Across Cartouche and Le Magnifique, Philippe de Broca truly manages to have his cake and eat it too.
The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard improves on its 2017 predecessor only insofar as it runs 20 minutes shorter.
Eytan Fox’s film is a low-key observance of two men finding the beauty in each other’s mysteries and contradictions.
Masters of Cinema has outfitted its release with extras that offer ripe interpretations of the film and the undersung Ritt’s work.
The fantastic slate of extras on this Arrow release help to contextualize the work of a criminally underrated filmmaker.
The reality of Nazi Germany and its looming atrocities feels as if it exists only beyond the edges of the film’s frame.
Trances is a fascinating glimpse into a culture and musical style rarely seen on film.
Hawks’s thrilling, conflicted, and viscerally charged film gets a stellar assortment of extras from Viva Vision’s Imprint label.
The film sees Boetticher operating on a more epic scale but still with his distinctively ruthless efficiency.
These two obscure British noirs are ready for rediscovery, but the Blu-ray’s lack of extras is disappointing.
While the film certainly lays out the dangers of technology run amok, it also sees its power to connect people.
Ed Helms and Patti Harrison’s wonderful rapport helps to keep the film grounded in the recognizably real.
This disc’s treasure trove of extras attest to the dizzying flurry of ideas and emotions that fuel Assayas’s uncategorizable film.
Maria Sødahl considers the extreme emotions provoked by a medical emergency with an impressive force of clarity.
The Producers gets a sparkling new 4K transfer that blows previous home-video editions out of the water.
Perry’s cynical western receives an impressive transfer and an illuminating commentary by Alex Cox.
Art, commerce, and immigration are inextricably bound in this playful and gently moving film.
In Touki Bouki, rejection of one’s homeland is inextricably bound to a glamorization of the colonizer’s homeland.
Criterion has beautifully preserved this vigorous portrait of New York City life that’s rarely depicted on screen.
The assortment of extras on Criterion’s disc help to contextualize the works of Africa’s most important filmmaker.