To dive into this comprehensive, vital tribute to Marlon Riggs is to come out on the other side with a degree from the Institute of Snap!thology.
Arzner’s film is a healthily skeptical, if nowhere near jaundiced, take on the prospects of modern love in the era of Prohibition.
We’re countering this Oscar year’s slow death of a thousand cuts by ripping the whole bandage off.
Leone truly came into his own with the capper to his Man with No Name trilogy, and it now looks better than ever home video.
While the extras are sadly limited, the film’s own rewards are more than enough to compensate.
Anne Baxter’s riotous pursuit of Charlton Heston has never looked better than it does on this 4K edition of DeMille’s epic.
Twenty-twenty was by no measure a business-as-usual year, so don’t expect our gripes to be either.
Man with a Movie Camera is still an intoxicating gateway drug for cinephiles.
This undervalued film receives a beautiful transfer for its Blu-ray debut, but the dearth of extras leaves much to be desired.
The film gets a significant facelift from Blue Underground alongside a smattering of new extras.
Criterion provides Godard’s freewheeling ode to amour and its ineluctable betrayal with a spiffy new 2K upgrade.
The exceptional new transfer highlights the aesthetic charms of one of the first great comedies of the talkie era.
This new Boys in the Band is a Matryoshka doll of period piecery, a flashback of a flashback of a flashback.
Blue Underground presents Franco’s dreamy slice of lifestyle porn in a new 2K restoration.
We’ve dug up some of the forgotten or unheralded gems scattered throughout the singer’s catalog.
Paramount’s newly remastered 4K transfer ensures that the film looks better than it ever has on home video.
Has the time come to ask if the pendulum has swung too far in the other direction?
Criterion’s disc offers an embarrassment of riches, from the stellar new 4K transfer to a multitude of diverse and fascinating extras.
It’s a lightning strike of glamor worship, melodramatic storytelling, abnormal psychology, and irreducible, airport-paperback frisson.
We’ve ranked all 25 of Justin Timberlake’s singles from worst to best.