This Blu-ray should prompt a much-deserved rediscovery of Phil Goldstone’s strange and inventive pre-Code melodrama.
The film is almost sadistically driven to turn a woman’s trip down memory lane into fodder for cringe humor.
Paramount’s newly remastered 4K transfer ensures that the film looks better than it ever has on home video.
Criterion’s release of Noah Baumbach’s latest is built to last.
The film is a kaleidoscopic portrait of a world where emotions are accessed and revealed primarily through digital intermediaries.
This set is a must-own for even casual fans of Laurel and Hardy.
Peter Segal’s film is pulled in so many different directions that it comes to feel slack.
Some of the film’s narrative threads are frustratingly unresolved, while others are wrapped up in arbitrary fashion.
This Blu-ray comes with an impressive array of extras not found in Criterion’s 100 Years of Olympics box set.
Criterion’s disc offers an embarrassment of riches, from the stellar new 4K transfer to a multitude of diverse and fascinating extras.
Spielberg’s classic returns to home video just shy of its 45th anniversary, this time to take a bite out of the 4K market.
Even Blaise Pascal would wager you have everything to lose by not picking up Criterion’s upgrade of Eric Rohmer’s “Six Moral Tales.”
Once the film shifts into a broader comedic register, it no longer capitalizes on Kumail Nanjiani and Issa Rae’s gift for gab.
The film seems almost content to have you forget about everything that inspired it in the first place.
Criterion’s Blu-ray release of The Great Escape offers an abundance of goodies to dig into from the inside.
The image presentation on this Kino Blu-ray is absolutely stunning.
The film’s devotion to the belief that kindness can be a balm for almost any hurt is deeply moving.
Murnau’s light-hearted, self-reflexive film gets a solid video upgrade and an illuminating commentary track.
The film gives palpable expression to the sense of hopelessness felt by those who fall under the control of cults.
The film now burns bright like a lucid fever dream thanks to Kino Lorber’s new Blu-ray.