Rage, bitterness, sorrow, and beauty, all in unison against the dying of the light.
As modest and urbane as the film, Criterion’s Blu-ray is a worthwhile upgrade from their 2006 DVD release.
Sans extras, Olive Films’s handsome platter leaves the viewer no choice but to come up with their own take.
This Blu-ray is light on contextual supplements, but nearly immaculate on a technical level.
Sometimes a classic film gets a grand reception on home video, and sometimes it has to sneak out by the fire escape.
A film that barely saw the light of day, on a Blu-ray that almost didn’t happen, with an extended cut that fans thought they’d never see.
The Great Stone Face’s feature debut, now politely considered non-canon but worthwhile, is given a tidy high-definition release.
Not for its overall betterment, the film makes room for occasional glimpses into the abyss.
Simply the best television of 2011, presented on two gorgeous Blu-ray discs, courtesy of Fox Home Entertainment.
Fox’s handsome, if close to barren, two-disc Blu-ray set is just what the vet ordered.
Warner’s 1080p transfer of the film preserves the haunting, mythic quality of Vilmos Zsigmond’s work.
This non-classic has plenty of boilerplate pulp-Guignol appeal.
It’s a film that has one opening scene after another, never seeming to run short of prologues and prefaces.
It’s a little disturbing that Brooks’s Oscar-winning comedy should get what amounts to a home-video brush-off.
Outstanding picture and sound, and robust supplements that will be engrossing for fans and skeptics alike.
An oddball blockbuster that gets better when it gets to be “too much.” As for Warner’s handsomely mounted Blu-ray, less is more.
Put your feet up, open a beer, and enjoy Al Bundy’s all-time favorite movie.
The film about a million miles away from Oscar material, but Warner’s high-definition transfer is praiseworthy in and of itself.
Get ready to dig your fingernails into your palms all over again.
Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted is low on character development, relying on flimsy, time-honored narrative arcs that audiences barely even notice anymore.