The technical sophistication of Edgar Wright’s artistry reaches new heights with this heist-cum-musical.
The sensory overload of Michael Bay’s hyperkinetic cinema is such that it eradicates any actual sense of place.
Still one of the most fun sugar rushes of the year, the film arrives on home video with a shimmering, chromatic video transfer.
A worthy escalation of its predecessor’s sleek charm, John Wick: Chapter 2 is the finest action film since Mad Max: Fury Road.
Too much is at stake, leading to formulaic plot filler and exposition that snuff out the spark of the early scenes.
Depp’s perfunctory gestures and flailing pratfalls befit a film that brings the series’s theme-park roots full circle.
David Fincher’s film maintains a consistently bleak atmosphere that elevates it above its sloppy sequel.
It finally gets a home-video release worthy of purchase, sporting excellent video, flawless audio, and a bounty of well-sourced extras.
Akerman’s magnum opus remains one of the definitive showcases of cinematic structuralism.
The only saving grace of the film’s mostly recycled horrors is how they deepen Michael Fassbender’s android David.
For all the attempts to update King Arthur to be cool and sexy, neither the character nor the film musters any spark.
The film at one point offers the finest sustained act of emotional storytelling to grace a Marvel production.
Von Sternberg’s final feature receives a sparkling Blu-ray, marking it as the best-looking home-video release yet of the director’s work.
The film finally tips the franchise over from modestly thoughtful stupidity into tedious, loud inanity.
The flawless A/V transfer of Disney’s Blu-ray fully translates the film’s aesthetic beauty.
This is a desperately needed home-video upgrade that at last presents Leos Carax’s film in its correct aspect ratio.
Petra Epperlein’s personal ties to the subject matter provides the documentary with a necessary anchor point.
Every creature here that’s intended to burrow into our nightmares is less a wonder of imagination than of size.
The documentary stands apart from its peers only in Louis Theroux’s good-natured cheekiness.
Disney’s best animated film in a generation arrives on Blu-ray as one of the finest home-video releases of the year so far.