Arrow’s set is yet another loving tribute to some of the best of Hong Kong genre cinema.
The aesthetic whimsy that’s made the Toy Story movies so popular is all but absent here.
The film is sure to be the fastest entry into the genre canon since Mad Max: Fury Road.
Hairspray can be seen as a foil to Frank Tashlin’s The Girl Can’t Help It.
The series has morphed from a “social experiment” into TV’s most complex competition.
De Palma’s acidic satire of mass commodification from 1970 is his first triumph.
This release, sourced from a 4K restoration, leaves the old Blu-ray presentation in the dust.
Trier’s gentle, reflective family dramedy comes to home video with a flawless transfer.
Kurosawa’s early 1949 triumph looks better than ever on Criterion’s UHD release.
The film has the aspartame fake-sweetness and zero-calorie comfort of its predecessor.
Kino gives Mann’s grim depiction of frontier greed a stellar reissue.
Singleton’s trilogy is one of the great achievements in African-American filmmaking.
One of the funniest aspects of Innerspace is how elaborately over-plotted it is.
The draw here is the intricate production design and Anderson’s direction of action scenes.
Song of the Miraculous Hind is one of Jankovics’s most phantasmagoric works.
The film is a distillation of the critiques embedded in the wuxia genre’s most popular classics.
A Bridge Too Far is a fascinating mix of aesthetic and tonal contradictions.
Review: Ivan Passer’s Neo-Noir Thriller ‘Cutter’s Way’ on Radiance Films 4K UHD Blu-ray
Radiance’s UHD is the definitive home video presentation of Passer’s masterful neo-noir.
‘Project Hail Mary’ Review: Close Encounters of the Thoughtful and Charmingly Goofy Kind
Phil Lord and Christopher Miller put a winningly comedic spin on Andy Weir’s 2021 novel.
Littman’s post-apocalyptic drama from 1983 receives a subtly beautiful transfer.