Turns out, Hammer was still making entertaining and even innovative films in the 1970s.
Michael Seresin’s cinematography may not be in the service of much, but the 1080p transfer confirms its accomplishment.
It may not deserve the Criterion treatment, but fans will be pleased by the solid audio/video treatment it has received.
He gave her his heart, she gave him a pen, and Say Anything… still gives off a sweet, enveloping glow.
Smith’s best film, in a disappointing audio-visual package with some great extras.
The extras are sweet, but Clerks’s low-budget ugliness is a questionable fit for Blu-ray.
Kevin Smith’s clever in-joke movie gets an anemic Blu-ray release.
Winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing in this pointed study of competitive obsessions and Phyrric victories.
A stunning release of one of Pixar’s most sadly underappreciated works.
This set is comprehensive enough to get lost in, but if postmodern sitcoms with a sharp Faustian undercurrent are your thing, you won’t mind.
Even if this two-disc DVD feels lightweight, the film itself does not.
Deeply condescending but often hilarious, this absolute mess of a film showcases the best and worst tendencies of Sacha Baron Cohen’s character and talents.
This Blu-ray is a charming presentation of an overrated childhood benchmark.
Not my cup of tea. I don’t even like tea.
Huston’s uneven swan song deserves better than this cheap-as-Lucky Charms package.
Even for non-fanatics, this packaging of perhaps the most beloved European film of a generation is heaven-sent.
This collection is an ideal tribute to the horror staple.
A solid DVD release of a terrible, terrible movie.
The only thing mysterious about Orphan is why Vera Farmiga and Peter Sarsgaard signed on to such an idiotic mess.
The Film Foundation offers a Fuller understanding of film noir through one of the genre’s most unique participants.
This edition of Z lives, perhaps ironically, through the beauty of its surface and sheen.