by the cruel Viktor. The deaf Angel that witnessed the execution of her mother has a weird birth mark on the face and Viktor chooses her to housework; to put makeup and drug the girls for the clients; and cleaning them up after the brutal encounters. Angel also sneaks between the walls and ventilation ducts during the night. Angel befriends the girl Vanya that knows the language of the deaf. When Goran returns to the house with his men, Angel witnesses one of them raping and killing Vanya and she revenges her new friend killing the man. Now Goran and his men are hunting her down and she is trapped in the house.
 

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (screener)

Director: Ben Stiller
Starring: Ben Stiller, Kristen Wiig, Patton Oswalt, Shirley MacLaine, Adam Scott, Kathryn Hahn, Sean Penn, Terence Bernie Hines, Gurdeep Singh, Alex Anfanger, Gary Wilmes
Genre: Adventure, Comedy, Drama, Fantasy
Studio: Red Hour Films
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Release: Dec 2013
Summary: The classic story of a day-dreamer who escapes his anonymous life by disappearing into a world of fantasies filled with heroism, romance and action. When his job along with that of his co-worker (Kristen Wiig) are threatened, Walter takes action in the real world embarking on a global journey that turns into an adventure more extraordinary than anything he could have ever imagined.
 

The Secret of Kells

Director: Tomm Moore, Nora Tworney
Starring: Brendan Gleeson, Mick Lally, Evan McGuire, Christen Mooney
Genre: Animation, Family, Fantasy
Studio: New Video Group
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.5 (11,395 votes)
Release: Feb 2009
Summary: Young Brendan lives in a remote medieval outpost under siege from barbarian raids. But a new life of adventure beckons when a celebrated master illuminator arrives from the isle of Iona carrying an ancient but unfinished book, brimming with secret wisdom and powers. To help complete the magical book, Brendan has to overcome his deepest fears on a dangerous quest that takes him into the enchanted forest where mythical creatures hide. It is here that he meets the fairy Aisling, a mysterious young wolf-girl, who helps him along the way. But with the barbarians closing in, will Brendan's determination and artistic vision illuminate the darkness and show that enlightenment is the best fortification against evil?
 

Secretariat

Director: Randall Wallace
Starring: Diane Lane, John Malkovich
Genre: Drama, Family, History
Studio: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7.1 (14,137 votes)
Release: Oct 2010
Summary: The "greatest racehorse of all time" mantle fits easily around the neck of Secretariat, the 1973 Triple Crown winner. So why not a movie version of this champion's life? "Secretariat" begins in the late '60s, with some good behind-the-scenes material on how thoroughbreds come to be (there's flavorful atmosphere inside the horsey world, including an account of Secretariat's ownership being decided by a coin flip as part of an old-school agreement). A highly lacquered Diane Lane plays Penny Chenery, the inheritor of her father's stables, who segues from being an all-American mom to running a major horse-racing franchise; reliable character-actor support comes in the form of John Malkovich, as a gaudily outfitted trainer, and Margo Martindale, as Chenery's assistant. Screenwriter Mike Rich and director Randall Wallace must do some heavy lifting to make Lane's privileged millionaire into some sort of underdog--luckily, the hidebound traditions of the male-dominated racing scene provide some sources of outrage. The need to stack the deck even more leads the movie into its more contrived scenes, unfortunately, as though we needed dastardly villains in order to root for Penny and her horse. Meanwhile, attempts to reach for a little "Seabiscuit"-style social relevance don't come off, and a curious religious undertone might make you wonder whether we're meant to assume that God chose Secretariat over some less-deserving equine. The actual excitement of the races can't be denied, however, and Secretariat's awe-inspiring win at the Belmont Stakes remains a jaw-dropping, still-unequaled display of domination in that event. And maybe in sports. "--Robert Horton"
 

Senna

Director: Asif Kapadia
Starring: Reginaldo Leme, Richard Williams, John Bisignano, Pierre van Vilet, Alain Prost, Ron Dennis, Frank Williams, Nevde Senna, Viviane Senna, Sid Watkins, Ayrton Senna
Genre: Documentary, Foreign
Studio: Arc Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 8.5 (25,657 votes)
Release: Oct 2010
Summary: Senna's remarkable story, charting his physical and spiritual achievments on the track and off, his quest for perfection, and the mythical status he has since attained, is the subject of Senna, a documentary feature that spans the racing legend's years as an F1 driver, from his opening season in 1984 to his untimely death a decade later.
 

A Serbian Film

Director: Srdjan Spasojevic
Starring: Srdjan Todorovic, Sergej Trifunovic, Jelena Gavrilovic, Katarina Zutic, Slobodan Bestic
Genre: Adult, Drama, Horror, Thriller
Studio: Contra Film
My Rating:
Rated: NC-17
Rating: 5.5 (18,170 votes)
Release: Jan 2012
Summary: Milos, a retired porn star, leads a normal family life with his wife Maria and six-year old son Petar in tumultuous Serbia, trying to make ends meet. A sudden call from his former colleague Layla will change everything. Aware of his financial problems, Layla introduces Milos to Vukmir - a mysterious, menacing and politically powerful figure in the pornographic business. A leading role in Vukmir's production will provide financial support to Milos and his family for the rest of their lives. A contract insists on his absolute unawareness of a script they will shoot. From then on, Milos is drawn into a maelstrom of unbelievable cruelty and mayhem devised by his employer, "the director" of his destiny. Vukmir and his cohorts will stop at nothing to complete his vision. In order to escape the living cinematic hell he's put into, and save his family's life, Milos will have to sacrifice everything - his pride, his morality, his sanity, and maybe even his own life.
 

Serenity

Director: Joss Whedon
Starring: Nathan Fillion, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Raphael Feldman, Yan Feldman, Ron Glass
Genre: Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Studio: Universal Studios Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.9 (171,492 votes)
Release: Sep 2005
Summary: In the future, a spaceship called Serenity is harboring a passenger with a deadly secret. Six rebels on the run. An assassin in pursuit. When the renegade crew of Serenity agrees to hide a fugitive on their ship, they find themselves in an awesome action-packed battle between the relentless military might of a totalitarian regime who will destroy anything - or anyone - to get the girl back and the bloodthirsty creatures who roam the uncharted areas of space. But, the greatest danger of all may be on their ship.
 

Series 7: The Contenders

Director: Daniel Minahan
Starring: Brooke Smith, Marylouise Burke, Mark Woodbury
Genre: Comedy
Studio: VCI
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.5 (4,979 votes)
Release: May 2001
Summary: Series 7: The Contenders takes a look into the formula that has recently topped television polls; the reality game show. In a society where the media and the authorities have absolute power, contestants in "Series 7" of The Contenders are chosen by lottery--six players must compete to kill each other, with the survivor/winner competing in the next series. Current champion Dawn (Brooke Smith)--who is heavily-pregnant--returns to her home town and finds herself pitted against a terrifying Christian nurse, a desperately unemployed man, an embittered old timer, a tough-talking teenage girl and a terminally-ill artist. --Kim Newman
 

Seven Psychopaths

Director: Martin McDonagh
Starring: Colin Farrell, Sam Rockwell, Woody Harrelson, Christopher Walken, Tom Waits
Genre: Comedy, Crime
Studio: CBS Films
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.2 (82,572 votes)
Release: Jan 2013
Summary: A struggling screenwriter inadvertently becomes entangled in the Los Angeles criminal underworld after his oddball friends kidnap a gangster's beloved Shih Tzu.
 

Severance

Director: Christopher Smith
Starring: Danny Dyer, Laura Harris, Toby Stephens, Tim McInnerny, Babou Ceesay, Andy Nyman, Claudie Blakley, David Gilliam, Juli Drajkó, Judit Viktor, Sándor Boros
Genre: Horror
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 4
Release: May 2006
Summary: When weapons multi-national Palisade Defense reward their European sales division with a team-building weekend in the mountains of Eastern Europe, the team fight first amongst themselves, and later for survival against a group of war-crazed killers intent on revenge!
 

Shadow Dancer

Director: James Marsh
Starring: Andrea Riseborough, Clive Owen, Gillian Anderson, Aidan Gillen, Domhnall Gleeson, Brid Brennan, David Wilmot, Stuart Graham, Martin McCann, Maria Laird, Barry Barnes, Michael McElhatton, Gary Lydon
Genre: Drama, Thriller
Studio: BBC Films
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: May 2013
Summary: In 1993, the IRA member Collette is arrested in the London tube after leaving a bomb in the facility. MI-5 Agent Mac offers a deal to Collette to become an informer. She accepts the agreement to protect her son and in return Mac offers a new identity to her after a period working for the MI-5. Soon Mac learns that his superior Kate Fletcher is using Collette to protect her mole inside the Irish organization. Mac tries to find the identity of the informer and protect Collette.
 

Shallow Grave

Director: Danny Boyle
Starring: Kerry Fox, Christopher Eccleston, Ewan McGregor, Ken Stott, Keith Allen
Genre: Horror
Studio: MGM Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.3 (32,515 votes)
Release: Mar 2000
Summary: This movie starts when three people living together in a four bedroom flat are looking for a house mate. The interviews they conduct are very unorthodox and very funny. Eventually the three agree on one prospective tenant. He moves in, locks his door, and is not seen again. After a couple of days the three become curious and break in to his room. What follows is an amazing piece of cinema and to say more would ruin it.
 

Shame

Director: Steve McQueen
Starring: Michael Fassbender, Carey Mulligan, Hannah Ware, James Badge Dale, Amy Hargreaves
Genre: Drama
Studio: Film4
My Rating:
Rated: NC-17
Rating: 6
Release: Apr 2012
Summary: Brandon is a 30-something man living in New York who is unable to manage his sex life. After his wayward younger sister moves into his apartment, Brandon's world spirals out of control. From director Steve McQueen (Hunger), Shame is a compelling and timely examination of the nature of need, how we live our lives and the experiences that shape us.
 

Shaun of the Dead

Director: Edgar Wright
Starring: Kate Ashfield, Tim Baggaley, Nicola Cunningham, Sonnell Dadral, Lucy Davis (II)
Genre: Comedy, Horror
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.0 (246,148 votes)
Release: Dec 2004
Summary: Shaun doesn't have a very good day, so he decides to turn his life around by getting his ex to take him back, but he times it for right in the middle of what may be a zombie apocalypse... But for him, it's an opportunity to show everyone he knows how useful he is by saving them all. All he has to do is survive... And get his ex back.
 

Sherlock Holmes

Director: Guy Ritchie
Starring: Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, Rachel McAdams, Mark Strong, Eddie Marsan
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 5.9 (3,518 votes)
Release: Mar 2010
Summary: After finally catching serial killer and occult "sorcerer" Lord Blackwood, legendary sleuth Sherlock Holmes and his assistant Dr. Watson can close yet another successful case. But when Blackwood mysteriously returns from the grave and resumes his killing spree, Holmes must take up the hunt once again. Contending with his partner's new fiancée and the dimwitted head of Scotland Yard, the dauntless detective must unravel the clues that will lead him into a twisted web of murder, deceit, and black magic - and the deadly embrace of temptress Irene Adler.
 

Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows

Director: Guy Ritchie
Starring: Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, Noomi Rapace, Rachel McAdams, Jared Harris
Genre: Action, Adventure, Crime, Mystery, Thriller
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.4 (197,605 votes)
Release: Dec 2011
Summary: Sherlock Holmes (Robert Downey, Jr.) and his longtime trusted associate, Doctor Watson (Jude Law), take on their arch-nemesis, Professor Moriarty (Jared Harris), with the help of Holmes's older brother Mycroft Holmes (Stephen Fry) and a gypsy named Sim (Noomi Rapace).
 

The Shining

Director: Stanley Kubrick
Starring: Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Danny Lloyd, Scatman Crothers, Barry Nelson
Genre: Science Fiction
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.5 (341,755 votes)
Release: Feb 2010
Summary: Stanley Kubrick's "The Shining" is less an adaptation of Stephen King's bestselling horror novel than a complete reimagining of it from the inside out. In King's book, the Overlook Hotel is a haunted place that takes possession of its off-season caretaker and provokes him to murderous rage against his wife and young son. Kubrick's movie is an existential Road Runner cartoon (his steadicam scurrying through the hotel's labyrinthine hallways), in which the cavernously empty spaces inside the Overlook mirror the emptiness in the soul of the blocked writer, who's settled in for a long winter's hibernation. As many have pointed out, King's protagonist goes mad, but Kubrick's Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) is Looney Tunes from the moment we meet him--all arching eyebrows and mischievous grin. (Both Nicholson and Shelley Duvall reach new levels of hysteria in their performances, driven to extremes by the director's fanatical demands for take after take after take.) "The Shining" is terrifying--but not in the way fans of the novel might expect. When it was redone as a TV miniseries (reportedly because of King's dissatisfaction with the Kubrick film), the famous topiary-animal attack (which was deemed impossible to film in 1980) was there--but the deeper horror was lost. Kubrick's "The Shining" gets under your skin and chills your bones; it stays with you, inhabits you, haunts you. And there's no place to hide... --"Jim Emerson"
 

Short Term 12

Director: Destin Cretton
Starring: Brie Larson, John Gallagher Jr., Kaitlyn Dever, Melora Walters, Stephanie Beatriz, Rami Malek, Alex Calloway, Kevin Hernandez, Lydia Du Veaux, Keith Stanfield, Frantz Turner, Diana-Maria Riva, Harold Cannon, Silvia Curiel, Melora Walters, Bran'dee Allen
Genre: Drama
Studio: Cinedigm
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Aug 2013
Summary: The film follows Grace, a young supervisor at a foster-care facility, as she looks after the teens in her charge and reckons with her own troubled past. An unsparingly authentic film, full of both heart and surprising humor.
 

Shrek

Director: Andrew Adamson, Vicky Jenson
Starring: Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Lithgow, Vincent Cassel
Genre: Animation, Adventure, Comedy
Studio: Dreamworks Animated
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7.9 (291,484 votes)
Release: May 2001
Summary: n this fully computer-animated fantasy from the creators of Antz, we follow the travails of Shrek (Mike Myers), a green ogre who enjoys a life of solitude. Living in a far away swamp, he is suddenly invaded by a hoard of fairy tale characters, such as the Big Bad Wolf, the Three Little Pigs, and Three Blind Mice, all refugees of their homes who have been shunned by the evil Lord Farquaad (John Lithgow). They want to save their homes from ruin, and enlist the help of Shrek, who is in the same situation. Shrek decides to offer Lord Farquaad a deal; he will rescue the beautiful Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz), who is intended to be Farquaad's bride. Accompanying Shrek on his adventure is the faithful but loquacious Donkey (Eddie Murphy), who has a penchant for crooning pop songs. The two must face various obstacles in order to locate the Princess, but they find their world challenged when she reveals a dark secret that will affect the group. Shrek is based on the children's book by William Steig, and features additional voice-work by Vincent Cassel, Cody Cameron, and Kathleen Freeman.
 

