The episode’s saving grace lies in the contrast that the series continues to develop between the two young women of the Stark family.
Kiarostami’s film comes to the Criterion Collection as perhaps the most elegant reference disc ever made.
Louie offers a chance to reconnect with Louis C.K.’s roots as a more modest performer.
The unifying element of “The Laws of God and Men” may be the profound silence of the show’s architecture.
Ford’s bitter revisionist western is a must-see for fans of the director, as well as those who mistake him for a soft sentimentalist.
The title of the season-four premiere is possibly a wry acknowledgment of Louie’s return after a year-and-a-half hiatus.
One of Eastwood’s best films comes to high-def with an aggressively scrubbed image that robs it of some of its beauty.
Only Michelle MacLaren’s brilliantly composed coda with the White Walkers sticks in the memory.
As with any episode of television that bears Michelle MacLaren’s directing credit, “Oathkeeper” does not merely look good.
Decades ahead of its time, Dreyer’s silent satire can now be fully appreciated for its modern acting, nuanced invention and sly wit.
The Sansa/Cersei contrast sets the tone of the episode, which focuses on women more than any other hour of the series to date.
True to the more muted tone of the premiere, the second episode offers minimal indication that anything is wrong.
The inter-scene cutting here slightly lingers on every place the camera visits, now searching for someone who appears to know where to go next.
Ferrara’s canon of ambitious, autocritical exploitation movies gets its first great high-def release.
Jia’s tetraptych offers a haunting look at a system in which late capitalism and its provoked responses are terrifying and consumptive.
The auspicious debut of one of the decade’s best directors arrives on Blu-ray with its intimate majesty impeccably preserved.
Game of Thrones’s best season yet comes with a typically great transfer and enough extras to please devotees for days.
Criterion makes up for the stateside unavailability of Terence Davies’s greatest work with a disc that sets the bar for their 2014 releases.
Cohen Media Group push back against the neglect shown to late Godard with a beautiful transfer and copious extras.
Grindhouse Releasing marks its true arrival on the Blu-ray market with a package worthy of one of the finest spaghetti westerns.