Turns out, Hammer was still making entertaining and even innovative films in the 1970s.
Even when you have no idea what’s going on in The Man Who Fell to Earth, you won’t want to look away.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but I want to have sex with the Murnau, Borzage and Fox DVD set.
This special edition DVD will be the perfect holiday gift for your ABBA-lovin’ roommate…and a reason for you to invest in earplugs.
An already near-essential DVD release of an essential noir, updated for the high-def age.
The film provides a sweet, funny look at a young director finding his voice.
Of more interest to completists, but any journey with Werner Herzog is worth taking.
This handsomely packaged box set will please fans and cinema history buffs alike.
The restored Abraham Lincoln is impressive, and everyone should have a copy of Way Down East.
The future Dogme 95 king’s last work of crafty artifice: less than meets the eye.
Fuller’s hound from hell chews Crash‘s can’t-we-get-along platitudes and spits them out.
Collectors and franchise geeks will no doubt go batty for this two-disc set.
This classic’s new package has all a fan needs save for a model ship.
Who needs a director’s commentary with this much bonus material?
A key postcolonial work of remembrance from Africa’s father of film gets proper dissemination.
Though this is the best edition yet of Wong’s breakthrough, the film provides Criterion with one of its most anemic recent releases.
A fabulous package for a frigid Cold War chestnut.
Pixar pulls out all the stops for this three-disc special edition of WALL·E.
Give me the first Hellboy any day, but it’s always fun to see the new creatures del Toro comes up with for his netherworlds.
The newly burnished look of a silent-cinema landmark demands a fresh gaze at Keaton’s least characteristic great film.
A throwaway package for a pair of interesting Rossellini curios.