Shutter

Director: Masayuki Ochiai
Starring: Joshua Jackson, Rachael Taylor, Megumi Okina, David Denman, Eri Otoguro, John Hensley, Maya Hazen, James Kyson, Yoshiko Miyazaki, Kei Yamamoto, Daisy Betts, Adrienne Pickering, Pascal Morineau, Masaki Ota, Heideru Tatsuo
Genre: Horror, Mystery, Thriller
Studio: Regency Enterprises
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Release: Mar 2008
Summary: A newlywed couple Ben and Jane move to Japan for a promising job opportunity - a fashion shoot in Tokyo. During their trip on a dark forest road they experience a tragic car accident, leading to the death of a young local girl. Upon regaining consciousness, they find no trace of her body. A bit distraught the couple arrives in Tokyo to begin their new life. Meanwhile Ben begins noticing strange white blurs in many of his fashion shoot photographs. Jane believes that the blurs are actually spirit photography of the dead girl who they hit on the road, and that she may be seeking vengeance.
 

Shutter Island

Director: Martin Scorsese
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo
Genre: Drama, Mystery, Thriller
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.0 (382,933 votes)
Release: Feb 2010
Summary: Martin Scorsese puts Leonardo DiCaprio through the wringer again in "Shutter Island", a gothic adaptation of Dennis Lehane's novel. Leo's character, a Federal Marshal named Teddy Daniels, is first seen vomiting and jittery aboard a ferry; he and his new partner (Mark Ruffalo) are being taken across the water to investigate an escape from a prison for the criminally insane, located on a forbidding rock called Shutter Island. From the first, Scorsese treats the place as though it were Skull Island in "King Kong", worthy of ominous music cues and portentous camera angles. This might not be an easy assignment for the sweaty, anxious Daniels, who is haunted by his memories of German concentration camps and the loss of his wife (Michelle Williams, appearing in ghostly hallucinations). The audience will likely feel just as unnerved as Daniels, given the destabilizing nature of Robert Richardson's swooping cinematography and Thelma Schoonmaker's crazy-making editing scheme (it feels as though fractions of seconds have been removed from the timing of simple conversations, giving the movie a strung-out edginess--it's like watching Ray Liotta's cocaine meltdown sequence from "GoodFellas" for 138 minutes). Ben Kingsley and Max von Sydow are staff psychiatrists, suspiciously eager to talk about lobotomies, and Ted Levine and Patricia Clarkson appear for small but potent turns. Scorsese appears to be "doing a genre picture" here, borrowing happily from influences such as Val Lewton and Samuel Fuller, and the film has a resultingly put-on atmosphere: a great deal of old-dark-house Sturm und Drang whipped up in service of a gimmicky little premise. The fade-out achieves some measure of real eeriness, and the whole shebang is certainly a kicky night out at the movies--if you can shake the sense that a talented filmmaker is working a couple of rungs beneath his level. "--Robert Horton"
 

Side Effects

Director: Steven Soderbergh
Starring: Channing Tatum, Rooney Mara, Jude Law, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Vinessa Shaw, David Costabile, Polly Draper, Andrea Bogart, Carol Commissiong, Sheila Tapia, Mamie Gummer
Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Studio: Di Bonaventura Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Feb 2013
Summary: Emily Taylor, despite being reunited with her husband from prison, becomes severely depressed with emotional episodes and suicide attempts. Her psychiatrist, Jonathan Banks, after conferring with her previous doctor, eventually prescribes an experimental new medication called Ablixa. The plot thickens when the side effects of the drug lead to Emily killing her husband in a "sleepwalking" state. With Emily plea-bargained into mental hospital confinement and Dr. Banks' practice crumbling around him, the case seems closed. However, Dr. Banks cannot accept full responsibility and investigates to clear his name. What follows is a dark quest that threatens to tear what's left of his life apart even as he discovers the diabolical truth of this tragedy.
 

Sideways

Director: Alexander Payne
Starring: Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Virginia Madsen, Sandra Oh, Marylouise Burke, Jessica Hecht, Missy Doty, M.C. Gainey, Alysia Reiner, Shake Tukhmanyan, Shaun Duke, Robert Covarrubias, Patrick Gallagher, Stephanie Faracy, Joe Marinelli
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Indie, Romance
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.6 (109,801 votes)
Release: Oct 2004
Summary: Two middle-aged men embark on a spiritual journey through Californian wine country. One of them an unpublished novelist suffering from depression, the other only days away from walking down the aisle. Both meet two beautiful women on their trip and become romantically involved with them.
 

The Silence Of The Lambs

Director: Jonathan Demme
Starring: Jodie Foster, Anthony Hopkins, Scott Glenn, Ted Levine, Brooke Smith
Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.7 (471,685 votes)
Release: Aug 2001
Summary: Based on Thomas Harris's novel, this terrifying film by Jonathan Demme really only contains a couple of genuinely shocking moments (one involving an autopsy, the other a prison break). The rest of the film is a splatter-free visual and psychological descent into the hell of madness, redeemed astonishingly by an unlikely connection between a monster and a haunted young woman. Anthony Hopkins is extraordinary as the cannibalistic psychiatrist Dr. Hannibal Lecter, virtually entombed in a subterranean prison for the criminally insane. At the behest of the FBI, agent-in-training Clarice Starling (Jodie Foster) approaches Lecter, requesting his insights into the identity and methods of a serial killer named Buffalo Bill (Ted Levine). In exchange, Lecter demands the right to penetrate Starling's most painful memories, creating a bizarre but palpable intimacy that liberates them both under separate but equally horrific circumstances. Demme, a filmmaker with a uniquely populist vision ("Melvin and Howard", "Something Wild"), also spent his early years making pulp for Roger Corman ("Caged Heat"), and he hasn't forgotten the significance of tone, atmosphere, and the unsettling nature of a crudely effective close-up. Much of the film, in fact, consists of actors staring straight into the camera (usually from Clarice's point of view), making every bridge between one set of eyes to another seem terribly dangerous. --"Tom Keogh"
 

Silver Linings Playbook

Director: David O. Russell
Starring: Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro, Jacki Weaver, Chris Tucker
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance
Studio: Weinstein Company, The
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.9 (186,971 votes)
Release: Dec 2012
Summary: Against medical advice and without the knowledge of her husband Pat Solatano Sr., caring Dolores Solatano discharges her adult son, Pat Solatano Jr., from a Maryland mental health institution after his minimum eight month court ordered stint. The condition of the release includes Pat Jr. moving back in with his parents in their Philadelphia home. Although Pat Jr.'s institutionalization was due to him beating up the lover of his wife Nikki, he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Nikki has since left him and has received a restraining order against him. Although he is on medication (which he doesn't take because of the way it makes him feel) and has mandatory therapy sessions, Pat Jr. feels like he can manage on the outside solely by healthy living and looking for the "silver linings" in his life. His goals are to get his old job back as a substitute teacher, but more importantly reunite with Nikki...
 

Sin City

Director: Frank Miller, Robert Rodriguez
Starring: Robert Rodriguez, Frank Miller, Jessica Alba, Devon Aoki, Alexis Bledel
Genre: Crime, Thriller
Studio: Dimension
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.2 (423,538 votes)
Release: Apr 2005
Summary: Four tales of crime adapted from Frank Miller's popular comics, focusing around a muscular brute who's looking for the person responsible for the death of his beloved Goldie, a man fed up with Sin City's corrupt law enforcement who takes the law into his own hands after a horrible mistake, a cop who risks his life to protect a girl from a deformed pedophile, and a hitman looking to make a little cash.
 

A Single Shot

Director: David M. Rosenthal
Starring: Sam Rockwell, William H. Macy, Jeffrey Wright, Jason Isaacs, Kelly Reilly, Ted Levine, Jason Isaacs, Joe Anderson, Ophelia Lovibond, Melissa Leo, Amy Sloan, W. Earl Brown, Heather Lind, Christie Burke, Jenica Bergere, Lana Glacose
Genre: Drama, Crime, Thriller
Studio: Unified Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Sep 2013
Summary: The tragic death of a beautiful young girl starts a tense and atmospheric game of cat and mouse between hunter John Moon and the hardened backwater criminals out for his blood.
 

Sinister

Director: Scott Derrickson
Starring: Ethan Hawke, Fred Dalton Thompson
Genre: Horror, Mystery, Thriller
Studio: Summit Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.7 (52,807 votes)
Release: Feb 2013
Summary: A scary movie that understands the value of a slow burn, "Sinister" stands as an unsettling hybrid between old-school horror jolts and newfangled found-footage creepiness. Beginning with a hackle-raising 16mm film clip, the story follows a disgraced true-crime author (Ethan Hawke) who, in hopes of regaining his writerly mojo, moves his unsuspecting family into a house where a grisly murder took place. After discovering a projector and collection of home movies in the attic, he finds evidence of a series of unsolved crimes, all centering around an ancient supernatural presence with an appetite for children. What's worse, said Presence seems to be aware of the attention.
 

Sixteen Candles

Director: John Hughes
Starring: Molly Ringwald, Anthony Michael Hall, Justin Henry, Michael Schoeffling, Haviland Morris
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Universal Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Release: May 1998
Summary: Molly Ringwald established herself as the teen queen of the '80s in this fresh comedy. The movie is a day in the life of Samantha, whose 16th birthday is turning out to be anything but sweet. All the traumas of teendom come down on one long day, which sees Samantha surrounded by dithery relatives, mooning over a high school hunk, and pursued by a sawed-off Lothario. "Sixteen Candles" marked the directing debut of John Hughes, and its goofy energy displayed a promising talent with a great ear for high school lingo ... a promise neglected since Hughes became, after "Home Alone", a one-man entertainment industry. There are some pretty crass moments (Why the stereotype of the foreign-exchange student from Asia?), but Ringwald's steady appeal smoothes over the rough spots. As the pubescent, self-styled lady-killer, Anthony Michael Hall turns in a hilarious portrait of a young swinger; he and Ringwald would reteam with Hughes for "The Breakfast Club", another key teen picture of the decade. "--Robert Horton"
 

The Skin I Live In

Director: Pedro Almodóvar
Starring: Antonio Banderas, Elena Anaya, Marisa Paredes, Jan Cornet, Roberto Álamo
Genre: Drama, Thriller
Studio: Canal+ España
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.7 (13,388 votes)
Release: Sep 2011
Summary: In honor of his late wife who died in a flaming car accident, scientist, Dr. Robert Ledgard, is trying to synthesize the perfect skin which can withstand burns, cuts or any other kind of damage. As he gets closer to perfecting this skin on his flawless patient, the scientific community starts growing skeptical and his past is revealed that shows how his patient is closely linked to tragic events he would like to forget.
 

Sky Captain and The World of Tomorrow

Director: Kerry Conran
Starring: Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow, Giovanni Ribisi, Angelina Jolie, Ling Bai, Michael Gambon, Omid Djalili, Laurence Olivier, Peter Law, Khan Bonfils
Genre: Action, Thriller, Science Fiction
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 6.1 (57,930 votes)
Release: Sep 2004
Summary: When scientists the world over keep disappearing without a trace, it's up to intrepid reporter Polly Perkins and top aviator Sky Captain to uncover the truth in this futuristic, Art Deco-style actioner. The task involves putting their lives at risk as the pair travels to treacherous locales, hoping to throw a wrench in the plans of a villain who aims to wipe out the planet.
 

Sky High

Director: Mike Mitchell
Starring: Michael Angarano, Kurt Russell, Kelly Preston, Danielle Panabaker, Kevin Heffernan, Dee Jay Daniels, Kelly Vitz, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Lynda Carter, Bruce Campbell, Steven Strait, Cloris Leachman, Jim Rash, Dave Foley, Kevin McDonald, Tom Kenny, Patrick Warburton
Genre: Action, Adventure, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Science Fiction
Studio: Walt Disney Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7
Release: Jul 2005
Summary: It all begins at a secret school in the clouds like none on earth: Sky High, the first and only high school for kids with super-human powers going through crime-fighting puberty. At Sky High, the student body throw flames with their footballs, study Villainy with their Chemistry and are divided into Heroes and Sidekicks instead of jocks and geeks. It's an out-of-this-world yet completely recognizable place where cool gadgetry, rampant bravery and awe-inspiring magical skills mix it up with parental battles, peer pressure and dating trouble--with explosively fun results. This year's class features some of the best, brightest and most powerfully gifted super-teens ever assembled. And then there's Will Stronghold. When you're the son of the world's most legendary super heroes, The Commander and Jetstream, people expect you to live up to the family name The problem is that Will is starting with no superpowers of his own and, worst of all, instead of joining the ranks of the Hero class, he finds himself relegated to being a Sidekick. Now he must somehow survive his freshman year while dealing with an overbearing gym coach, a bully with super speed and a dangerous rebel with a grudge (and the ability to shoot fire from his hands)--not to mention the usual angst, parental expectations and girl problems that accompany teenage life. But when an evil villain threatens his family, friends and the very sanctity of Sky High, Will must use his newfound superpowers to save the day and prove himself a Hero worthy of the family tradition.
 

Skyfall

Director: Sam Mendes
Starring: Daniel Craig, Judi Dench, Javier Bardem, Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 8.0 (193,308 votes)
Release: Nov 2012
Summary: When Bond's latest assignment goes gravely wrong and agents around the world are exposed, MI6 is attacked forcing M to relocate the agency. These events cause her authority and position to be challenged by Gareth Mallory (Ralph Fiennes), the new Chairman of the Intelligence and Security Committee. With MI6 now compromised from both inside and out, M is left with one ally she can trust: Bond. 007 takes to the shadows - aided only by field agent, Eve (Naomie Harris) - following a trail to the mysterious Silva (Javier Bardem), whose lethal and hidden motives have yet to reveal themselves.
 

Slap Shot

Director: George Roy Hill
Starring: Paul Newman, Michael Ontkean, Strother Martin, Jennifer Warren, Lindsay Crouse
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Sports
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.2 (20,742 votes)
Release: Jan 1999
Summary: Paul Newman and his "Butch Cassidy" director, George Roy Hill, made a very original comedy in this 1977 story of an over-the-hill player/coach (Newman) for a lousy hockey team who gets results when he teaches his players to get dirty. One of the most hilariously profane movies ever to come out of Hollywood, this is the kind of film that makes its own rules as it goes along. Newman is very good, and while Hill goes for the gusto in terms of capturing the violence of this world, his instinct for comedy has never been sharper. Great support from Strother Martin, Paul Dooley, and the rest. "--Tom Keogh"
 

Sleepers

Director: Barry Levinson
Starring: Kevin Bacon, Billy Crudup, Robert De Niro, Brad Pitt, Vittorio Gassman, Minnie Driver, Dustin Hoffman, Ron Eldard, Jason Patric, Geoffrey Wigdor, Terry Kinney, Bruno Kirby, Mary B. McCann, Eugene Byrd, Peter Appel
Genre: Crime, Drama
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7
Release: Oct 1996
Summary: Four boys growing up in Hell's Kitchen play a prank that leads to an old man getting hurt. Sentenced to no less than one year in the Wilkenson Center in upstate New York, the four friends are changed by the beating, humiliation and sexual abuse by the guards sworn to protect them. Thirteen years later and a chance meeting lead to a chance for revenge against the Wilkenson Center and the guards.
 

