The remnants of war are fractious and far-flung in Eastwood’s impressive revisionist western.
Sergio Leone’s titanic saga of vengeance and progress doubles as a stunning reassessment of John Ford’s West.
MGM has backed their impressive transfer of Stone’s masterwork with an abundance of all-encompassing extras.
The Misfits wrangles a very good transfer from MGM but very little else.
This hardboiled, emotionally potent Cinemascope sonata of addiction and self-defeatism gets one of the best Blu-ray releases of the year.
Singer’s twisty breakthrough is still worth a look on Blu-ray for both its minor, diabolical pleasures and the solid job MGM has done on the transfer.
MGM does a highly respectable job transferring Wilder’s lunatic escapade into a sexual hall of mirrors onto Blu-ray.
Beverly Hills Cop’s emergence on Blu-ray is barely a step up from its DVD treatment.
The film marginally succeeds at perverting superhero stereotypes, and now it receives an expectedly excellent transfer from Sony.
A lively yet bleak allegory for post-war Japan and a totem of the Japanese New Wave.
Introducing the world to the galvanic, incomparable Béatrice Dalle constitutes the only noteworthy facet of Betty Blue.
Jodorowsky’s batshit-crazy paean to spiritual liberation gets a nice cleanup and an invaluable commentary track.
It’s unlikely that Dont Look Back will ever look better than it does on Docurama’s Blu-ray release.
South Park remains one of the more rewarding comedies on television, and its technical advancements shine on Blu-ray.
This comedy of lust and mismatched love receives a robust Blu-ray transfer and an informative, if relatively light, sampling of extras.
The Blu-ray release of Breillat’s superb coming-of-age tale is worth taking a look at for the ever-blooming mysteries of the film itself.
Th extras offer a variety of opinions on the film that absolutely dwarfs the amount of barbiturates ingested throughout the narrative.
As pseudo-highbrow entertainments go, The King’s Speech is slightly north of enjoyable.
The conflict between natural talent and learned and practiced ability shapes the heart of The Incredibles.
Neds opens with the sort of celebratory moment that makes you think for a moment that things might be all right.