A Fugitive from the Past is a sweeping, psychologically astute study in guilt and expiation.
Austere and affecting, Coming Apart reflects on varying acts of degradation and dissolution.
Curtis Harrington’s Mata Hari is an erotic melodrama of consummate craftmanship.
Gorgeously shot and affectingly brooding, Hôtel du Nord shows equal amounts of empathy for its occupants one and all.
Stanley Kubrick’s Paths of Glory gets a superlative 4K transfer and an enlightening commentary track from Kino Lorber.
Boldly stylized and intricately structured, The Killing gets a sterling 4K transfer and one very satisfying supplement from Kino Lorber.
Kino Lorber’s disc makes the case that Planet of the Vampires is perhaps the finest Italian science-fiction film of all time.
Gordon Parks’s Shaft is much more than a rollicking crowd-pleaser, as it’s also a snapshot of a bygone era.
George Armitage’s captivatingly eccentric neo-noir is assisted by three magnetic leads and a healthy dose of black comedy.
Sofia Coppola’s hypnotic and elegiac debut feature gets a sterling UHD upgrade from the Criterion Collection.
Larry Cohen’s batshit-crazy film gets a phenomenal UHD upgrade from the devoted freaks at Blue Underground.
The sensibilities of Quentin Tarantino and Tony Scott come together to fashion one of the cornerstone films of the early 1990s.
William Lustig and Larry Cohen team up to bring you this curdled rumination on small-town Americana, jingoism, and the hell that is warfare.
Edge of Sanity is a luridly stylized and slyly subversive adaptation of the Jekyll and Hyde story.
Gorgeous and goofy in equal measure, Dario Argento puts his inimitable stamp on this adaptation of The Phantom of the Opera.
Terry Gilliam’s prescient and visionary 12 Monkeys gets a sterling UHD upgrade.
Bernard Rose’s bloody and hypnotic Candyman gets the definitive UHD Blu-ray treatment.
De Sade is a flawed yet fascinating attempt to penetrate into the headspace of the Marquis de Sade.
Joseph Losey’s late-career triumph gets a solid new 4K restoration, coupled with a handful of solid extras.
Twisting the Knife collects four taut late-period exercises in ambiguity from the great Claude Chabrol.