Despite occasional hiccups in the source elements, these HD transfers look incredibly good.
Imagine awakening from a series of grim nightmares to find your body covered in dried blood and ejaculate.
We’re past the tipping point where the faithfulness to the source material has unquestionably revealed its shortcomings.
The film is a masterpiece, but not for the faint of heart.
Osamu’s barbed cartoons meta-examine the same ground they break.
From the fidgety lead performances to the seemingly Ron Howard-inspired aesthetic, it’s rife with bad choices.
Give me Speed Racer instead—hell, even Wicked Stepmother.
If this release is remembered in the future, it’s for introducing a new generation to the music of Kenny Loggins.
Though not without voyeuristic subtext and sleazy kicks, Torso makes for a pretty anemic bloodfest.
Repulsion refers to a lot of other movies, but its queasy black humor is entirely Polanski.
The DVD release of this bold, long-unavailable tour de force should be an event to Godard-heads everywhere.
Aside from some gray flickering in a scene or two, Raoul Coutard’s imagery bursts with color and soft-edged, subversive beauty.
The only surprise to this by-the-numbers action thriller is that it didn’t go straight to video-and that it doesn’t star Jon Voight.
One for the ages, Repulsion is a master class of hypnotic movie brio.
First Run Features confirms its ongoing devotion to illuminating human rights abuses worldwide.
This set has been lovingly designed for The State fanatics who, at the current price point, will want to dip their balls in it.
Not quite a space odyssey, but a peerless planetarium show.
The second Zulawski film put out by Mondo Video maintains their impeccable standards of quality.
Eastbound & Down is myopic, wasting its focus on shortsighted laughs rather than giving us something we have not seen before.
A stolid horror drama, but a beguiling showcase for John Barrymore.
The film is notable in John Barrymore’s catalogue for exuding an aura of mostly asexual cultural significance.