Kino’s 4K UHD is sure to be the definitive home video release of High Noon for years to come.
When it comes to playing at revolution, Leone suggests, it’s best not to get involved.
The extras further attest to Nan Goldin’s commitment to intertwining the personal and political.
The film reveals a young director mastering his influences before coming into his own.
The 4K presentation affirms the film’s position among the gutsiest Golden Age crime epics.
Hasebe keeps the film anchored in a fragmented, pop-art-infused dream space.
Never has the green felt on poker tables suggested such a world unto itself.
Roemer’s film gets a home video release that confirms its classic status.
Both films pop with color and brightness on Criterion’s 4K transfer.
Twilight gives grueling expression to a force of evil that’s as inexplicable as it is unimaginable.
Rohmer’s wistful, sumptuously beautiful film cycle receives a gorgeous box set from Criterion.
The film is an triumph of effortless story execution, pinpoint humor, and acting masterclass.
JFK still stands as possibly the purest camp artifact of American political cinema.
4K UHD Blu-ray Review: Robert Altman’s McCabe & Mrs. Miller on the Criterion Collection
Criterion breathes new life into one of the most rapturously poetic of all American movies.
The works in this set range from the virtually archetypal to the resolutely revisionist.
One of Lang’s most lauded American works gets what is easily its best A/V presentation to date.
Wise’s film is as tense, thrilling, and relevant today as it was in 1959.
The Riddle of Steel: Conan the Barbarian and Conan the Destroyer on Arrow 4K UHD Blu-ray
Give Conan his due, as he’s a work in progress.
This essential box set gathers nine films from the first decade of one of cinema’s greatest artists.
Arrow has assembled 10 of José Mojica Marins’s films in a staggeringly appointed new box set.
With this release, Sayles’s complex neo-western noir is primed for long-overdue rediscovery.