Joe Kidd ambles onto Blu-ray with an exemplary transfer and a couple of interesting extras.
This impeccable box set allows you to follow the development of one of contemporary Japanese cinema’s true visionaries.
The Hit is an enigmatic, existential fable about crime and punishment.
Criterion provides Godard’s freewheeling ode to amour and its ineluctable betrayal with a spiffy new 2K upgrade.
Cronenberg’s first feature is a decidedly bloody valentine to libidinal liberation.
Diving headfirst into this gorgeous box set is bound to be a mind-altering experience for Jodorowsky fans and novices alike.
The documentary’s ethnographic bent is balanced out by a healthy dose of hard science.
Anderson’s strident, often uproarious, satire takes on a lot more than just the National Health.
Blue Underground presents Franco’s dreamy slice of lifestyle porn in a new 2K restoration.
Renoir’s film is an exquisite, idyllic ode to love and loss among the working classes.
Nelson’s rancorous revisionist western forces us to peer into the heart of an all-too-human darkness.
The maverick filmmaker discusses working with the tarot, the surrealist moviement, and more.
The film could stand as a fitting encapsulation of the themes that have run throughout Alejandro Jodorowsky’s work.
McKee’s disturbing satire about family values gone horribly awry gets a superlative new Blu-ray package.
Making its Blu-ray debut, Uchida’s film is a highly stylized ode to love and disorder.
Criterion gives new life to Kiarostami’s lovely, understated rumination on existential quandaries.
By all accounts, this should have been Paul Verhoeven’s Vera Cruz.
Sturges’s farce remains a canny deconstruction of romantic-comedy tropes.
Not for Publication and Scenes from the Class Struggle in Beverly Hills are now available on Blu-ray for the first time.
Radical political agitation plays a significant role in Clark’s film.