
Disney’s ‘Frozen’ movie review
Frozen, the latest offering from Disney, may not be up there with ‘90s classics such as The Lion King or Pocahontas, but it’s a refreshing and thoroughly modern fairy tale for a new generation to enjoy.
Frozen, the latest offering from Disney, may not be up there with ‘90s classics such as The Lion King or Pocahontas, but it’s a refreshing and thoroughly modern fairy tale for a new generation to enjoy.
Cannibal teddy bears, strangled giant slugs, electrocution, kinky metal bikinis, talking lobsters; it’s fair to say Return of the Jedi certainly has something for everyone!
In this new ‘making of’ book J. W. Rinzler once again goes into microscopic detail about almost every aspect of the making of the 1983 Star Wars classic.
To celebrate the release of The Hangover Part III and The Hangover Trilogy, out now on Blu-ray and DVD, we’ve got copies of The Hangover Trilogy on DVD to give away to three of our Twitter followers!
With all the Christmas tat lining the shelves already, the office Secret Santa set to yield increasingly underwhelming results and that wretched John Lewis ad forever on our screens to pound us all into saccharine submission, it seems the season is well and truly upon us. Fittingly, this means it’s time for the belated DVD release of last year’s festive slasher pic, Silent Night.
To celebrate the release of Nebraska in cinemas on Friday 6 December, we’ve partnered up with Paramount Pictures UK to give away sets of the soundtrack (out now on Milan Records) and film poster to five of our Twitter followers!
Edgar Wright has told CultBox what attracted him to direct Marvel’s upcoming Ant-Man movie and how he plans to keep the characters “grounded” with “real world problems”.
To celebrate the release of dark action comedy The Family – starring Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer, Dianna Agron and Tommy Lee Jones, in cinemas now – we’ve got sets of goodies (see above) to give away to 5 of our Twitter followers!
The Family should be good. With the talent in front of and behind the camera, it really should be good.
It should be a smart, snappy and entertaining deconstruction of the gangster movie, providing laughs, knowing references and exciting action. The Family is none of these things, and provides none of these things.