Sleeping Beauty

Director: Clyde Geronimi
Starring: Mary Costa, Bill Shirley, Eleanor Audley, Verna Felton, Barbara Luddy, Barbara Jo Allen, Taylor Holmes, Bill Thompson
Genre: Fantasy, Animation, Science Fiction, Romance, Family
Studio: Walt Disney Productions
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 7.3 (51,797 votes)
Release: Jan 1959
Summary: A beautiful princess born in a faraway kingdom is destined by a terrible curse to prick her finger on the spindle of a spinning wheel and fall into a deep sleep that can only be awakened by true love's first kiss. Determined to protect her, her parents ask three fairies to raise her in hiding. But the evil Maleficent is just as determined to seal the princess's fate.
 

Sleepless in Seattle

Director: Nora Ephron
Starring: Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Ross Malinger, Rita Wilson, Victor Garber
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Release: Sep 1999
Summary: The director and stars of 1998's "You've Got Mail" scoreda breakthrough hit with this hugely popular romantic comedy from 1993, about a recently engaged woman (Meg Ryan) who hears the sad story of a grieving widower (Tom Hanks) on the radio and believes that they're destined to be together. She's single in New York, he lives in Seattle with a young son, but the cross-country attraction proves irresistible, and pretty soon Meg's on a westbound flight. What happens from there is ... well, you must have been living in a cave to have let this sweet-hearted comedy slip below your pop-cultural radar. There's little complexity or depth to writer-director Nora Ephron's cheesy tale of a romantic fait accompli, and more than a little contrivance to the subplots that threaten to keep Hanks and Ryan from actually meeting. But the purity of star chemistry here is hard to deny, and this may be the first film to indicate the more serious and sympathetic side of Hanks that is revealed in later roles. With its clever jokes about "chick movies" and repeated homage to the classic weeper "An Affair to Remember", this may not be everybody's brand of amorous entertainment, but it's got an old-Hollywood charm that appeals to many a movie fan. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Sleepy Hollow

Director: Tim Burton
Starring: Johnny Depp, Christina Ricci, Miranda Richardson, Michael Gambon, Casper Van Dien
Genre: Fantasy, Mystery, Thriller
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.5 (181,959 votes)
Release: May 2000
Summary: The films of Tim Burton shine through the muck like a jack-o-lantern on a foggy October night. After such successes as "The Nightmare Before Christmas" and "Edward Scissorhands", it should come as no surprise that "Sleepy Hollow" is a dazzling film, a delicious reworking of Washington Irving's "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow". Dark and moody, the film is a thrilling ride back to the turn of the 19th century. Johnny Depp stars as Ichabod Crane, a seemingly hapless constable from New York City who is sent to the small town of Sleepy Hollow to solve the mystery of the decapitations that are plaguing the town. Crane is a bumbling sort, with a tremendous faith in science over mysticism, and he comes up against town secrets, bewitching women, and a number of bodies missing heads. Christina Ricci, as beautiful as ever, is Katrina Van Tassel, the offbeat love interest who alternately charms and frightens Crane. The film, while occasionally gory (as one should expect from a movie about a headless horseman), is not terribly frightening, although it is suspenseful. Both Depp and Ricci are convincing, and the art direction and production values give the village its harsh feel. Toward the end, once the secrets are revealed, the film does slow down; however, this stylistic horror film provides many tricks and even more treats. "--Jenny Brown"
 

Slither

Director: James Gunn
Starring: Nathan Fillion, Don Thompson, Elizabeth Banks, Gregg Henry, Xantha Radley, Michael Rooker, Tania Saulnier, Magda Apanowicz, Dustin Milligan, Zak Ludwig
Genre: Comedy, Horror, Science Fiction
Studio: NBC Universal
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.5 (43,507 votes)
Release: Mar 2006
Summary: A small town is taken over by an alien plague, turning residents into zombies and all forms of mutant monsters.
 

Smokey & The Bandit

Director: Hal Needham
Starring: Burt Reynolds, Sally Field, Jerry Reed, Mike Henry, Paul Williams
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7.1 (44,906 votes)
Release: Oct 1998
Summary: It's easy to assume this is just another dumb redneck comedy from Burt Reynolds's years of underachievement. But it's not bad as a dumb redneck comedy at all. Directed by career stuntman Hal Needham, "Smokey and the Bandit" is just a goofy chase starring a bunch of Reynolds's Hollywood cronies. New to the job as film boss, Needham brings a silly but energized sensibility to the production and an action man's need to see things moving. But he also has a distinctive feeling for relationships, and he's good with a joke. Put all that together, and "Smokey" is, at the very least (and unlike its sequels), a simple and original pleasure. "--Tom Keogh"
 

Snatch

Director: Guy Ritchie
Starring: Brad Pitt, Benicio del Toro, Dennis Farina, Jason Statham, Jason Buckham
Genre: Crime, Thriller
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8.3 (353,145 votes)
Release: Jul 2001
Summary: Usually it might seem a tad unfair to begin a review by referring to the director's missis. But then the missis in question wouldn't usually be Madonna--a woman whose ability to reinvent herself several times before breakfast seems in marked contrast to that of hubby Guy Ritchie. Certainly, this follow-up to the filmmaker's breakthrough film--the high-energy, expletive-strewn cockney-gangster movie "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels"--hardly breaks new ground being, well, "another" high-energy, expletive-strewn cockney-gangster movie. OK, so there are some differences. This time around our low-rent hoodlums are battling over dodgy fights and stolen diamonds rather than dodgy card games and stolen drugs. There has been some minor reshuffling of the cast too, with Sting and Dexter Fletcher making way for the more bankable Benicio Del Toro and Brad Pitt, the latter pretty much stealing the whole shebang as an incomprehensible Irish gypsy. And, sure, people who really, really liked "Lock, Stock"--or have the memory of a goldfish--will really, really like this. The suspicion lingers, however, that if the director doesn't do something very different next time around then his career may prove to be considerably shorter than that of his missis. "--Clark Collis"
 

Snitch

Director: Ric Roman Waugh
Starring: Dwayne Johnson, Susan Sarandon, J.D. Pardo, Harold Perrineau, Jon Bernthal, Michael Kenneth Williams, Barry Pepper, Benjamin Bratt, Nadine Velazquez, Richard Cabral, Kym Jackson, Melina Kanakaredes, Rafi Gavron, Jason Douglas
Genre: Drama, Thriller
Studio: Summit Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.7 (7,287 votes)
Release: Feb 2013
Summary: Construction company owner John Matthews learns that his estranged son, Jason, has been arrested for drug trafficking. Facing an unjust prison sentence for a first time offender courtesy of mandatory minimum sentence laws, Jason has nothing to offer for leniency in good conscience. Desperately, John convinces the DEA and the opportunistic DA Joanne Keeghan to let him go undercover to help make arrests big enough to free his son in return. With the unwitting help of an ex-con employee, John enters the narcotics underworld where every move could be his last in an operation that will demand all his resources, wits and courage to survive.
 

Snow White and the Huntsman

Director: Rupert Sanders
Starring: Kristen Stewart, Chris Hemsworth, Charlize Theron, Sam Claflin, Sam Spruell
Genre: Action, Adventure, Drama, Fantasy
Studio: Universal Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.2 (139,685 votes)
Release: Jun 2012
Summary: Snow White, imprisoned daughter of the late king, escapes just as the Magic Mirror declares her the source of the Evil Queen's immortality. The Queen sends her men, led by a local huntsman to bring her back. But upon her capture, the huntsman finds he's being played and turns against the Queens men, saving Snow White in the process. Meanwhile, Snow's childhood friend, William, learns that she is alive and sets off to save her.
 

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

Director: David Hand
Starring: Adriana Caselotti, Eddie Collins, Pinto Colvig, Marion Darlington, Billy Gilbert, Otis Harlan, Roy Atwell, Lucille La Verne, Scotty Mattraw, Moroni Olsen, Harry Stockwell, Purv Pullen, James MacDonald
Genre: Fantasy, Animation, Science Fiction, Family
Studio: Disney Studios
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 7.8 (77,927 votes)
Release: Dec 1937
Summary: A beautiful girl, Snow White, takes refuge in the forest in the house of seven dwarfs to hide from her stepmother, the wicked Queen. The Queen is jealous because she wants to be known as "the fairest in the land," and Snow White's beauty surpasses her own.
 

Snowtown

Director: Justin Kurzel
Starring: Daniel Henshall, Lucas Pittaway, Louise Harris, Frank Cwertniak, Matthew Howard, Marcus Howard, Anthony Groves, Aaron Viergever, Beau Gosling, Richard Greene
Genre: Drama, Horror, Thriller, Crime, Foreign
Studio: Screen Australia
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7
Release: Mar 2012
Summary: Sixteen-year-old Jamie lives with his mother, Elizabeth, and two younger brothers, Alex and Nicholas, in a housing trust home in Adelaide's northern suburbs. Their home is but one of many sun-starved houses crammed together to cater for a disenfranchised society. Jamie longs for an escape from the violence and hopelessness that surrounds him and his salvation arrives in the form of John, a charismatic man who unexpectedly comes to his aid. As John spends more and more time with Jamie's family, Elizabeth and her boys begin to experience a stability and sense of family that they have never known. John moves from the role of Jamie's protector to that of a mentor, indoctrinating Jamie into his world, a world brimming with bigotry, righteousness and malice. Like a son mimicking his father, Jamie soon begins to take on some of John's traits and beliefs as he spends more and more time with him and his select group of friends...
 

The Social Network

Director: David Fincher
Starring: Jesse Eisenberg, Andrew Garfield, Armie Hammer, Justin Timberlake, Monique Edwards
Genre: Biography, Drama
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.9 (279,884 votes)
Release: Jan 2011
Summary: They all laughed at college nerd Mark Zuckerberg, whose idea for a social-networking site made him a billionaire. And they all laughed at the idea of a Facebook movie--except writer Aaron Sorkin and director David Fincher, merely two of the more extravagantly talented filmmakers around. Sorkin and Fincher's breathless picture, "The Social Network", is a fast and witty creation myth about how Facebook grew from Zuckerberg's insecure geek-at-Harvard days into a phenomenon with 500 million users. Sorkin frames the movie around two lawsuits aimed at the lofty but brilliant Zuckerberg (deftly played by "Adventureland"'s Jesse Eisenberg): a claim that he stole the idea from Ivy League classmates, and a suit by his original, now slighted, business partner (Andrew Garfield). The movie follows a familiar rise-and-fall pattern, with temptation in the form of a sunny California Beelzebub (an expert Justin Timberlake as former Napster founder Sean Parker) and an increasingly tangled legal mess. Emphasizing the legal morass gives Sorkin and Fincher a chance to explore how unsocial this social-networking business can be, although the irony seems a little facile. More damagingly, the film steers away from the prickly figure of Zuckerberg in the latter stages--and yet Zuckerberg presents the most intriguing personality in the movie, even if the movie takes pains to make us understand his shortcomings. Fincher's command of pacing and his eye for the clean spaces of Aughts-era America are bracing, and he can't resist the technical trickery involved in turning actor Armie Hammer into privileged Harvard twins (Hammer is letter-perfect). Even with its flaws, "The Social Network" is a galloping piece of entertainment, a smart ride with smart people… who sometimes do dumb things. "--Robert Horton"
 

Sold Out: A Threevening With Kevin Smith

Director: Joey Figueroa, Zak Knutson
Starring: Kevin Smith, Jennifer Schwalbach Smith, Harley Quinn Smith, Grace Smith
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Weinstein Company
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.7 (937 votes)
Release: Oct 2008
Summary: To celebrate his 37th birthday, Kevin Smith took to the stage. Anyone else might've thrown a party, but the man who bankrolled "Clerks" with maxed-out credit cards has never been one to follow convention. Filmed in his native New Jersey, "A Threevening" features jokes, stories, and questions from the audience. Instead of a suit, Smith's apparel consists of long shorts, checkered sneakers, and a sweat-inducing overcoat (hence, the pile of towels to wipe his face). It may sound like the ingredients for a stand-up routine, except he wrings more humor from biographical incidents than pre-written punch lines. Aside from the movies with which he's been involved, like "Clerks II" and "Live Free or Die Hard", he relates the history of Saint Kevin, a delicate medical dilemma, and the sexual proclivities of dogs Shecky, Mulder, and Skully. Naturally, there's name-dropping--Harvey Weinstein, Hayden Christensen, Bruce Willis, etc.--and more profanity than a Richard Pryor record, but Smith's appeal lies in his honesty and humility. When he says, "Throw a rock, you'll hit a better filmmaker than me," he's calling it as he sees it; not asking for pity or praise. And if he has little patience for the "whiny" and "emo," as he describes "Superman Returns", he's just as generous with the praise, describing favorite flicks, like "Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan", as "pimp." The Q&A continues in the deleted scenes, in which the director sets the record straight about a rumored "Dogma" sequel and the "Clerks" sitcom. "--Kathleen C. Fennessy"
 

Soldier

Director: Paul W.S. Anderson
Starring: Kurt Russell, Jason Scott Lee, Jason Isaacs, Connie Nielsen
Genre: Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Studio: Warner Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7
Release: Oct 1998
Summary: Sergeant Todd, born and bred to be a soldier in a futuristic army, raised to kill mercilessly and living only for battle, finds himself at the twilight of his career (and so-called life) when a regiment of genetically enhanced warriors threatens to make his brand of soldiering obsolete. Despite his extensive skills, he is no match for the best of breed of the new order, and he's left for dead on a planet that serves only as a junk heap. There he encounters a ragtag group of castaways, and in his own strange and silent way slowly begins to learn how to be less a killer and more a human. All is disrupted, though, when the genetic regiment arrives on the trash planet and decides to eradicate the local human "trespassers." Though Todd had been overmatched before, this time he has more than ever to fight for--a home, and friends.
 

Solitary Man

Director: David Levien Brian Koppelman
Starring: Michael Douglas, Susan Sarandon, Danny DeVito, Mary-Louise Parker, Jenna Fischer
Genre: Drama
Studio: Millennium Films
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.4 (9,676 votes)
Release: Sep 2010
Summary: Ben Kalman is aging: he has heart problems, his marriage is over, he's lost a fortune after being caught cutting corners in his East Coast car business, and he's sleeping with as many women as possible - the younger the better. He's chosen his current girlfriend, Jordan, because her father can help him get a new auto dealership; she's asked him to escort her daughter, Allyson, 18, on a visit to a Boston college campus. He behaves badly, and there are consequences to his love life, his finances, and his relationship with his daughter and grandson. Is there anywhere he can turn?
 

