Hud is a mournful lament for a passing of a way of life and a meditation on the ways forward.
A hallucinatory near-masterpiece and one of the best American war films produced in the 1990s.
Criterion’s Blu-ray is like viewing this masterpiece and all its glorious moving parts for the first time.
Álex de la Iglesia does it again but will anyone other than his established fanbase take notice?
The film is a joyous and rambunctious series of mad-hatter schemes that occasionally transcends its childish roots.
Beauty and the Beast is the movie that convinced Disney they were back in the game.
The film is a low-budget action spectacle that should inspire amateur filmmakers to take genuine risks.
Needed less Psychology for Dummies, more wooden dummies.
For all we know, the shark in PsychoShark is perfectly sane. Ever get the feeling you’ve been cheated?
The film gets a perfectly calibrated Blu-ray release from the Criterion Collection.
Pick this disc up just to see Balch and William Burroughs’s astonishing avant-garde short The Cut Ups.
Fact: You haven’t truly lived until you’ve seen Walter Huston do the jackrabbit dance.
This is a tragically absurd Mexican love story told through the resurfaced lens of Godard and the French New Wave.
This new take on A Nightmare on Elm Street gives a famous movie boogeyman an explicit psychological makeover
Save for some minor instances of edge enhancement, it’s a practically flawless presentation.
Huston’s noir debut gets its fair shake from Warner Bros. via an overall exceptional Blu-ray.
This is a film reliant on the hard questions Western media outlets don’t always want to admit exist.
Frozen is a ludicrous, uneven horror film that still successfully puts the screws to the audience.
Dark Night of the Scarecrow is very close to the cult find many diehards have always stubbornly claimed it is.
The Blu-ray features two commentaries and both bring out the good humor behind the making of the film.
Director Terrence Malick recommends that The Thin Red Line be played loud.