Star Trek: Motion Picture Trilogy
STAR TREK MOTION PICTURE TRILOGY SD Prepare to embark on an epic three-part adventure starring the legendary crew of the USS Enterprise as they sacrifice their lives, ship, and freedom to save the universe from imminent destruction.(more)
This series is loved and lauded for a reason: it broke serious dramatic ground for television, postulated a hopeful future for humanity.
By following up their debut thriller Bound with the 1999 box-office smash The Matrix, the codirecting Wachowski brothers--Andy and Larry--annihilated any suggestion of a sophomore jinx, crafting one of the most exhilarating sci-fi/action movies of the 1990s.
Conceived as an "online miniseries event" during the 2008 writers' strike, Dr Horrible's Sing-Along Blog is a 42-minute musical romp that bears the distinctive stamp of Joss Whedon.
Artist-writer Katsuhiro Ôtomo began telling the story of Akira as a comic book series in 1982 but took a break from 1986 to 1988 to write, direct, supervise, and design this animated film version.
For all the flaws that the Prequels may have, they're still highly enjoyable films, with just as many memorable scenes and quotes as the Original Trilogy.
It's silly, it's superficial, it's so desperately earnest about its tale of time-spanning love that you almost wish for a cheap flatulence gag just to break the solemn mood.
The fourth (and lets hope not final) of the planned straight to DVD Futurama movies, "Futurama: Into The Wild Green Yonder" has arrived and continues the winning formula of the television series and three previous films.
From 1988 to 1999, the crew of The Satellite of Love skewered bad movies and in the process made them masterworks of comedy.