A Somewhat Gentle Man

Director: Hans Petter Moland
Starring: Stellan Skarsgard, Bjorn Floberg, Gard B. Eidsvold, Jorunn Kjellsby, Jannike Kruse
Genre: Comedy, Crime, Drama
Studio: Strand Releasing
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.9 (2,892 votes)
Release: May 2011
Summary: As the title promises, Stellan Skarsgård plays a somewhat gentle man in this deadpan Norwegian comedy. After 12 years behind bars for murder, Skarsgård's Ulrik, whose ratty ponytail contributes to his sad-sack demeanor, reunites with crime boss Jensen (Bjørn Floberg, Skarsgård's "Insomnia" nemesis), who sets him up with a mechanic gig and a rented room. Unfortunately, his favors don't come for free: Jensen expects Ulrik to kill the snitch who reported his crime, except his legit new life keeps getting in the way. First, his stone-faced landlady expects sexual favors for her hospitality, which Ulrik dutifully obliges. Then, he reconnects with his estranged son, whose fiancée is expecting their first child. When the garage manager, who has a heart condition, ends up in the hospital, Ulrik steps in to run the joint with blunt bookkeeper Merete. After he rescues her from an abusive ex, she asks him out. Though his supervisor warned him to keep his dealings with her professional, Ulrik can't resist, thus putting his job in jeopardy. At that point, everything falls apart, and Ulrik grudgingly returns to the criminal life, knowing it will only push his son further away. From start to finish, Skarsgård makes all the right moves, though the script lets him down whenever a depressed woman flings herself at him, resulting in some seriously un-sexy sex scenes, but Hans Petter Moland, who directed the Swedish actor in "Zero Kelvin" and "Aberdeen", wraps up Ulrik's moral quandary in dramatically satisfying and darkly amusing fashion. "--Kathleen C. Fennessy"
 

Sonicsgate

Director: Jason Reid
Starring: John Keister, Kevin Calabro, Percy Allen, Chris Daniels, Art Thiel
Genre: Documentary, History, Sport
Studio: 2R Productions
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.6 (193 votes)
Release: Oct 2009
Summary: "Sonicsgate" is a feature documentary film exposing the truth behind how Seattle lost the SuperSonics after a heated legal battle in 2008. The perfect storm of corporate greed and political impotence formed to rob loyal Seattle sports fans of their oldest professional franchise. The team's celebrated 41-year run in Seattle included an NBA Championship, three Western Conference titles, six division titles and legendary players such as Gary Payton, Shawn Kemp, Ray Allen, Tom Chambers, Xavier McDaniel, Jack Sikma, Freddy Brown, Slick Watts and Spencer Haywood... just to name a few. As NBA salaries skyrocketed following the 1999 player lockout, the league's business model changed to require expansive new buildings paid for with taxpayer dollars. Seattle's KeyArena, built in 1995 as a remodel of the old Seattle Coliseum, just wouldn't cut it anymore according to NBA Commissioner David Stern...
 

Sordid Lives

Director: Del Shores
Starring: Delta Burke, Bonnie Bedelia, Olivia Newton-John, Kirk Geiger, Sarah Hunley
Genre: Comedy
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Mar 2003
Summary: If you've got a taste for big hair, broad Texas accents, and gay rights, this mixture of white-trash comedy and coming-out melodrama is for you. "Sordid Lives" starts out as chicken-fried farce, as a funeral is prepared for a woman who died when she tripped over her adulterous lover's wooden legs; about midway the emphasis shifts to a drag queen unfairly held in a mental institution and the dead woman's grandson, an actor in Los Angeles who hasn't come out to his mother. The tone shifts wildly, and the humor depends on your fondness for the white-trash genre--if you like it, this will tickle your ribs; if you don't, it'll fall flat as the panhandle landscape. But it must be said that the cast (including Bonnie Bedelia, Beau Bridges, Delta Burke, and Olivia Newton-John) dives right in, no matter how over-the-top their characters get. "--Bret Fetzer"
 

Sound City

Director: David Grohl
Starring: Trent Reznor, Tom Petty, Mick Fleetwood, Dave Grohl, John Fogerty, Rivers Cuomo, Taylor Hawkins, Barry Manilow, Stevie Nicks, Krist Novoselic, Rick Rubin, Rick Springfield, Lars Ulrich, Butch Vig, Lee Ving, Brad Wilk, Chris Shiflett, James Brown, Rick Neilsen, Paul McCartney, Robert Levon Been, Brian Bell, Black Francis, Lindsey Buckingham, Mike Campbell, Tim Commerford, Kevin Cronin, Warren DeMartini, Joshua Homme, Neil Giraldo, Jessy Greene, Omar Hakim, Corey Taylor
Genre: Documentary, Music
Studio: Therapy Content
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Release: Jan 2013
Summary: Deep in the San Fernando Valley, amidst rows of dilapidated warehouses, was rock n' roll's best kept secret: Sound City. America's greatest unsung recording studio housed a one-of-a-kind console, and as its legend grew, seminal bands and artists such as Fleetwood Mac, Neil Young, Rick Springfield, Tom Petty, Metallica and Nirvana all came out to put magic to tape. Directed by Dave Grohl (Nirvana, Foo Fighters) and featuring interviews and performances from the iconic musicians who recorded some of rock’s greatest albums at the studio, Sound City doesn’t just tell the story of this real-life rock ’n’ roll shrine, it celebrates the human element of music as Grohl gathers some of rock's biggest artists to collaborate on a new album. Using Sound City's legendary analog console, together these artists continue to create musical miracles in a digital world.
 

The Sound of Music

Director: Robert Wise
Starring: Julie Andrews, Christopher Plummer, Eleanor Parker, Richard Haydn, Peggy Wood
Genre: Drama
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 7.9 (90,509 votes)
Release: Aug 2002
Summary: When Julie Andrews sang "The hills are alive with the sound of music" from an Austrian mountaintop in 1965, the most beloved movie musical was born. To be sure, the adaptation of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II's Broadway hit has never been as universally acclaimed as, say, Singin' in the Rain. Critics argue that the songs are saccharine (even the songwriters regretted the line "To sing through the night like a lark who is learning to pray") and that the characters and plot lack the complexity that could make them more interesting. It's not hard to know whom to root for when your choice is between cute kids and Nazis.
 

Sound of My Voice

Director: Zal Batmanglij
Starring: Christopher Denham, Nicole Vicius, Brit Marling, Davenia McFadden, Kandice Stroh
Genre: Drama, Thriller
Studio: Skyscraper Films
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.5 (2,350 votes)
Release: Aug 2012
Summary: A journalist and his girlfriend get pulled in while they investigate a cult whose leader claims to be from the future.
 

South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut

Director: Trey Parker
Starring: Deb Adair, Mary Kay Bergman, Franchesca Clifford, George Clooney, Stewart Copeland
Genre: Animation
Studio: Paramount Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.7 (115,543 votes)
Release: Jun 1999
Summary: OK, let's get all the disclaimers out of the way first. Despite its colorful (if crude) animation, "South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut" is in no way meant for kids. It is chock full of profanity that might even make Quentin Tarantino blanch and has blasphemous references to God, Satan, Saddam Hussein (who's sleeping with Satan, literally), and Canada. It's rife with scatological humor, suggestive sexual situations, political incorrectness, and gleeful, rampant vulgarity. And it's probably one of the most brilliant satires ever made. The plot: flatulent Canadian gross "meisters" Terrance and Philip hit the big screen, and the South Park quartet of third graders--Stan, Kyle, Kenny, and Cartman--begin repeating their profane one-liners ad infinitum. The parents of South Park, led by Kyle's overbearing mom, form "Mothers Against Canada," blaming their neighbors to the north for their children's corruption and taking Terrance and Philip as war prisoners. It's up to the kids then to rescue their heroes from execution, not mention a brooding Satan, who's planning to take over the world.
To give away any more of the plot would destroy the fun, but this feature-length version of Trey Parker and Matt Stone's Comedy Central hit is a dead-on and hilarious send-up of pop culture. And did we mention it's a musical? From the opening production number "Mountain Town" to the cheerful antiprofanity sing-along "It's Easy, MMMKay" to Satan's faux-Disney ballad "Up There," Parker (who wrote or cowrote all the songs) brilliantly shoots down every earnest musical from "Beauty and the Beast" to "Les Misérables". And in advocating free speech and satirizing well-meaning but misguided parental censorship groups (with a special nod to the MPAA), "Bigger, Longer & Uncut" hits home against adult paranoia and hypocrisy with a vengeance. And the jokes, while indeed vulgar and gross, are hysterical; we can't repeat them here, especially the lyrics to Terrance and Philip's hit song, but you'll be rolling on the floor. Don't worry, though--to paraphrase Cartman, this movie won't warp your fragile little mind. Unless you have something against the First Amendment. "--Mark Englehart"
 

Spaceballs

Director: Mel Brooks
Starring: Mel Brooks, John Candy, Ronny Graham, Rick Moranis, Bill Pullman
Genre: Adventure, Comedy, Sci-Fi
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7.0 (90,250 votes)
Release: Jun 1987
Summary: Mel Brooks's 1987 parody of the Star Wars trilogy is a jumble of jokes rather than a comic feature, and, predictably, some of those jokes work better than others. The cast, including Brooks in two roles, more or less mimics the principal characters from George Lucas's famous story line, and the director certainly gets a boost from new allies ("SCTV" graduates Rick Moranis and John Candy) as well as old ones (Dick Van Patten, Dom DeLuise). Watch this and wait for the sporadic inspiration--but don't be surprised if you find yourself yearning for those years when Brooks was a more complete filmmaker ("Young Frankenstein"). "--Tom Keogh"
 

Spaced: The Complete Series

Director: Edgar Wright
Starring: Jessica Hynes, Simon Pegg, Katy Carmichael, Julia Deakin, Nick Frost
Genre: Comedy
Studio: BBC Warner
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 8.7 (25,719 votes)
Release: Jul 2008
Summary: It only takes one episode to become very protective of this 1999 British Comedy Award-winning series that put comedy soul mates Simon Pegg and Jessica Stevenson (now Hynes), as well as Nick Frost, and director Edgar Wright ("Shaun of the Dead", "Hot Fuzz") on the map. One can only hope a threatened American version is never produced. This is one of those brilliant, off-center, lightning-in-a-bottle creations that gets you so jazzed, you want to turn all your friends on to it. "Spaced" (actually, "Friends" might have been a better title; too bad it was taken) stars Pegg and Stevenson as strangers Tim and Daisy, "amiable 20-somethings" who pose as a "professional couple" to rent an apartment. He is a recently-dumped aspiring comic book artist. She is an easily distracted writer. As the series unfolds, their apartment becomes an "island of calm in the ocean of life" as Tim and Daisy form a kind of 21st century family with their similarly misfit friends, including soused landlord Marsha (Julia Deakin), who lives with her teenager daughter (aka "the devil in a A cup," who is heard, but never quite seen), Brian (Mark Heap), an artist who deals in anger, fear, and aggression, Simon's best friend Mark (Frost), a militaristic gun nut, and Daisy's best friend, Twist (Katy Carmichael), a fashion poseur (in the series' penultimate episode, look for a pre-"Office" Ricky Gervais). "Spaced" is not so much interested in Tim and Daisy's charade as it is in cramming each episode with pop culture references and obscure in-jokes, and brilliantly realized film and TV homages, ranging from Woody Allen's "Manhattan" to "Pulp Fiction" and "The Empire Strikes Back" ("Star Wars", especially, looms large in Tim's slacker universe). As with "Arrested Development", "Spaced" benefits from repeat viewings to catch missed bits of business and gags that fly by at a "Simpsons"-esque rate. This "Complete Series" set is everything "Spaced"'s fervent following would demand. Each episode is complemented by the original commentaries as well as newly-recorded gabfests that also feature American friends of the show, including Kevin Smith, Patton Oswalt, Quentin Taratinto, Matt Stone, Diablo Cody, and Bill Hader. There are deleted scenes and outtakes, and, best of all, an hour-long 2007 Q&A with Wright and the cast, in which Pegg allows that, had there been a third series (and we can still dream), it would have provided viewers hoping that Tim and Daisy would ultimately get together with "a moment to make every hair of your body stand on end." You will see such a moment if you "skip to the end" of the essential near two-hour series retrospective. "--Donald Liebenson"
 

Spartacus

Director: Anthony Mann, Stanley Kubrick
Starring: Kirk Douglas, Laurence Olivier, Jean Simmons, Charles Laughton, Peter Ustinov, John Gavin, Nina Foch, John Ireland, Herbert Lom, John Dall, Woody Strode, Harold J. Stone, Charles McGraw, Joanna Barnes, Peter Brocco, Paul Lambert, Robert J. Wilke, Nick Dennis, John Hoyt, Frederick Worlock, Tony Curtis
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 8.7 (101,107 votes)
Release: Oct 1960
Summary: Spartacus is a 1960 American historical drama film directed by Stanley Kubrick and based on the novel of the same name by Howard Fast about the historical life of Spartacus and the Third Servile War. The film stars Kirk Douglas as the rebellious slave Spartacus who leads a violent revolt against the decadent Roman empire. The film was awarded four Oscars and stands today as one of the greatest classics of the Sword and Sandal genre.
 

Spartacus: Blood and Sand - The Complete First Season

Starring: Andy Whitfield, John Hannah, Peter Mensah, Lucy Lawless, Nick Tarabay
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
My Rating:
Rated: TVMA
Rating: TVMA
Release: Jan 2010
Summary: The "sword and sandals" genre isn't exactly known for its subtlety and restraint, but even by those standards, "Spartacus: Blood and Sand" is deliriously, delightfully over the top. Viewers familiar with the 1960 film starring Kirk Douglas and directed by Stanley Kubrick, the best-known version of the Spartacus tale, will recognize the basic outline of the story: a Thracian warrior with a beautiful, loving wife is betrayed by his Roman "allies" and forced into slavery, whereupon he distinguishes himself as a gladiator nonpareil and, after enduring countless indignities, leads his brethren and others in a rebellion against their oppressors. But there's a lot more "Caligula" than Kubrick in the 13 first-season episodes (each a bit less than an hour long) of this Starz television series, which stars Andy Whitfield in the title role and also features Lucy Lawless ("Xena: Warrior Princess") as the wicked wife of Spartacus's owner. The fight scenes are highly stylized (the entire production seems to have taken a cue from the surreal, painterly look of "300") but extraordinarily brutal, featuring multiple dismemberments and decapitations amidst seas of slow-motion, CGI-generated blood; a gladiatorial battle in episode 5 pitting Spartacus and his rival-turned-ally Crixus (Manu Bennett) against a monster named Theokoles is definitely not for the squeamish, but that's only one of many such scenes. There's also ample sex and nudity, as the couplings involving various studly gladiators and lustful Roman noblewomen are like salacious combat between Chippendales dancers and Victoria's Secret models. Meanwhile, the personal relationships are the stuff of soap operas, with the Romans in particular depicted as relentlessly decadent, duplicitous, and power-hungry.
If this all sounds outrageously entertaining, it is, though perhaps not for everyone. And although the future of the show (which was executive produced by "Spider-Man" director Sam Raimi) is in doubt due to Whitfield's ongoing battle with cancer, we'll always have this season to revel in. Bonus material in the four-disc set includes audio commentary on a variety of episodes and a batch of featurettes, most prominently a 15-minute "making of" documentary. "--Sam Graham"
 

Spartacus: Gods of the Arena

Starring: John Hannah, Lucy Lawless, Dustin Clare, Peter Mensah, Jaime Murray
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Anchor Bay Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: TVMA
Rating: TVMA
Release: Jan 2011
Summary: The title is misleading--there is no Spartacus to be found here--but little matter, as "Gods of the Arena" is a prime example of making lemonade from lemons. Faced with the unavailability of Andy Whitfield, star of "Spartacus: Blood and Sand", due to a recurrence of cancer, the folks at Starz chose to go ahead without him and create a prequel, a resourceful way of buying some time until a new Spartacus could be found while employing several actors already under contract. The focus throughout these six episodes is on the house of Batiatus. It is there that gladiators hone their skills as they prepare for glory and/or death in the arena under the evil eye of Quintus Batiatus (John Hannah), whom "Blood and Sand" viewers will recognize as the principal villain of that series. The younger Batiatus, already blindly ambitious, wants to make his mark in the gladiator biz, aided by his sexy, scheming wife, Lucretia (Lucy Lawless), and her licentious friend Gaia (Jaime Murray)--and they have just the warrior to do it with in Gannicus (Dustin Clare), a preening stud described by one show exec as "Han Solo meets Achilles." There are, of course, numerous obstacles, ranging from Batiatus's own father to various rival gladiatorial operations. But really, who cares about plotting when a show has as much sex and violence, usually directly juxtaposed, as this one? True to the "Blood and Sand" precedent, every episode offers a steady parade of gratuitous, risibly over-the-top beheadings and other mayhem, much of it lovingly shot in slow motion, along with ample nudity (some of it full-frontal) and sex (all of it soft-core). With drugs, torture, and constant profanity also in the mix (who knew the ancient Romans dropped so many F-bombs?), this is definitely not a program for the young and impressionable. Nor is it one that's big on nuance; almost without exception, Batiatus and his ilk are depicted as frivolous, depraved, and conniving, while the gladiators and slaves are lowly but noble (not to mention as gloriously muscled and sweaty as your average Chippendales dancer). But this isn't a documentary--it's entertainment, and on that level, "Gods of the Arena" totally works. "--Sam Graham"
 

Spartacus: Vengeance - The Complete Second Season

Starring: Liam McIntyre, Katrina Law, Dustin Clare, Lucy Lawless, Manu Bennett
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
My Rating:
Rated: TVMA
Rating: TVMA
Release: Jan 2012
Summary: 10-episode sequel to “Spartacus: Blood & Sand.”

