For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
Double Indemnity: Special Edition (Universal)
Any film with a mugging qualifies as noir these days, but back in 1944, noir meant black shadows, moral grayness, and white-hot femme fatales. In other words: Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity, which crammed in enough talent to choke John Holmes' fluffer. Likable everyman Fred MacMurray is perfectly stunt-cast as the sleazy insurance salesman, and the story, in which fatale Barbara Stanwyck lures MacMurray into helping rub out her husband, has been copied (both implicitly and explicitly) over and over in thrillers for the last 60 years. Alas, a pair of film-buff commentary tracks won't appeal to most fans, and the second disc -- featuring only a 1973 TV remake -- is little more than a joke. A much better retelling can be found in the William Hurt/Kathleen Turner sleazefest Body Heat. -- Jordan Harper
The Robinsons (BBC)
The Robinsons is perhaps best described as Britain's Arrested Development, which is probably why 13 people in the U.S. know about this 2005 gem that aired for six episodes on the BBC. It's a dark, ironic, sorta-mean, kinda-sweet show about a family that loves to loathe each other and offers the sort of support you wouldn't wish from your worst enemies. And it's anchored by three stellar performances from Martin Freeman (The Office's Tim) as the put-upon brother trying to make something of his average existence; Hugh Bonneville (Iris, Asylum) as the prickly time-management specialist; and Abigail Cruttenden as the finicky sister who'll date losers because she's too lazy to break up with them. The Robinsons is more cynical than whimsical, but it's a genuine delight -- six perfect episodes, because seven might have been pushing it. -- Robert Wilonsky