Doug Liman’s sci-fi action thriller remains one of the most enjoyable American blockbusters of the previous decade.
William Lustig and Larry Cohen team up to bring you this curdled rumination on small-town Americana, jingoism, and the hell that is warfare.
Criterion reaffirms their commitment to Waters’s oeuvre with a definitive release of his seminal sensation.
Paramount gives De Palma’s opulent crime epic a home-video presentation that’s worthy of its sumptuous sense of visual invention.
This set is going to look awfully smart on the shelf next to Criterion’s forthcoming release of Pink Flamingos.
Laurie Anderson’s Big Science is an immense structure, generously democratic, as approachable as it is enigmatic.
Even if this isn’t actually The End of Movies As We Know It, it’s unmistakably The End of Peak Oscar.
If the film is undoubtedly Sirk’s giddiest trash entertainment, it’s also the shallowest example of his less-heralded humanist acuity.
Alligator get an incredible split polish, though the extras don’t live up to the promise of its “collector’s edition” designation.
Calling Erykah Badu’s Baduizm a better blueprint than it is an album isn’t meant to diminish its impact.
It’s once again AMPAS’s moment to show what side of history they want to be on.
Criterion’s release of Time affirms its place among the essential docs of its era.
It took a dozen years, but we finally get a transfer that does full justice to the glory of this most sumptuous of all Technicolor films.
This subversive, unsentimental adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s novel gets a fabulous 4K transfer from Kino Lorber.
Paramount’s UHD release renders the film’s sensory overload in its fullest expression.
Criterion brings this quintessentially vital film into present-tense greatness once again.
Dangerous upped the stakes while cunningly inverting Michael Jackson’s playbook.
Wes Craven’s down and dirty shocker gets a gratifying UHD upgrade and a full roster of edifying supplements.
There’s no better time to enjoy the fruits of the Great White Way’s yesteryear labors than Original Cast Album: Company.
This Blu-ray makes a fine case for the film being a highpoint in the careers of David Cronenberg, Stephen King, and Christopher Walken.