
‘The Lord of the Rings’ trilogy (Extended Editions) Blu-ray review
Peter Jackson’s masterful and timeless Lord of the Rings trilogy represents a cinematic feat that will not easily be matched.
Peter Jackson’s masterful and timeless Lord of the Rings trilogy represents a cinematic feat that will not easily be matched.
Attractively packaged, this is a three disc-set, with the third disc containing extras.
The level of storytelling seems to have shifted up another gear with this opening salvo of six episodes from Merlin’s fifth series.
Ah, late October. The time for DVD distributors line up a bumper batch of gorefests to keep you, the eager public, satisfied.
The second season of this swords-and-sandals epic maintains the gripping atmosphere and momentum while propelling its characters into new dangerous situations.
First up amongst the laughing boys of genre cinema we have the highly enjoyable Dutch zombie apocalypse-fest Kill Zombie.
Item 47, the latest of Marvel’s series of ‘One Shots’ – short films that are the equivalent of their one-issue, stand-alone comics – is attached to the Blu-ray release of Avengers Assemble.
You’re thinking twisty-faced Asian dead girls creeping towards the camera as incongruous sound-effects grind your mind into little bits, right?
There are many times when you feel that Wilfred would have been much better as a film, or as a number of sketches.
Australian director Carlo Ledesma’s pseudo-documentary sleeper hit The Tunnel at least offers something slightly different to most of its ilk.