Hud is a mournful lament for a passing of a way of life and a meditation on the ways forward.
Let your loved ones know that you care by letting chaos reign…in their Blu-ray player.
A no-frills package for a second-tier Tennessee Williams work, but the play’s the thing.
Blue Underground has been a reliable source for revamping cult films with impeccable visual clarity.
The extras are plentiful, enthusiastic, and, in the typical DVD tradition, mostly redundant.
The film’s especially detailed vision of time and place deserves to be seen in high definition.
This new “Hyperdrive” edition is a great update thanks to its abundant special features.
The bonus features are lacking, but The Pacific looks and sounds as impressive as any Blu-ray you’re likely to see.
The hardcore version of Score stands shoulder (or dick) with screenwriter Jerry Douglas’s more notable recent works.
Tweaking the nose of hegemony is sometimes funny. Ditto for Teknolust.
Tears tell no lies in the end: Toy Story 3 is sketchy, but it’s also profoundly moving.
Stone’s flawed, fascinating doc receives an appropriately subjective DVD treatment.
Searchers 2.0 alludes to John Ford’s film in name only.
The Magician is Bergman playing dead in all possible senses of the term.
For better and worse, Paths of Glory is Exhibit A in defense of Stanley Kubrick against those who think he lacks human feeling.
Paul Verhoeven’s fantastic commentary from the Criterion Collection DVD version is, sadly, not duplicated here.
Criterion’s release is a welcome step in the film’s canonization as a brainy and blisteringly strange cult classic.
VCI’s new release is a lousy transfer of a very sharp giallo; rent it before buying.
The film lovingly represents the sincere devotion famed paparazzo Ron Galella feels for his celebrity subjects.
King would say the extras on this release are meant to stir one’s juices, but I say they have been designed to diminish brain cells.
Oceans is bound to be a big hit among children, stoners, stoners’ children, spinster stoners, and more.