Search Results Your search for James Stewart found the following documents (of 8834 documents searched): Displaying documents 31-40 of 60, with best matches first:
- 31. Vertigo [Blu-Ray] (1958)
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"Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: Ultimately I find i
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/vertigobr.shtml - 23k - 05 Oct 2024
- 32. Vertigo: Alfred Hitchcock Masterpiece Collection (1958)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: Vertigo definitely is effective, but something about it simply leaves me flat. Maybe it's because the film wasn't really what I expected. While it has some of those moments, it's not a really thrilling chiller ala Psycho. That's not bad, but even though I'd seen Vertigo years ago, I wasn't quite prepared for the route it would take. Starring James Stewar
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/vertigo2005.shtml - 27k - 05 Oct 2024
- 33. Vertigo: Special Edition - Universal Legacy Series (1958)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: This marks the third DVD release of Vertigo, and it’s the best. However, it’s not significantly superior to the one that immediately preceded it. Those two offer similar visuals and identical audio, though the new one loses a mono mix. Otherwise, this one differs from its predecessor solely due to a few new extras. While those components have value, they
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/vertigose.shtml - 27k - 05 Oct 2024
- 34. Anatomy Of A Murder: Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray] (1959)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: Anatomy of a Murder was a terrific movie that translated well to home video. The film maintained a fine pace from start to finish and kept me thoroughly involved in the story. The Blu-ray delivered very good picture, more than acceptable audio, and a nice roster of supplements. Criterion gave this movie the treatment it deserved via this quality release.
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/anatomyofamurderbr.shtml - 27k - 05 Oct 2024
- 35. How The West Was Won: Special Edition (1962)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: As one of only two narrative flicks shot with the three-panel Cinerama process, How the West Was Won merits a special place in history. That doesn’t make it a particularly engaging film, however. It always looks great, but it fails to present especially involving characters or story ... This is an impressive release. Warner, $20.98, 9/9/2008.
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/howthewestwaswon.shtml - 28k - 05 Oct 2024
- 36. The Man From Laramie
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The Man From Laramie Reviewed by Colin Jacobson DVD Columbia-TriStar, widescreen 1.85:1/16x9, standard 1.33:1, languages: English DD 3.0 [CC] & Dolby Surround, Spanish Digital Stereo, subtitles: English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Chinese,...
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/manfromlaramie.shtml - 13k - 05 Oct 2024
- 37. After The Thin Man [Blu-Ray] (1936)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: Many folks seem to regard After the Thin Man as a film as good if not better than its predecessor. I don’t agree with that, as I think After brings a fairly lazy rehash of the original that lacks much of the same spirit or creativity. Starring William Powell, Myrna Loy. Warner, $21.99, 1/26/2021.
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/afterthethinmanbr.shtml - 18k - 05 Oct 2024
- 38. Mr. Smith Goes To Washington [4K UHD] (1939)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: More than 80 years after its debut, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington remains a compelling and entertaining movie. Though not perfect, the film entertains and proves to be a stirring morality tale. Starring James Stewart, Jean Arthur. Sony, $164.99, 6/16/2020.
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/mrsmithgoestowashington4k.shtml - 18k - 05 Oct 2024
- 39. Airport '77 [Blu-Ray] (1977)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: With an excellent cast and a theoretically interesting scenario, Airport ‘77 could have delivered the best of the series. Unfortunately, it bores us to death with its endless focus on logistics. Starring Jack Lemmon, Lee Grant. Universal, $34.98, 6/14/2016.
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/airport77br.shtml - 19k - 05 Oct 2024
- 40. You Can't Take It With You [Blu-Ray] (1938)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: You Can’t Take It With You doesn’t stand as one of the strongest Best Picture winners, and it doesn’t even appear to be one of Frank Capra’s top flicks. Nonetheless, it comes across as generally likeable and amusing, and it does more right than wrong. Starring Jean Arthur, Lionel Barrymore. Sony, $59.95, 12/5/2006.
URL: http://www.dvdmg.com/youcanttakeitwithyoubr.shtml - 20k - 05 Oct 2024
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