Reviews

Review: Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy (1996)

(Note: this capsule review is part of my farewell to the Netflix DVD service. #GetThroughMyQueue) This is one of those films I’ve been meaning to catch for ages… likely since it came out. And I’m thinking some of it has not aged so well since then — though the main plot of a pharmaceutical company being more than a little unscrupulous in trying to mass distribute a happiness pill with disastrous side effects is still…

Continue reading

Reviews

Review: Catch-22 (1970)

(Note: this capsule review is part of my farewell to the Netflix DVD service. #GetThroughMyQueue) This is one of those classic anti-war movies – in this case based on the classic anti-war novel of the same name by Joseph Heller. I’m pretty sure I have a copy of the novel, printed as the 1970 movie tie-in, in my library somewhere, but I haven’t read that or seen the movie, so this seemed like an ideal…

Continue reading

Reviews

Review: Captain Horatio Hornblower (1951)

(Note: this capsule review is part of my farewell to the Netflix DVD service. #GetThroughMyQueue) Okay, so this actually isn’t a film I’ve gotten from Netflix.  I decided to get this after finally rewatching the ‘99 – ‘03 TV movie series — and after the last two entries, I needed some cinematic comfort food. Right from the get-go, you get Robert Farnon’s rousing score that proclaims you’re in for a ripping yarn. The stakes are…

Continue reading

Reviews

Review: Ben-Hur (2016)

(Note: this capsule review is part of my farewell to the Netflix DVD service. #GetThroughMyQueue) Come on, I can’t just stop with one version of Ben-Hur, right? Unlike the mini-series from yesterday, this had been on my list for a while, though I knew it wasn’t well received. Timur Bekmambetov, of Night Watch and Day Watch fame, employs some visual panache, the script by Keith Clarke and John Ridley has some flair, and the art…

Continue reading

Reviews

Review: Ben Hur (2010)

(Note: this capsule review is part of my farewell to the Netflix DVD service. #GetThroughMyQueue) Sometimes you just have a hankering for a Biblical version of The Count of Monte Cristo, so after watching the iconic ’59 version for the umpteenth time and not wanting to rewatch either the 1907 or 1925 versions, I thought, “Hey, there’s a 2010s version of the tale, right?” If you’re thinking of the 2016 big budget remake with Morgan…

Continue reading

Reviews

Review: Paddington 2 (2017)

(Note: this capsule review is part of my farewell to the Netflix DVD service. #GetThroughMyQueue) Admittedly a tonal shift from the last film in my queue as Paddington would doubtless point out that it would be better to put marmalade on toast rather than throw it at the screen — and his inherent politeness might make the denizens of the castle stop their machinations for a moment (though that doesn’t preclude another musical number and…

Continue reading

Reviews

Review: The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)

(Note: this capsule review is part of my farewell to the Netflix DVD service. #GetThroughMyQueue) The poster child for cult movies with those iconic lips on the poster… and it’s a cult movie that still has a veritable cult (plus a an enviable box office return on its original budget, considering it still plays in theaters). I like some of the songs, there’s some great comic bits, and I’ve talked ad nauseam with many of…

Continue reading

Reviews

Review: The Four Musketeers (1974)

(Note: this capsule review is part of my farewell to the Netflix DVD service. #GetThroughMyQueue) A perfect film to kick things off because I had just watched The Three Musketeers (1973) and couldn’t see the sequel on a streaming service without paying more pistoles to somebody.  Why, if I hadn’t had Netflix DVDs, I would have been forced to challenge someone to a duel. Netflix saved my honor is what I’m saying. (Or possibly saved…

Continue reading

Reviews

Cry Havoc and Let Slip the Reviews of Red Envelopes!

The final month is upon us. DVD Netflix is going away. This departure will blow a hole in the movie-watching habits of many of us… and leave us ever more at the mercy of ephemeral licensing deals and capricious streamers, both of which may conspire to leave us without certain perfectly good films that deserve to be seen. As Beth Greenfield notes on Aol.com (yes, the irony of that article’s location is not lost on…

Continue reading

Reviews Various and Sundry

One Last Ride into the Sunset: Red Envelope Reviews

Not quite three months ago, I, along with a couple million other people, got the sad news that Netflix was finally shuttering its films-by-mail service aka, the DVD rental business with “no late fees” that started it all. Now, there’s also over 200 million other Netflix subscribers who likely didn’t realize you could still get DVDs and Blu-Rays by mail. That doesn’t change the fact that this Postal method was and is a great way…

Continue reading