Hud is a mournful lament for a passing of a way of life and a meditation on the ways forward.
An exhaustive double-disc that suggests the unique circumstances of a production can make for a more compelling tale than the resulting film.
King’s reputation as one of cinema’s great nonfiction filmmakers is cemented in stone with this release.
Bored to Death’s great comedic cast makes undistinguished material well worth holding out for.
A beautiful, fitfully successful film with another compelling Casey Affleck performance.
A substantial Blu-ray package befitting the legendary status of Godard’s debut feature.
This representative showcase of a great comedian is simple and efficient.
Charade finds its way onto Blu-ray with a spectacular visual transfer.
The film remains a stunning collective of method acting and 1970s social critique.
Raging Phoenix isn’t pretty, but then again, that’s why it’s a sign of the times for martial arts cinema.
This disc carries no extras, making the filmmaker’s sensationalistic slant even more incomplete and suspect.
A fascinating specimen of modern-day American power lust, a tragic moral lesson our financial players have yet to learn.
An underwhelming Blu-ray to remind viewers that the problems with Terry Gilliam’s recent films are not an entirely new development.
The nightmare visions of Jacob’s Ladder offer a rare cerebral experience from a director known mostly for movies about couples behaving badly.
The film’s first great adventure finally comes to DVD. Could Tih Minh be next?
The film arrives on Blu-ray with a befittingly humble and loving audio and visual transfer.
The film lunges into the fragmented abyss of a murderous lost soul attempting to craft his own personalized religious awakening.
One can discern an unobstructed path of influence and heritage from the heyday of U.S. multi-cam TV comedy up to The Norm Show.
Ajami continues the tedious trend of films that purposefully muddle interlocking stories to prove simplistic notions about hotbed issues.
Blue Underground rescues another solid and deserving B movie from the vaults.
The film is a salvo of social disgust filled uneasily with self-deprecating doubt.