Scorsese’s manic best picture winner looks sharper than ever on Warner’s UHD disc.
Truffaut’s late-career triumph remains a moving paean to obsessive love.
These films feel like the works of someone who had yet to truly find their own voice.
The film suggests that there’s a way to reconcile oneself with the ghosts of cinema past.
The Italian Job is a raucous, riotously funny exemplar of Cool Britannia at its coolest.
Mosese’s fiction feature debut receives a vibrant transfer and a small but solid slate of extras.
Review: Daniel Haller’s Lovecraft Adaptation The Dunwich Horror on Arrow Video Blu-ray
Groovy and grotesque in equal measure, Daniel Haller’s film looks hauntingly good on Blu-ray.
The film remains a conscientious depiction of the bitter realities of race in America.
Gilliam’s film gets a superlative new transfer and a bounty of (entirely true) extras.
Cohen Media Group’s transfer perfectly captures the elegance of Caroline Champetier’s lensing.
Girl on a Motorcycle gets a stunning 4K upgrade as well as a meaty new commentary track.
The film has been given a new lease on home video life by a gorgeous 4K restoration.
Criterion accords this seminal teen film a gorgeous transfer and a few nutritious extras.
These three films by Mai Zetterling are visually sumptuous and thematically trenchant.
You should buy a ticket at your local rep house for each title you buy, lest we run out of titles to laud here in the future.
This minimalist package is a tell that Criterion believes that the films speak for themselves.
You can see just how much benefit the 4K format has to offer grainy, New Hollywood-era films.
Nightmare at Noon gets a sun-drenched 2K restoration and a generous supply of extras.
Jordan’s film makes its domestic Blu-ray debut in lustrous-looking UHD and HD.
Quentin Tarantino’s generation-defining classic receives a sterling, detail-rich 4K transfer.
Laika’s wry, sentimental work of kiddie horror receives a dazzling new A/V transfer.