On the heels of the bloody escape from the House of Batiatus that concluded “Spartacus: Blood and Sand,” the gladiator rebellion continues and begins to strike fear into the heart of the Roman Republic in “Spartacus: Vengeance.” Gaius Claudius Glaber and his Roman troops are sent to Capua to crush the growing band of freed slaves that Spartacus leads before it can inflict further damage. Spartacus is presented the choice of satisfying his personal need for vengeance against the man who condemned his wife to slavery and eventual death or making the larger sacrifices necessary to keep his budding army from breaking apart. Containing all of the blood-soaked action, exotic sexuality, and villainy and heroism that has come to distinguish the series, the tale of Spartacus resumes in epic fashion.

Includes tons of never-before-seen bonus features including featurettes, extended scenes and Content Too Risqué for CABLE TV.
 

Spartacus: War of the Damned - The Complete Third Season

Starring: Manu Bennett, Daniel Feuerriegel, Lucy Lawless, Peter Mensah, Nick Tarabay
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Starz Media
My Rating:
Rated: TVMA
Rating: 8.7 (88,131 votes)
Release: Jan 2013
 

The Spectacular Now

Director: James Ponsoldt
Starring: Miles Teller, Shailene Woodley, Brie Larson, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Kyle Chandler, Kaitlyn Dever, Bob Odenkirk, Andre Royo, Dayo Okeniyi, E. Roger Mitchell, Masam Holden, Nicci Faires, Gary Weeks, Christian Higgins
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance
Studio: 21 Laps Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Aug 2013
Summary: Sutter Keely lives in the now. It's a good place for him. A high school senior, charming and self-possessed, he's the life of the party, loves his job at a men's clothing store, and has no plans for the future. A budding alcoholic, he's never far from his supersized, whiskey-fortified thirst-master cup. But after being dumped by his girlfriend, Sutter gets drunk and wakes up on a lawn with Aimee Finicky hovering over him. She's different: the "nice girl" who reads science fiction and doesn't have a boyfriend. While Amy has dreams of a future, Sutter lives in the impressive delusion of a spectacular now, yet somehow, they're drawn together.
 

Speed

Director: Jan de Bont
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Dennis Hopper, Sandra Bullock, Joe Morton, Jeff Daniels
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.2 (172,119 votes)
Release: Feb 2005
Summary: Everything clicked in this 1994 action hit, from the premise (a city bus has to keep moving at 50 mph or blow up) to the two leads (the usually inscrutable Keanu Reeves and the cute-as-a-button Sandra Bullock) to the villain (Dennis Hopper in psycho mode) to the director (Jan De Bont, who made this film hit the ground running with an edge-of-your-seat opening sequence on a broken elevator). This is the sort of movie that becomes a prototype for a thousand lesser films (including De Bont's lousy sequel, "Speed 2: Cruise Control"), but "Speed" really is a one-of-a-kind experience almost anyone can enjoy. "--Tom Keogh"
 

Spider

Director: David Cronenberg
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, Miranda Richardson, Gabriel Byrne
Genre: Drama
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.8 (23,044 votes)
Release: Jul 2003
Summary: Internal madness is hypnotically externalized in David Cronenberg's "Spider", a disturbing portrait of schizophrenia. Adapted by Patrick McGrath from his celebrated novel, this no-frills production begins when "Spider" Cleg (Ralph Fiennes, in a daring, nearly nonverbal role) returns to his childhood neighborhood in London's dreary East End, where a traumatic event from his past percolates to the surface of his still-erratic consciousness. Released from a mental institution and left to fend for himself, he pursues elusive memories while staying in a halfway house run by a stern matron (Lynn Redgrave), unable to distinguish between past, present, and psychological fabrication. The distorting influence of Spider's mind is directly reflected in Cronenberg's cunning visual strategy, presenting a shifting "reality" that's deliberately untrustworthy, until the veracity of nearly every scene is called into question. With an impressive dual-role performance by Miranda Richardson, "Spider" falls prey to its own lugubrious rhythms, but like the acclaimed 1995 indie film "Clean, Shaven", it's a compelling glimpse of mental illness, seen from the inside out. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Spider-Man

Director: Sam Raimi
Starring: Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, Willem Dafoe, James Franco, Cliff Robertson
Genre: Action, Adventure, Fantasy
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.3 (320,318 votes)
Release: May 2002
Summary: For devoted fans and nonfans alike, "Spider-Man" offers nothing less--and nothing more--than what you'd expect from a superhero blockbuster. Having proven his comic-book savvy with the original "Darkman", director Sam Raimi brings ample energy and enthusiasm to Spidey's origin story, nicely establishing high-school nebbish Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) as a brainy outcast who reacts with appropriate euphoria--and well-tempered maturity--when a "super-spider" bite transforms him into the amazingly agile, web-shooting Spider-Man. That's all well and good, and so is Kirsten Dunst as Parker's girl-next-door sweetheart. Where "Spider-Man" falls short is in its hyperactive CGI action sequences, which play like a video game instead of the gravity-defying exploits of a flesh-and-blood superhero. Willem Dafoe is perfectly cast as Spidey's schizoid nemesis, the Green Goblin, and the movie's a lot of fun overall. It's no match for "Superman" and "Batman" in bringing a beloved character to the screen, but it places a respectable third. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Spider-Man 2

Director: Sam Raimi
Starring: Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, Alfred Molina, Rosemary Harris
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.3 (320,318 votes)
Release: Nov 2004
Summary: More than a few critics hailed "Spider-Man 2" as "the best superhero movie ever," and there's no compelling reason to argue--thanks to a bigger budget, better special effects, and a dynamic, character-driven plot, it's a notch above "Spider-Man" in terms of emotional depth and rich comic-book sensibility. "Ordinary People" Oscar-winner Alvin Sargent received screenplay credit, and celebrated author and comic-book expert Michael Chabon worked on the story, but it's director Sam Raimi's affinity for the material that brings "Spidey 2" to vivid life. When a fusion experiment goes terribly wrong, a brilliant physicist (Alfred Molina) is turned into Spidey's newest nemesis, the deranged, mechanically tentacled "Doctor Octopus," obsessed with completing his experiment and killing Spider-Man (Tobey Maguire) in the process. Even more compelling is Peter Parker's urgent dilemma: continue his burdensome, lonely life of crime-fighting as Spider-Man, or pursue love and happiness with Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst)? Molina's outstanding as a tragic villain controlled by his own invention, and the action sequences are nothing less than breathtaking, but the real success of "Spider-Man 2" is its sense of priorities. With all of Hollywood's biggest and best toys at his disposal, Raimi and his writers stay true to the Marvel mythology, honoring "Spider-Man" creators Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, and setting the bar impressively high for the challenge of "Spider-Man 3". "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Spider-Man 3

Director: Sam Raimi
Starring: Toby Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, Thomas Haden Church, Topher Grace
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Columbia Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Release: Oct 2007
Summary: Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) finally has the girl of his dreams, Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst), and New York City is in the throes of Spider-mania! But when a strange alien symbiote turns Spider-Man¿s suit black, his darkest demons come to light changing Spider-Man inside as well as out. Spider-Man is in for the fight of his life against a lethal mix of villains - the deadly Sandman (Thomas Haden Church), Venom (Topher Grace), and the New Goblin (James Franco) - as well as the enemy within himself.
 

Spies Like Us

Director: John Landis
Starring: Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd, Steve Forrest, Donna Dixon, Bruce Davison
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 6.2 (23,566 votes)
Release: Dec 1985
Summary: Yet another bad movie in a lengthy string of losers for all three of the principals involved here: director John Landis and stars Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase. Chase and Aykroyd play a pair of bumbling would-be CIA agents who are spotted cheating on the entrance exam. So the CIA decides to use them as bait in a mission to flummox the Russians. Lots of pointless slapstick and mugging, but Landis hasn't made a genuinely funny film since "Trading Places". Aykroyd and Chase seem smug and self-satisfied (don't they always?), as though they can rest forever on laurels earned during the 1975 season of "Saturday Night Live". Look for a gaggle of film directors (Terry Gilliam, Joel Coen, Costa-Gavras) in cameo roles: that's the closest this film comes to cleverness. "--Marshall Fine"
 

Spirited Away

Director: Hayao Miyazaki
Starring: Lacey Chabert, Jodi Carlisle, Tim Curry, Flea, Danielle Harris
Genre: Animation
Studio: Walt Disney Video
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Release: Apr 2003
Summary: The highest grossing film in Japanese box-office history (more than $234 million), Hayao Miyazaki's "Spirited Away" ("Sen To Chihiro Kamikakushi") is a dazzling film that reasserts the power of drawn animation to create fantasy worlds. Like Dorothy in "The Wizard of Oz" and Lewis Carroll's Alice, Chihiro (voice by Daveigh Chase--Lilo in Disney's "Lilo & Stitch") plunges into an alternate reality. On the way to their new home, the petulant adolescent and her parents find what they think is a deserted amusement park. Her parents stuff themselves until they turn into pigs, and Chihiro discovers they're trapped in a resort for traditional Japanese gods and spirits. An oddly familiar boy named Haku (Jason Marsden) instructs Chihiro to request a job from Yubaba (Suzanne Pleshette), the greedy witch who rules the spa. As she works, Chihiro's untapped qualities keep her from being corrupted by the greed that pervades Yubaba's mini-empire. In a series of fantastic adventures, she purges a river god suffering from human pollution, rescues the mysterious No-Face, and befriends Yubaba's kindly twin, Zeniba (Pleshette again). The resolve, bravery, and love Chihiro discovers within herself enable her to aid Haku and save her parents. The result is a moving and magical journey, told with consummate skill by one of the masters of contemporary animation. MPAA Rated: PG ("Some scary moments") "--Charles Solomon"
 

Spring Breakers

Director: Harmony Korine
Starring: James Franco, Selena Gomez, Ashley Benson, Vanessa Anne Hudgens, Rachel Korine, Heather Morris, Justin Wheelon, Emma Holzer, Gucci Mane
Genre: Comedy, Crime, Drama
Studio: Muse Productions
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Mar 2013
Summary: Brit, Candy, Cotty, and Faith have been best friends since grade school. They live together in a boring college dorm and are hungry for adventure. All they have to do is save enough money for spring break to get their shot at having some real fun. A serendipitous encounter with rapper "Alien" promises to provide the girls with all the thrill and excitement they could hope for. With the encouragement of their new friend, it soon becomes unclear how far the girls are willing to go to experience a spring break they will never forget.
 

Spy Game

Director: Tony Scott
Starring: Robert Redford, Brad Pitt, Catherine McCormack, Stephen Dillane, Larry Bryggman
Genre: Action
Studio: Beacon Communications
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7
Release: Apr 2002
Summary: CIA operative Nathan Muir (Redford) is on the brink of retirement when he finds out that his protege Tom Bishop (Pitt) has been arrested in China for espionage. No stranger to the machinations of the CIA's top echelon, Muir hones all his skills and irreverent manner in order to find a way to free Bishop. As he embarks on his mission to free Bishop, Muir recalls how he recruited and trained the young rookie, at that time a sergeant in Vietnam, their turbulent times together as operatives and the woman who threatened their friendship.
 

Stake Land

Director: Jim Mickle
Starring: Connor Paolo, Danielle Harris, Kelly McGillis, Michael Cerveris, Bonnie Dennison
Genre: Horror
Studio: Glass Eye Pix
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8
Release: Aug 2011
Summary: Martin was a normal teenage boy before the country collapsed in an empty pit of economic and political disaster. A vampire epidemic has swept across what is left of the nation's abandoned towns and cities, and it's up to Mister, a death dealing, rogue vampire hunter, to get Martin safely north to Canada, the continent's New Eden.
 

Stalingrad

Director: Sebastian Dehnhardt, Jörg Müllner, Christian Deick
Starring: Albrecht Appelt, Lidia Arazkaja, Richard Bäuerle, Hermann Behet, Winrich Behr
Genre: Documentary
Studio: Synapse Video
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.6 (446 votes)
Release: Jun 2006
Summary: Stalingrad
The Eastern Front experienced the viciousness of war on a scale of unimaginable horror and brutality. The bloodiest and most savage fighting took place in Stalingrad between August 1942 and February 1943. Stalin's city on the Volga had military significance for Hitler. It carried the name of his enemy and therefore had to be destroyed. The ensuing battle sealed the fates of hundreds of thousands of soldiers and civilians and marked the turning point of World War 11. It was the beginning of the end for Nazi Germany. In their 3 part 16:9 HDTV, documentary filmmakers Sebastian Dehnhardt, Christian Deick and Jorg Mullner reveal new historical facts while touching the emotions of their audience with new, moving eyewitness accounts and confessions from some of the last survivors.
Filmed from both the German and Russian perspective, the series contains footage shot by soldiers during the siege. The Russian achives opened their doors to the filmmakers, granting them exclusive access to previously unreleased material. The series also contains digitally restored archive film as well as 3-D animation to recreate the city of Stalingrad and plot the course of its destruction.
Originally broadcast in both Germany and Russia in slightly truncated editions, this Special Edition DVD contains all three Stalingrad documentaries including The ATTACK (54 min.), THE KESSEL (56 min.) and THE DOOM (55 min.) in their original uncut forms and a wealth of extra supplementary materials.
 

Star Trek

Director: J.J. Abrams
Starring: Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Simon Pegg
Genre: Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 8.0 (303,189 votes)
Release: Nov 2009
Summary: On the day of James Kirk's birth, his father dies on his ship in a last stand against a mysterious alien time-traveling vessel looking for Ambassador Spock, who, in this time, is also a child on Vulcan disdained by his neighbors for his half-human heritage. Twenty-five years later, Kirk has grown into a young troublemaker. Challenged by Captain Christopher Pike to realize his potential in Starfleet, he comes to annoy instructors like young Commander Spock. Suddenly, there is an emergency at Vulcan and the newly commissioned USS Enterprise is crewed with promising cadets like Nyota Uhura, Hikaru Sulu, Pavel Chekov and even Kirk himself, thanks to Leonard McCoy's medical trickery. Together, this crew will have an adventure in the final frontier where the old legend is altered forever as a new version of it begins.
 

