Despite occasional hiccups in the source elements, these HD transfers look incredibly good.
Hardly worth a double-dip, but No Country’s ambient horror will pin you to the floor and slice into your neck with a taut handcuff chain.
There’s no doubt that Doubt has been given a highly exalted DVD treatment.
For including the original Head Case shorts, disc two is the keeper.
A standard stand-up special like this doesn’t need many perks in the audio-visual department and so HBO delivers a standard setup.
Overrated when first released and underrated since, Rossellini’s trenchant tale of redemption is ripe for rediscovery.
Danton suggests that while blood is thicker than wine, the latter might be a preferable vice for our political leaders.
This presentation suggests there’s a whole new world of black-and-white cinematography to be discovered in high-definition.
Criterion’s very handsome transfer does wonders for the film’s gentle, practically caressing lighting and deep reds and browns.
Murnau’s masterpiece gets the deluxe DVD treatment it deserves.
Keep a copy of this DVD handy for when we’re all living on the edge of sanity in a pile of trash down by the river.
Warmly tinted and liltingly scored, this is a particularly fetching transfer, particularly considering the film’s rather obscure status.
A hearty DVD release with a great commentary track for what is possibly the final chapter of Futurama.
The film makes the viewer wait in a state of anticipation for something to resonate on screen.
Sally Hawkins and Eddie Marsen’s performances still make this DVD worth every penny, don’t they?
A peculiarly adagio note on which to close a career with so many fortissimo gestures.
One of the only Disney animated features with real gravitas, Pinocchio’s reputation grows longer with each passing generation.
From “the studio that brought you the Academy Award-winning Life Is Beautiful” comes another Holocaust movie that you’re sure to love!
A barebones release for a well done, if often forgotten, miniseries.
A vital, confounding, surprising, confrontational collection of underappreciated American films.
Natalie Wood and Warren Beatty fight the good fight.