To Live and Die in L.A. gets a vibrant 4K transfer and a slate of solid new extras.
Lone Wolf and Cub slashes its way onto Blu-ray with a katana-sharp transfer and a baby cartload of bonus materials.
A gorgeous and painterly late-period masterwork, the film gets a stellar 4K transfer and a surfeit of extras from Criterion.
Arrow Video serves up a 14-course Herschell Gordon Lewis Feast in one of the most impressively packaged box sets in recent memory.
Blue Underground delivers Fulci’s film with a gorgeous HD transfer, terrific new bonus features, and a CD of Fabio Frizzi’s glorious score.
Altman’s sprawling tragicomic testament to fate and infidelity gets an impressive 4K upgrade from Criterion.
Criterion showcases Linklater’s longitudinal masterwork with a gorgeous HD transfer and an entire second Blu-ray’s worth of supplements.
Daughter of Dracula gets an attractive HD transfer and some essential context from Kino’s Redemption Films line.
The Horrible Dr. Hichcock gets a reasonably good-looking, if barebones, Blu-ray release from Olive Films.
This mischievous gob of spit in the face of chivalry gets a problematic HD transfer and a spate of twice-told supplements.
Get radicalized with Compañeros in a sterling new Blu-ray transfer that’s bolstered by the inclusion of an engaging commentary track.
Like Port of Shadows, the film establishes a versatile visual palette that exerted a significant influence over classical noir.
Demons 2 trades in its predecessor’s penchant for wall-to-wall gore in favor of surreal shocks and quasi-Cronenbergian craziness.
The set includes several top-notch films, an overall excellent A/V presentation, and a bevy of bonus materials.
Russell’s bracing film gets a solid, if unspectacular, transfer (and little in the way of extras) from Kino Lorber.
MPI drops this perversely engrossing film onto DVD with a reasonably strong transfer, but precious little in the way of extras.
Like the anonymous entwined bodies glimpsed in its opening moments, things tend to commingle in Resnais’s revolutionary first feature.
It swaggers onto Blu-ray with a superfly transfer from Kino, accompanied, unfortunately, by nothing more contextual than the trailer.
Birds of a fiendish feather will flock to Blue Underground’s sterling new Blu-ray transfer of Soavi’s film.
For these family units, incest seems the natural endgame of a merit system based on pernicious nepotism and inveterate ass-kissing.