The film is a ghost story as well as a story of transference, which Pedro Almodóvar understands to be one in the same.
Kino’s UHD upgrade of The Silence of the Lambs presents the film at theatrical-grade quality.
Criterion honors the sheer gorgeousness of Johnnie To’s eccentric noirish story of friendship and midlife crisis.
This new release finally allows one to savor the unexpected gothic intensity of Francis Ford Coppola’s debut film.
With Theater of Blood, Vincent Price was allowed to become an unexpected ringmaster of a kind of kitchen-sink Grand Guignol.
The film's devotion to the quotidian aspects of a mythical small-town western life is nearly religious.
Robert Greene’s gaze is an attempt to accord his subjects the dignity of attention, utilizing cinema as a form of emotional due process.
Wife of a Spy could use a streak of live-wire crudeness, a bit of melodrama delivered in an unselfconscious manner.
France indecisively utilizes a news personality’s crocodile tears as as symbolic of the bad faith that pervades news discourse.
Paul Schrader’s film grows more heated and crazed as the chaos of the past bleeds into a repressed present.
The film hauntingly suggests that a man’s most rational move in a rigged society is to fade away into the ecosystem.
Like District 9, the film is a genre outing with big ideas that’s more committed to the power of arsenals and pyrotechnics.
The film reveals a pandemic to be an inevitable comeuppance for both China and the U.S.’s respective policy failures.
At its best, Matt Yoka’s documentary vividly captures how personal demons shape creative output.
Criterion’s lush transfer makes it clear now, more than ever, that Deep Cover is one of the great American thrillers of the early ’90s.
Rarely do the filmmakers show people mutually affecting one another in cycles of pain and control, rather than blaming phantom figures.
The film is an obsessive rumination on the little squabbles and inconveniences and pleasures that add up to the bulk of our lives.
The UHD presentation of The Bird with the Crystal Plumage is quite possibly the label’s best 4K release to date.
The idle one-thing-after-another-ness of Mandibles is evocative, disturbing, and moving.
Samuel Fuller’s diamond-hard yet poignant crime classic receives a wonderful transfer and a somewhat warmed-over extras package.