Star Trek Into Darkness

Director: J.J. Abrams
Starring: Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Zoe Saldana, Simon Pegg, Anton Yelchin, John Cho, Karl Urban, Bruce Greenwood, Benedict Cumberbatch, Alice Eve, Britanni Johnson, Tom Archdeacon, Jon Lee Brody, Hiram A. Murray, Peter Weller, Heather Langenkamp, Aisha Hinds
Genre: Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Studio: Paramount Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Release: May 2013
Summary: When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.
 

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Director: Robert Wise
Starring: William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, James Doohan, George Takei
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 5.2 (240,091 votes)
Release: Nov 2001
Summary: Back when the first "Star Trek" feature was released in December 1979, the "Trek" franchise was still relatively modest, consisting of the original TV series, an animated cartoon series from 1973-74, and a burgeoning fan network around the world. Series creator Gene Roddenberry had conceived a second TV series, but after the success of "Star Wars" the project was upgraded into this lavish feature film, which reunited the original series cast aboard a beautifully redesigned starship U.S.S. "Enterprise". Under the direction of Robert Wise (best known for "West Side Story"), the film proved to be a mixed blessing for "Trek" fans, who heatedly debated its merits; but it was, of course, a phenomenal hit. Capt. Kirk (William Shatner) leads his crew into the vast structures surrounding V'Ger, an all-powerful being that is cutting a destructive course through Starfleet space. With his new First Officer (Stephen Collins), the bald and beautiful Lieutenant Ilia (played by the late Persis Khambatta) and his returning veteran crew, Kirk must decipher the secret of V'Ger's true purpose and restore the safety of the galaxy. The story is rather overblown and derivative of plots from the original series, and avid Trekkies greeted the film's bland costumes with derisive laughter. But as a feast for the eyes, this is an adventure worthy of big-screen trekkin'. Douglas Trumbull's visual effects are astonishing, and Jerry Goldmith's score is regarded as one of the prolific composer's very best (with its main theme later used for "Star Trek: The Next Generation"). And, fortunately for "Star Trek" fans, the expanded 143-minute version (originally shown for the film's network TV premiere) is generally considered an improvement over the original theatrical release. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Star Wars Begins

Director: George Lucas
Starring: Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Harrison Ford, Peter Mayhew, Anthony Daniels, Kenny Baker, David Prowse, Alec Guinness
Genre: Documentary
Studio: Cygnus Software
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 4.1 (6 votes)
Release: Sep 2011
Summary: Star Wars Begins is an unofficial commentary to Star Wars, offering an insight into the development and creation of film. The documentary combines video from the movie itself with seen and unseen behind the scenes footage, rare audio from the cast and crew, alternate angles, bloopers, reconstructed scenes, text facts and more to give an in-depth look at the process which brought the film to the big screen.
 

Star Wars Trilogy

Director: George Lucas
Starring: Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Harrison Ford, James Earl Jones, Peter Mayhew
Genre: Sci-Fi, Fantasy
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 7.8 (1,829 votes)
Release: Sep 2004
Summary: Was George Lucas's "Star Wars Trilogy", the most anticipated DVD release ever, worth the wait? You bet. It's a must-have for any home theater, looking great, sounding great, and supplemented by generous bonus features.
The Movies
The "Star Wars Trilogy" had the rare distinction of becoming a cultural phenomenon, a defining event for its generation. On its surface, George Lucas's story is a rollicking and humorous space fantasy that owes debts to more influences than one can count on two hands, but filmgoers became entranced by its basic struggle of good vs. evil "a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away," its dazzling special effects, and a mythology of Jedi knights, the Force, and droids. Over the course of three films--"A New Hope" (1977), "The Empire Strikes Back" (1980), and "Return of the Jedi" (1983)--Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill), Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher), and the roguish Han Solo (Harrison Ford) join the Rebel alliance in a galactic war against the Empire, the menacing Darth Vader (David Prowse, voiced by James Earl Jones), and eventually the all-powerful Emperor (Ian McDiarmid). "Empire" is generally considered the best of the films and "Jedi" the most uneven, but all three are vastly superior to the more technologically impressive prequels that followed, "Episode I, The Phantom Menace" (1999) and "Episode II, Attack of the Clones" (2002).
How Are the Picture and Sound?
Thanks to a new digital transfer, you've never seen C-3PO glow so golden, and Darth Vader's helmet is as black as the Dark Side.
In a word, spectacular. Thanks to a new digital transfer, you've never seen C-3PO glow so golden, and Darth Vader's helmet is as black as the Dark Side. And at the climactic scene of "A New Hope", see if the Dolby 5.1 EX sound doesn't knock you back in your chair. Other audio options are Dolby 2.0 Surround in English, Spanish, and French. (Sorry, DTS fans, but previous "Star Wars" DVDs didn't have DTS either.) There have been a few quibbles with the audio on "A New Hope", however. A few seconds of Peter Cushing's dialogue ("Then name the system!") are distorted, and the music (but not the sound effects) is reversed in the rear channels. For example, in the final scene, the brass is in the front right channel but the back left channel (from the viewer's perspective), and the strings are in the left front and back right. The result feels like the instruments are crossing through the viewer.
What's Been Changed?
The rumors are true: Lucas made "more" changes to the films for their DVD debut. Hayden Christensen (Anakin Skywalker) has been added to a scene in "Jedi", Ian McDiarmid (the Emperor) replaces Clive Revill with slightly revised lines in "Empire", Temuera Morrison has rerecorded Boba Fett's minimal dialogue, and some other small details have been altered. Yes, these changes mean that the "Star Wars" films are no longer the ones you saw 20 years ago, but these brief changes hardly affect the films, and they do make sense in the overall continuity of the two trilogies. It's not like a digitized Ewan McGregor has replaced Alec Guiness's scenes, and the infamous changes made for the 1997 special-edition versions were much more intrusive (of course, those are in the DVD versions as well).
How Are the Bonus Features?
Toplining is "Empire of Dreams: The Story of the Star Wars Trilogy", a 150-minute documentary incorporating not only the usual making-of nuts and bolts but also the political workings of the movie studios and the difficulties Lucas had getting his vision to the screen (for example, after resigning from the Directors' Guild, he lost his first choice for director of "Jedi": Steven Spielberg). It's a little adulatory, but it has plenty to interest any fan. The three substantial featurettes are "The Characters of "Star Wars"" (19 min.), which discusses the development of the characters we all know and love, "The Birth of the Lightsaber" (15 min.), about the creation and evolution of a Jedi's ultimate weapon, and "The Force Is with Them: The Legacy of "Star Wars"" (15 min.), in which filmmakers such as Peter Jackson, Ridley Scott, and James Cameron talk about how they and the industry were affected by the films and Lucas's technological developments in visual effects, sound, and computer animation.
The bonus features are excellent and along the same lines as those created for "The Phantom Menace" and "Attack of the Clones". Each film has a commentary track, recorded by Lucas, Ben Burtt (sound design), Dennis Muren (visual effects), and Carrie Fisher, with Irvin Kershner joining in on the film he directed, "The Empire Strikes Back". Recorded separately and skillfully edited together (with supertitles to identify who is speaking), the tracks lack the energy of group commentaries, but they're enjoyable and informative, with a nice mix of overall vision (Lucas), technical details (Burtt, Muren, Kershner), and actor's perspective (Fisher). Interestingly, they discuss some of the 1997 changes (Mos Eisley creatures, the new Jabba the Hutt scene) but not those made for the DVDs.
There's also a sampler of the Xbox game "Star Wars: Battlefront", which lets the player reenact classic film scenarios (blast Ewoks in the battle of Endor!); trailers and TV spots from the films' many releases; and a nine-minute preview of the last film in the series, "Episode III, Revenge of the Sith" (here identified by an earlier working title, "The Return of Darth Vader"). Small extra touches include anamorphic widescreen motion menus with dialogue, original poster artwork on the discs, and a whopping 50 chapter stops for each film.
"The Force Is Strong with This One"
The "Star Wars Trilogy" is an outstanding DVD set that lives up to the anticipation. There will always be resentment that the original versions of the films are not available as well, but George Lucas maintains that these are the versions he always wanted to make. If fans are able to put this debate aside, they can enjoy the adventures of Luke, Leia, and Han for years to come. "--David Horiuchi"
 

Star Wars: Episode I, The Phantom Menace

Director: George Lucas
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Liam Neeson, Natalie Portman, Jake Lloyd, Ian McDiarmid
Genre: Sci-Fi, Fantasy
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 6.5 (322,090 votes)
Release: Sep 2007
Summary: "I have a bad feeling about this," says the young Obi-Wan Kenobi (played by Ewan McGregor) in "Star Wars: Episode I, The Phantom Menace" as he steps off a spaceship and into the most anticipated cinematic event... well, ever. He might as well be speaking for the legions of fans of the original episodes in the "Star Wars" saga who can't help but secretly ask themselves: Sure, this is "Star Wars", but is it "my Star Wars"? The original elevated moviegoers' expectations so high that it would have been impossible for any subsequent film to meet them. And as with all the "Star Wars" movies, "The Phantom Menace" features inexplicable plot twists, a fistful of loose threads, and some cheek-chewing dialogue. Han Solo's swagger is sorely missed, as is the pervading menace of heavy-breather Darth Vader. There is still way too much quasi-mystical mumbo jumbo, and some of what was fresh about "Star Wars" 22 years earlier feels formulaic. Yet there's much to admire. The special effects are stupendous; three worlds are populated with a mélange of creatures, flora, and horizons rendered in absolute detail. The action and battle scenes are breathtaking in their complexity. And one particular sequence of the film--the adrenaline-infused pod race through the Tatooine desert--makes the chariot race in "Ben-Hur" look like a Sunday stroll through the park.
Among the host of new characters, there are a few familiar walk-ons. We witness the first meeting between R2-D2 and C-3PO, Jabba the Hutt looks younger and slimmer (but not young and slim), and Yoda is as crabby as ever. Natalie Portman's stately Queen Amidala sports hairdos that make Princess Leia look dowdy and wields a mean laser. We never bond with Jedi Knight Qui-Gon Jinn (Liam Neeson), and Obi-Wan's day is yet to come. Jar Jar Binks, a cross between a Muppet, a frog, and a hippie, provides many of the movie's lighter moments, while Sith Lord Darth Maul is a formidable force. Baby-faced Anakin Skywalker (Jake Lloyd) looks too young and innocent to command the powers of the Force or wield a lightsaber (much less transmute into the future Darth Vader), but his boyish exuberance wins over skeptics.
Near the end of the movie, Palpatine, the new leader of the Republic, may be speaking for fans eagerly awaiting "Episode II" when he pats young Anakin on the head and says, "We will watch your career with great interest." Indeed! --"Tod Nelson"
 

Star Wars: Episode II, Attack of the Clones

Director: George Lucas
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen, Christopher Lee, Samuel L. Jackson
Genre: Sci-Fi, Fantasy
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 6.7 (271,461 votes)
Release: Mar 2005
Summary: If "The Phantom Menace" was the setup, then "Attack of the Clones" is the plot-progressing payoff, and devoted "Star Wars" fans are sure to be enthralled. Ten years after "Episode I", Padmé Amidala (Natalie Portman), now a senator, resists the creation of a Republic Army to combat an evil separatist movement. The brooding Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) is resentful of his stern Jedi mentor, Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor), tormented by personal loss, and showing his emerging "dark side" while protecting his new love, Amidala, from would-be assassins. Youthful romance and solemn portent foreshadow the events of the original "Star Wars" as Count Dooku (a.k.a. Darth Tyranus, played by Christopher Lee) forges an alliance with the Dark Lord of the Sith, while lavish set pieces showcase George Lucas's supreme command of all-digital filmmaking. All of this makes "Episode II" a technological milestone, savaged by some critics as a bloated, storyless spectacle, but still qualifying as a fan-approved precursor to the pivotal events of "Episode III". "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Star Wars: Episode III, Revenge of the Sith

Director: George Lucas
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen, Ian McDiarmid, Samuel L. Jackson
Genre: Sci-Fi, Fantasy
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.7 (305,206 votes)
Release: Nov 2005
Summary: Ending the most popular film epic in history, "Star Wars: Episode III, Revenge of the Sith" is an exciting, uneven, but ultimately satisfying journey. Picking up the action from "Episode II, Attack of the Clones" as well as the animated "Clone Wars" series, Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) and his apprentice, Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen), pursue General Grievous into space after the droid kidnapped Supreme Chancellor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid).
The "Star Wars" Family Tree (click for larger image) It's just the latest maneuver in the ongoing Clone Wars between the Republic and the Separatist forces led by former Jedi turned Sith Lord Count Dooku (Christopher Lee). On another front, Master Yoda (voiced by Frank Oz) leads the Republic's clone troops against a droid attack on the Wookiee homeworld of Kashyyyk. All this is in the first half of "Episode III", which feels a lot like "Episodes I" and "II". That means spectacular scenery, dazzling dogfights in space, a new fearsome villain (the CGI-created Grievous can't match up to either Darth Maul or the original Darth Vader, though), lightsaber duels, groan-worthy romantic dialogue, goofy humor (but at least it's left to the droids instead of Jar-Jar Binks), and hordes of faceless clone troopers fighting hordes of faceless battle droids.
But then it all changes.
"Star Wars" Time Line (click for larger image)
After setting up characters and situations for the first two and a half movies, "Episode III" finally comes to life. The Sith Lord in hiding unleashes his long-simmering plot to take over the Republic, and an integral part of that plan is to turn Anakin away from the Jedi and toward the Dark Side of the Force. Unless you've been living under a rock the last 10 years, you know that Anakin will transform into the dreaded Darth Vader and face an ultimate showdown with his mentor, but that doesn't matter. In fact, a great part of the fun is knowing where things will wind up but finding out how they'll get there. The end of this prequel trilogy also should inspire fans to want to see the original movies again, but this time not out of frustration at the new ones. Rather, because "Episode III" is a beginning as well as an end, it will trigger fond memories as it ties up threads to the originals in tidy little ways. But best of all, it seems like for the first time we actually care about what happens and who it happens to.
"Episode III" is easily the best of the new trilogy--OK, so that's not saying much, but it might even jockey for third place among the six "Star Wars" films. It's also the first one to be rated PG-13 for the intense battles and darker plot. It was probably impossible to live up to the decades' worth of pent-up hype George Lucas faced for the "Star Wars" prequel trilogy (and he tried to lower it with the first two movies), but "Episode III" makes us once again glad to be "a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away." "--David Horiuchi"
 

Starter For 10

Director: Tom Vaughan
Starring: James McAvoy, Rebecca Hall, Alice Eve, Mark Gatiss, Catherine Tate
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Icon Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.7 (10,275 votes)
Release: Mar 2007
Summary: In 1985, against the backdrop of Thatcherism, Brian Jackson enrolls in the University of Bristol, a scholarship boy from seaside Essex with a love of knowledge for its own sake and a childhood spent watching "University Challenge," a college quiz show. At Bristol he tries out for the Challenge team and falls under the spell of Alice, a lovely blond with an extensive sexual past. He's smitten, and he carelessly manages to hurt the feelings of Rebecca Epstein, a friend whose politics and wit he admires. The Challenge finale is coming up; maybe Brian can redeem himself and still avoid being a prat.
 

