The film gets a sterling Blu-ray transfer and a satisfyingly comprehensive slate of bonus features.
Criterion’s new Blu-ray for Waters’s transitional masterpiece gave us ants in our pants.
Kino’s transfer highlights the alluring beauty of Thorold Dickinson’s gothic horror classic.
By the measure of the films it includes alone, this set is a must-own.
The film was a decisive turning point for Sirk, kicking off a beloved string of loopy ’50s melodramatic masterpieces.
With this extraordinary transfer, Criterion honors the profound hothouse intensity of Spike Lee’s greatest film.
Time may have been surprisingly kind to Cruising, but that’s at least in part because it’s also been slow to be kind to the LGBT community.
Jane Campion upends staid genre convention with an impressionistic approach to character.
The contestants in Simon’s temperate portrait are openly, if not quite unapologetically, what-you-see-is-what-you-get.
The magnificent transfer further deepens the emotional resonance of Leni’s strange, transfixing, and compassionate film.
No one is okay with the Academy Awards the way they are, and everyone seems sure that they know how to fix them.
The industry’s existential crisis has polluted this race so thoroughly that it feels eerily similar to the 2016 election cycle all over again.
This season, Hollywood is invested in celebrating the films they love while dodging the cultural bullets coming at them from every angle.
If it were biologically possible to do so, both Ed and I would happily switch places with A Quiet Place’s Emily Blunt.
Sigh, can we just edit this whole Oscar season from our memories?
Throwing questions of artistic merit out the window, opponents of a Rami Malek win have dutifully cast doubt on his ideological purity.
Year in, year out, Oscar voters have tended to judge this category in favor of the film that least makes them feel embarrassed to support.
Going into this year’s nominations, cinephiles wished for three composers to make the cut in this category.
Mahershala Ali, still fresh off his prior win in this category, performs utter miracles with the role of jazz pianist Dr. Don Shirley.
By the end of Period. End of Sentence., woman after woman muses that she’s actually the stronger sex, and who in the Academy would dare argue otherwise?