

Blu ray review: To Hell and Back (1955)
Audie Murphy was the most decorated American soldier in WW2. He managed to parlay that fame into a movie career, with the help of James...


Blu Ray Review: Two westerns with Charles Bronson released
Kino Lorber is doing a great job of releasing Charles Bronson movies that cover his long movie career in the States and overseas. ...


Blu Ray Review: Night Has a Thousand Eyes (1948)
Released on blu ray by Kino Lorber, John Farrow’s chilling noir is based on a story by the prolific Cornell Woolrich, who also notably...


Book Review: Time is Money: The Century, Rainbow, and Stern Brothers comedies
This massive, over 500-page, study of Julius and Abe Stern delves very deeply into an area of screen comedy that is very little known....


Blu ray review: WC Fields in three of his best, from Kino Lorber
One of the true greats of screen comedy, W.C. Fields enjoyed a massive resurgence in popularity during the late 1960s and early 1970s...


Blu Ray Review: Devil and the Deep (1932)
Kino Lorber continues to offer outstanding pre-code dramas that are new to blu ray. Devil and the Deep is a 1932 Paramount feature...


Blu Ray Review: The Cheat (1931)
Another fascinating pre-code drama released to blu ray by Kino Lorber, The Cheat is a 1931 remake of Cecil DeMille’s 1915 film. Tallulah...


Blu Ray Review: Hot Saturday (1932)
Kino Lorber has released the first film in which Cary Grant played the leading role (it was his sixth film), the seamy pre-code drama Hot...


Cinema Revisited: The Dancing Masters (1943)
By the 1940s, Laurel and Hardy were in their 50s. Being older and less spry, the boys weren’t engaging in a lot of knockabout gags...


Cinema Revisited: The Star Witness (1931)
With a screenplay by Lucien Hubbard (Smart Money, Three on a Match) and direction by William Wellman (The Public Enemy, Wild Boys of the...