State of Play

Director: Kevin Macdonald
Starring: Russell Crowe, Helen Mirren, Ben Affleck, Rachel McAdams, Harry J. Lennix
Genre: Drama, Mystery
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.1 (80,260 votes)
Release: Apr 2009
Summary: The superlative British miniseries becomes a smart, soap opera-free film courtesy of "The Last King of Scotland"'s Kevin Macdonald. His writers, including Tony Gilroy (the Bourne series) and Billy Ray (Breach), haven't simply condensed and Americanized the six-hour series--they've reinvented it. Now set in Washington D.C., veteran journalist Cal McAffrey (Russell Crowe, replacing Brad Pitt, who dropped out over script changes) still collaborates with editor Cameron Lynne (a delectably imperious Helen Mirren) and junior reporter Della Frye (Rachel McAdams) on a story involving Cal's politico pal, Stephen Collins (Ben Affleck), but there's a new subtext behind their plunge into sex scandals and corporate malfeasance, since this State of Play also eulogizes old-school beat reporting, and in interviews, Macdonald has acknowledged the influence of newsprint classics like All the President's Men (the Watergate Hotel even shows up as a location). So, while Cal and Della, the Globe’s blogger, try to determine whether the congressman’s aide Sonia (with whom he was having an affair) died at her own hands or the hands of another, they're also fighting for their careers and the survival of their ailing paper. Stephen's political rival Senator Fergus (Jeff Daniels), does his best to stymie their efforts, but PR flack Dominic Foy (Jason Bateman) becomes a reluctant ally. Though fans of the series may miss a few characters, like Cameron's son (played by James McAvoy in the BBC version), Oscar-winning documentarian-turned-filmmaker Macdonald remains true to its spirit. Be sure to stay through the poignant end credits, during which he returns to his doc roots. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
 

Step Brothers

Director: Adam McKay
Starring: Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Richard Jenkins, Mary Steenburgen, Ian Roberts
Genre: Comedy
Studio: SONY PICTURES
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.7 (128,425 votes)
Release: Dec 2008
Summary: Crude, juvenile, and proud of it, "Step Brothers" stars Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly as two 40-year-old men, both living at home and leading the lives of 13-year-old boys, who are thrown together when their single parents (Mary Steenburgen, "Parenthood", and Richard Jenkins, "Six Feet Under") get married. Brennan (Ferrell) and Dale (Reilly) start out hating each other as only teenage boys can--but things get even worse for their long-suffering parents when they become best friends. Step Brothers gets most of its mileage from very lowbrow humor, but hidden among the farts and masturbation jokes is the suggestion that while these guys may be emotionally arrested, so are Brennan's hotshot business executive brother (Adam Scott, "Tell Me You Love Me") and his high-fiving frat-boy pals, just in a way that's condoned because it makes money. Also crucial is that Ferrell and Reilly capture adolescence in all its gruesome glory--the awkward insecurity but also the egomaniacal, arrogant self-centeredness.
 

The Sting

Director: George Roy Hill
Starring: Paul Newman, Robert Redford, Robert Shaw, Charles Durning, Ray Walston, Eileen Brennan, Harold Gould, John Heffernan, Dana Elcar, Jack Kehoe, Dimitra Arliss, Robert Earl Jones, James Sloyan, Charles Dierkop, Lee Paul, Sally Kirkland, Avon Long, Arch Johnson, Ed Bakey, Brad Sullivan, John Quade
Genre: Comedy, Crime, Drama
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: PG
Rating: 8.4 (106,883 votes)
Release: Dec 1973
Summary: Set in the 1930's this intricate caper deals with an ambitious small-time crook and a veteran con man who seek revenge on a vicious crime lord who murdered one of their gang.
 

Sting: Bring On the Night

Director: Michael Apted
Starring: Miles A. Copeland III, Omar Hakim, Darryl Jones, Kenny Kirkland, Branford Marsalis
Genre: Documentary, Music
Studio: A&M
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.8 (364 votes)
Release: Mar 2005
Summary: A documentary about the making of the first Sting album. Not only is some time spent in the studio (much of was recorded in an interesting mansion), but there is also some interesting information about what was going on in the lives of the members of his band during that time, including Sting's child being born.
 

Sting: Live In Berlin

Director: Jim Gable
Starring: Sting
Genre: Music, Concerts
Studio: Decca
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 7.6 (47 votes)
Release: Nov 2010
Summary: Culled from Sting's critically acclaimed world tour, Symphonicity, this exclusive live CD/DVD compilation features many of his greatest hits, including "Roxanne," "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic," "King Of Pain," "Fields Of Gold," and more, all re-imagined for symphonic arrangement.

The 45-piece Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra are featured throughout the Symphonicity world tour.
Featuring special guest Branford Marsalis on select tracks, Sting is also joined by a group of accomplished musicians comprised of Dominic Miller (Sting's longtime guitarist), Rhani Krija (Sting's longtime multi-genre percussionist), David Cossin (a multi-percussion specialist in new and experimental music and featured member of the Bang on a Can All-Stars), Jo Lawry (vocalist) and Ira Coleman (bassist).
 

Stoker

Director: Chan-wook Park
Starring: Dermot Mulroney, Nicole Kidman, Mia Wasikowska, Matthew Goode, Lucas Till, Jacki Weaver, Ralph Brown, Alden Ehrenreich
Genre: Drama, Horror, Thriller
Studio: Fox Searchlight Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Release: Feb 2013
Summary: India Stoker (Mia Wasikowska) was not prepared to lose her father and best friend Richard (Dermot Mulroney) in a tragic auto accident. The solitude of her woodsy family estate, the peace of her tranquil town, and the unspoken somberness of her home life are suddenly upended by not only this mysterious accident, but by the sudden arrival of her Uncle Charlie (Matthew Goode), whom she never knew existed. When Charlie moves in with her and her emotionally unstable mother Evie (Nicole Kidman), India thinks the void left by her father's death is finally being filled by his closet bloodline. Soon after his arrival, India comes to suspect that this mysterious, charming man has ulterior motives. Yet instead of feeling outrage or horror, this friendless young woman becomes increasingly infatuated with him.
 

Stories We Tell

Director: Sarah Polley
Starring: Sarah Polley, Harry Gulkin
Genre: Documentary
Studio: National Film Board of Canada (NFB)
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Release: May 2013
Summary: In this inspired, genre-twisting new film, Oscar®-nominated writer/director Sarah Polley discovers that the truth depends on who's telling it. Polley is both filmmaker and detective as she investigates the secrets kept by a family of storytellers. She playfully interviews and interrogates a cast of characters of varying reliability, eliciting refreshingly candid, yet mostly contradictory, answers to the same questions. As each relates their version of the family mythology, present-day recollections shift into nostalgia-tinged glimpses of their mother, who departed too soon, leaving a trail of unanswered questions. Polley unravels the paradoxes to reveal the essence of family: always complicated, warmly messy and fiercely loving. Stories We Tell explores the elusive nature of truth and memory, but at its core is a deeply personal film about how our narratives shape and define us as individuals and families.
 

Stranger Than Fiction

Director: Marc Forster
Starring: Will Ferrell, Emma Thompson, Dustin Hoffman, Queen Latifah, Maggie Gyllenhaal
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.2 (982 votes)
Release: Feb 2007
Summary: Much was written about Will Ferrell's first "dramatic role" as Harold Crick, an IRS auditor who begins hearing a voice narrating his life. But "Stranger Than Fiction" is hardly a drama. However, what Ferrell does--like Jim Carrey before him in "The Truman Show"--is handle a toned-down character with genuineness and affection: you believe he is this guy. Crick leads a lonely life filled with numbers and routines. While at first he considers the voice a nuisance, Crick decides more action is needed when it speaks of "his demise." Enter Professor Jules Hilbert (Dustin Hoffman), who takes on the absurd notion with revelry, trying to find out what kind of book Crick's life is leading. It turns out that the voice Crick is hearing belongs to Kay Eiffel (Emma Thompson), a very real--and troubled--author who is writing a book in which Crick is a fictional character. As usual with these things, the stuffed shirt learns to live a better life--Crick even falls for one of his audits, a brash baker named Ana (Maggie Gyllenhaal). Marc Foster ("Monster's Ball, Finding Neverland") has the right tone for the film, using great urban scenes (the unnamed city is Chicago) with interesting visualizations of Crick's world of numbers. He also directs Ferrell, Hoffman, and Gyllenhaal to their most charming performances (plus Linda Hunt and Tom Hulce pop up in two funny scenes). Ferrell succeeds in being a romantic lead you can root for; a scene where he eats Ana's freshly baked cookies is totally delightful without a hint of sarcasm. Screenwriter Zach Helm has two personal traits with his story: like Crick he followed his heart (he stopped rewriting scripts and only worked on his own) and like Eiffel, the final results are not a masterpiece, but good, and entertaining enough. Britt Daniel of the band Spoon worked on the dynamite soundtrack."--Doug Thomas"















Extras from " Stranger Than Fiction "



"Counting Brush Strokes," A featurette
on the filming of "Stranger Than Fiction"high bandwidth


Tax Man!:

A clip from the film
high bandwidth

Queen Latifah on working with Emma Thompson
high bandwidth
Stills from " Stranger Than Fiction" (click for larger image)

























































Beyond " Stranger Than Fiction " on Amazon.com










Comic Actors Go Dramatic





CD Soundtrack








Emma Thompson Essentials
 

The Strangers

Director: Bryan Bertino
Starring: Scott Speedman, Liv Tyler, Gemma Ward, Alex Fisher, Peter Clayton-Luce
Genre: Horror, Mystery, Thriller
Studio: Universal Studios
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.1 (62,643 votes)
Release: Oct 2008
Summary: After returning from a wedding reception, a couple staying in an isolated vacation house receive a knock on the door in the mid-hours of the night. What ensues is a violent invasion by three strangers, their faces hidden behind masks. The couple find themselves in a violent struggle, in which they go beyond what either of them thought capable in order to survive.
 

Straw Dogs

Director: Sam Peckinpah
Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Susan George, Peter Vaughan, T.P. McKenna, Del Henney
Genre: Drama
Studio: ABC Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 8
Release: Oct 2002
Summary: A young American and his English wife come to rural England and face increasingly vicious local harassment.
 

Stripes

Director: Ivan Reitman
Starring: Bill Murray, John Candy, Harold Ramis, Warren Oates, P.J. Soles
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.8 (29,877 votes)
Release: Nov 1998
Summary: Bill Murray was heading toward a career peak on the back of comedies such as this one from 1981, the second film in his ongoing collaboration with director Ivan Reitman (the two went on to make "Ghostbusters"). Murray plays a chronic loser who joins the army and fails to find a fan for his ironic sensibilities in his by-the-book sergeant (Warren Oates). When push comes to shove, however, the smirking hero takes charge of his ragtag unit and turns them into fighting machines, albeit to the rhythm of hit songs by Manfred Mann and Sly Stone. The film is occasionally funny, but it mostly plays like any one of a dozen underachieving comedies featuring players from "Saturday Night Live" and "SCTV". "--Tom Keogh"
 

Submarine

Director: Richard Ayoade
Starring: Craig Roberts, Sally Hawkins, Paddy Considine
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance
Studio: Optimum Home Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.2 (32,951 votes)
Release: Mar 2011
Summary: When he learns that his mother is on the verge of deserting his father for a dance instructor, young Welsh teen Oliver (Craig Roberts) resolves to do whatever it takes to save his parents' marriage before the end of summer. Meanwhile, the offbeat lad also schemes to seduce pushy pyromaniac Jordana (Yasmin Paige) with nothing but the power of his mind. Richard Ayoade directs this quirky coming-of-age comedy based on a novel by Joe Dunthorne.
 

Sucker Punch

Director: Zack Snyder
Starring: Abbie Cornish, Emily Browning, Vanessa Hudgens
Genre: Action, Fantasy, Thriller
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.0 (134,404 votes)
Release: Mar 2011
Summary: A young girl (Baby Doll) is locked away in a mental asylum by her abusive stepfather where she will undergo a lobotomy in five days' time. Faced with unimaginable odds, she retreats to a fantastical world in her imagination where she and four other female inmates at the asylum, plot to escape the facility. The lines between reality and fantasy blur as Baby Doll and her four companions, as well as a mysterious guide, fight to retrieve the five items they need that will allow them to break free from their captors before it's too late.
 

Sukiyaki Western Django

Director: Takashi Miike
Starring: Kaori Momoi, Koichi Sato, Quentin Tarantino, Takaaki Ishibashi, Teruyuki Kagawa
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: FIRST LOOK PICTURES
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.2 (10,357 votes)
Release: Nov 2008
Summary: The prolific Takashi Miike co-wrote and directed this strikingly postmodern remake of Sergio Corbucci's 1966 Spaghetti Western, "Django". The story is much the same, but the highly stylized fusion of Japanese gangsterism and operatic musings on the Western form makes for a wild and unexpected cult movie. Still, there is not much here beyond the film's relentlessly creative surface, making "Sukiyaki" a bit wearying. Feuding for centuries, the Genji and Heiki clans both arrive in a 19th century Nevada town, determined to find hidden treasure rumored to be there. In the midst of their fighting comes a solitary gunslinger (Hideaki Ito) courted by each clan to work for them. When he refuses, the cross-currents of betrayal and murder escalate, and hidden truths behind at least one tragedy, and the real identity of an unlikely shooter, come to the surface. The film's energy, dynamic camerawork and almost tongue-in-cheek performances are fun and admirable, and Miike has a fascinating sense of composition. The story gets a little soft just past the halfway point and Miike attempts to fill the void with exhausting new ways of filming bloody mayhem for its own sake. Quentin Tarantino has a small role as a mystery man with a link to these events. "--Tom Keogh"
 

The Sum of All Fears

Director: Phil Alden Robinson
Starring: Ben Affleck, Morgan Freeman, James Cromwell, Ken Jenkins, Liev Schreiber
Genre: Thrillers
Studio: Paramount
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.3 (62,004 votes)
Release: Oct 2002
Summary: It's not easy replacing Harrison Ford as a beloved screen hero, but Ben Affleck brings fresh vitality to "The Sum of All Fears", reviving Paramount's Tom Clancy franchise in the role Ford made famous. As CIA agent Jack Ryan, Affleck is a rookie in the covert ranks, unraveling a plot that lures Russian and American superpowers into a nuclear standoff, while a neofascist faction turns most of Baltimore into an atomic wasteland and holds the world in the grip of a terrorist nightmare. Affleck combines sharp intelligence with a new-guy's perspective, while a senior agent (Morgan Freeman) passes the torch of back-channel authority. The result is one of the best Clancy films to date, ably helmed by Phil Alden Robinson (whose comic thriller "Sneakers" was sorely underrated) with a stellar supporting cast, and adapted with abundant humor, humanity, and thrills by "Donnie Brasco" screenwriter Paul Attanasio and cowriter Daniel Pyne. Even the typically reticent Clancy would approve. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Sunshine

Director: Danny Boyle
Starring: Cillian Murphy, Rose Byrne, Chris Evans, Michelle Yeoh, Cliff Curtis, Hiroyuki Sanada, Troy Garity, Benedict Wong, Mark Strong, Chipo Chung
Genre: Adventure, Sci-Fi, Thriller
Studio: 20th Century Fox
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.3 (126,063 votes)
Release: Mar 2007
Summary: 50 years from now the sun is dying and life on earth is threatened by arctic temperatures. Mankind puts together all its resources and sends a spaceship towards the sun. Its payload - a huge bomb. The spaceship is the second of its kind. The first one was lost on its way to the sun...
 

Sunshine Cleaning

Director: Christine jeffs
Starring: Amy Adams, Emily Blunt
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Studio: Overture Films/Anchor Bay Entertainment
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.7 (23 votes)
Release: Mar 2009
Summary: If Sunshine Cleaning occasionally recalls Sundance sensations like Little Miss Sunshine and Happy, Texas--note the cookie-cutter title and casting of Alan Arkin--it still offers an irresistible charm all its own. They don't look much alike, but Amy Adams and Emily Blunt, who both appeared opposite Tom Hanks in Charlie Wilson's War, offer convincing, heartfelt performances as Albuquerque sisters who barely get along (all the more impressive considering Blunt's upper-crust British credentials). Single mother and former cheerleader Rose (Adams), the optimistic and semi-responsible one, cleans houses for a living. Norah (Blunt), the pessimistic and irresponsible one, lives with their father, Joe (Arkin), a loving grandfather and lousy salesman, and attempts to earn her keep as a waitress. When both women find themselves in need of a quick influx of cash, Rose convinces Norah to join her as a crime-scene cleaner, a job her married, police-officer lover (an underused Steve Zahn) assures her pays well. He's right, but the ladies find the work even more emotionally demanding than physically repulsive, especially once they become entangled with Lynn (24's Mary Lynn Rajskub), a lonely blood-bank worker, and Winston (Capote's Clifton Collins Jr.), a one-armed cleaning-supply salesman. Megan Holley's script may be a mite overstuffed, but the pace never lags, and Christine Jeffs' follow-up to Sylvia packs an emotional punch that Little Miss Sunshine--arguably, the funnier film--lacked, even if the Oscar-winning Arkin plays a similarly unconventional grandfather figure. Then again: few do it better. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
Stills from Sunshine Cleaning (Click for larger image)
 

Super

Director: James Gunn
Starring: Rainn Wilson, Ellen Page, Kevin Bacon, Liv Tyler, Michael Rooker
Genre: Action, Comedy
Studio: Mpi Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.8 (38,611 votes)
Release: Aug 2011
Summary: When his wife (Liv Tyler) falls in league with a drug dealer, average guy Frank D'Arbo (Rainn Wilson) dons the guise of a superhero, dubs himself the Crimson Bolt and tries to keep a tagalong comic-book store clerk (Ellen Page) from becoming his sidekick. But it's hard to be a superhero when all you've got to work with is a pipe wrench. Kevin Bacon co-stars in this action-driven dramedy from writer-director James Gunn.
 

Super 8

Director: J.J. Abrams
Starring: Elle Fanning, Amanda Michalka, Kyle Chandler
Genre: Mystery, Sci-Fi, Thriller
Studio: Columbia Pictures Corporation
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 6.4 (77,833 votes)
Release: Jun 2011
Summary: In the summer of 1979, a group of friends in a small Ohio town witness a catastrophic train crash while making a super 8 movie and soon suspect that it was not an accident. Shortly after, unusual disappearances and inexplicable events begin to take place in town, and the local Deputy tries to uncover the truth - something more terrifying than any of them could have imagined.
 

Super Size Me

Director: Morgan Spurlock
Starring: John Banzhaf, Bridget Bennett (II), Ron English (III), Don Gorske, Mary Gorske
Genre: Documentary, Comedy, Drama
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: PG-13
Rating: 7.4 (57,319 votes)
Release: May 2004
Summary: Filmmaker Morgan Spurlock, rejected five times by the USC film school, won the best director award at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival for this alarmingly personal investigation into the health hazards wreaked by our fast food nation. Under extensive medical supervision, Spurlock subjects himself to a steady diet of McDonald's cuisine for 30 days just to see what happens. In less than a week, his ordinarily fit body and equilibrium undergo dark and ugly changes: Spurlock grows fat, his cholesterol rockets north, his organs take a beating, and he becomes subject to headaches, mood swings, symptoms of addiction, and lessened sexual energy. The gimmick is too obvious to sustain a feature documentary; Spurlock actually spends most of the film probing insidious ways that fast food companies worm their way into school lunchrooms and the hearts of young children who spend hours in McDonald's playrooms. French fries never looked more nauseating. "--Tom Keogh"
 

Superbad

Director: Greg Mottola
Starring: Jonah Hill, Michael Cera, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Bill Hader, Seth Rogen
Genre: Comedy
Studio: Sony Pictures
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.6 (269,103 votes)
Release: Dec 2007
Summary: Seth and Evan are best friends, inseparable, navigating the last weeks of high school. Usually shunned by the popular kids, Seth and Evan luck into an invitation to a party, and spend a long day, with the help of their nerdy friend Fogell, trying to score enough alcohol to lubricate the party and inebriate two girls, Jules and Becca, so they can kick-start their sex lives and go off to college with a summer full of experience and new skills. Their quest is complicated by Fogell's falling in with two inept cops who both slow and assist the plan. If they do get the liquor to the party, what then? Is sex the only rite of passage at hand?
 

Superheroes

Director: Mike Barnett
Genre: Documentary
Studio: HBO Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: Unrated
Rating: 6.2 (1,093 votes)
Release: Mar 2011
Summary: 'Superheroes' will introduce us to several of the country's most famous masked heroes including, Mr. Xtreme, a 33-year-old security guard officer by day, but a goon's worst nightmare by night. We'll follow Mr. Xtreme on his nightly patrols through the streets of San Diego, as he tries to stop evildoers and protect the innocent. We'll also meet the New York Initiative, a fantastic foursome of real life superheroes living together that tackle crime fighting, one Brooklyn borough at a time. Lead by Zimmer, we'll watch as they take to the streets and try to lure criminals out of hiding with their controversial Bait-Patrols. With over 300 registered superheroes in the United States, we'll definitively uncover the 'Real-Life Superhero' cultural phenomenon and discover what inspired these everyday citizens to take the law in to their own hands as they try to make the world a better and safer place for all.
 

Surviving the Game

Director: Ernest R. Dickerson
Starring: Rutger Hauer, Ice-T, Charles S. Dutton, Gary Busey, F. Murray Abraham
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: New Line Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 5.8 (6,085 votes)
Release: Dec 1999
Summary: One more time around for the storyline of "The Most Dangerous Game", except this one's refitted with explosions, big guns, and a flood of testosterone. Ice-T plays Mason, a homeless man shanghaied from the streets of Los Angeles to work as a guide and all-around man Friday for a hunting party. What the down-on-his-luck fellow soon finds out is that "he" is the quarry, and has to rely on his own resourcefulness to stay one step ahead of his tormentors. Laden with atrocious dialogue and narrative implausibilities, this is still a fun action movie if seen only for its own merits and nothing more. The fine cast (Gary Busey, Charles Dutton, F. Murray Abraham, John C. McGinley) chews the script until practically frothing at the mouth while trying to out-maniac each other. Busey is the head macho lunatic, but the twitchy McGinley nearly steals the show as he turns the knob on the weirdo meter up to eleven, then breaks it off and throws it away. Ice-T, on the other hand, puts his coping skills to the test as the hapless human prey. Most of director Ernest R. Dickerson's resumé has consisted of cinematography work (for Spike Lee, among others), and it shows with the film's competent, almost glossy look. Don't watch "Surviving the Game" expecting any great statements or overarching agendas, and you'll be surprised by an untentionally goofy action picture with preposterous situations and wide-open-throttle performances. Plus, chances are you've never seen a foot-wide pine tree chopped down with a shotgun (we kid you not). "--Jerry Renshaw"
 

The Sweeney

Director: Nick Love
Starring: Ray Winstone, Damian Lewis, Ben Drw, Hayley Atwell
Genre: Action, Crime, Drama
Studio: Entertainment One
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.6 (1,803 votes)
Release: Apr 2013
Summary: Armed and dangerous the Sweeney Flying Squad are London's elite crime fighting force. Led by legendary Detective Jack Regan (Ray Winstone) they are not afraid to use old school bare-knuckle tactics to bring down the modern underworld. Now with a master criminal on the loose and a major bank heist in progress Regan will do whatever it takes to get the job done even if that means defying the orders of his boss (Damian Lewis) and taking the law into his own hands.
 

Swimming With Sharks

Director: George Huang
Starring: Kevin Spacey, Frank Whaley, Michelle Forbes, Benicio Del Toro, T.E. Russell
Genre: Television
Studio: Lions Gate
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.4 (52 votes)
Release: Jun 2005
Summary: A harsh, cutting, and wickedly funny look into the darker side of show business, "Swimming with Sharks" tells the story of a naive and eager assistant (Frank Whaley) and his slide into the cutthroat world of Hollywood power struggles. Whaley goes to work for a top movie executive (Kevin Spacey) who almost immediately begins to wear down his new assistant's exuberance with his whining, egomaniacal tantrums and relentless verbal abuse, even as he promises his young charge a chance to move up the ladder. Culminating in a violent and ultimately ironic confrontation between mentor and protégé, this brutal 1994 black comedy benefits from some razor-sharp writing and terrific comic turns from both Whaley ("Hoffa") as one whose idealism is irrevocably shattered, and Spacey ("Seven", "L.A. Confidential"), deliciously funny as a caustic, belligerent, and ultimately sad figure. A savage indictment of both the movie business and the price of ambition, "Swimming with Sharks" is one of the best black comedies in recent years. "--Robert Lane"
 

Swingers

Director: Doug Liman
Starring: Jon Favreau, Vince Vaughn, Ron Livingston, Patrick Van Horn, Alex Désert
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Studio: Miramax
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.4 (47,955 votes)
Release: Sep 2003
Summary: For anyone who wants to catch a glimpse of the Los Angeles "lounge" scene that was in vogue during the early and mid-1990s, here's the movie that virtually defined that brief but colorful nightlife milieu. As an added bonus, it just happens to be a very funny, observant story about love, loss, and male bonding among a group of friends who struggle to find decent jobs by day, and lurk through Hollywood's hottest nightclubs by night. A sort of latter-day Rat Pack, they include Mike (writer-actor Jon Favreau) and his closest buddy, Trent (Vince Vaughn), who are waiting for the big show-biz break that seems to be eluding them. Mike's twisted up about the girlfriend he left back East to pursue his going-nowhere standup comedy career, and Trent uses the word "money" as an adjective ("Man, we look totally money tonight") with such frequency that you may find yourself slipping into lounge-lizard mode after watching the movie. One of the most noteworthy indie-film success stories of the '90s, this time-capsule comedy seized its moment in the spotlight, launched several promising careers, and continues to maintain its lasting appeal. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

The Sword in the Stone

Director: Wolfgang Reitherman
Starring: Rickie Sorensen, Karl Swenson, Junius Matthews, Sebastian Cabot, Norman Alden
Genre: Animation, Adventure, Fantasy, Science Fiction, Family
Studio: Walt Disney Video
My Rating:
Rated: G
Rating: 6
Release: Dec 1963
Summary: Arthur (aka Wart) is a young boy who aspires to be a knight's squire. On a hunting trip he falls in on Merlin, a powerful but amnesiac wizard who has plans for Wart beyond mere squiredom. He starts by trying to give Wart an education (whatever that is), believing that once one has an education, one can go anywhere. Needless to say, it doesn't quite work out that way.
 

Swordfish

Director: Dominic Sena
Starring: John Travolta, Hugh Jackman, Halle Berry, Don Cheadle, Sam Shepard
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 6.4 (114,604 votes)
Release: Jun 2004
Summary: "Swordfish" is a superficial movie, so let's address the superficial facts: Halle Berry was well paid to bare her breasts in this gratuitous cyber-action thriller, and while Berry's many fans will enjoy a cheap drool at the actress's expense, her brief topless scene doesn't justify this insipid parade of glossy violence from the director of 2000's "Gone in 60 Seconds". Add yet another notch in John Travolta's bad-movie belt, and you've got Hollywood bankruptcy in full blossom. Go ahead, marvel at director Dominic Sena's biggest money shot--a 360-degree pan as a robbery hostage is blown to bits by a bomb that pelts a surrounding SWAT squad with deadly ball bearings.
The plot, as if it matters: Travolta's a slick, self-appointed antiterrorist who recruits a top-flight computer hacker (Hugh Jackman) to transfer a $9.5 billion government slush fund into a cluster of secret accounts. Berry's the curvaceous bait who lures Jackman into the scheme; Don Cheadle's an FBI agent hot on their tails; and an obligatory subplot turns Jackman's daughter (Camryn Grimes) into an innocent bargaining chip. By the time a hostage transport bus is airlifted in the film's not-so-thrilling climax, "Swordfish" will hold your passive attention or put you to sleep--it all depends on your tolerance for Sena's brand of derivative bloodlust. It's pornography of a sort, and efficiently mechanical, but you can bet good money that Berry and her costars didn't cash their paychecks proudly. "--Jeff Shannon"
 

Syriana

Director: Stephen Gaghan
Starring: George Clooney, Matt Damon, Amanda Peet, Kayvan Novak, Amr Waked
Genre: Action, Adventure
Studio: Warner Home Video
My Rating:
Rated: R
Rating: 7.0 (81,907 votes)
Release: Jun 2006
Summary: "Syriana" is an oil-based soap opera set against the world of global oil cartels. It is to the oil industry as "Traffic" was to the drug trade (no surprise, since writer/director Stephen Gaghan wrote the screenplay to "Traffic"): a sprawling attempt to portray the vast political, business, social, and personal implications of a societal addiction, in this case, oil. A major merger between two of the world’s largest oil companies reveals ethical dilemmas for the lawyer charged with making the deal (Jeffrey Wright), and major global implications beyond the obvious; a CIA operative (George Clooney) discovers the truth about his work, and the people he works for; a young oil broker (Matt Damon) encounters personal tragedy, then partners with an idealistic Gulf prince (Alexander Siddig) attempting to build a new economy for his people, only to find he’s opposed by powers far beyond his control. Meanwhile, disenfranchised Pakistani youths are lured into terrorism by a radical Islamic cleric. And that’s just the start. As in "Traffic", in one way or another all of the characters’ fates are tied to each other, whether they realize it or not, though the connections are sometimes tenuous. While "Syriana" is basically a good film with timely resonance, it can’t quite seem to measure up to Gaghan’s ambitious vision and it very nearly collapses under the weight of its many storylines. Fortunately they are resolved skillfully enough to keep the film from going under in the end. To some viewers, "Syriana" will seem like an unfocused and over-loaded film that goes, all at once, everywhere and nowhere. Others will find it to be an important work earnestly exploring major issues. In either case, it’s a film that deserves to be taken seriously, and it’s likely to be one that will be talked about for a long time to come. "--Dan Vancini"