This trilogy shows just how versatile and highly entertaining the Japanese samurai film can be.
Germi’s fascinating The Facts of Murder is poised between docudrama and satire.
Criterion put some legwork into improving the presentation from its prior DVD release.
Shout! ups the ante with its finest selection yet of films from the Shaw Brothers Studio.
This two-disc set provides a well-rounded survey of Lamorisse’s singular work.
The set highlights the diverse aspects of Cushing’s always authoritative on-screen persona.
Woo’s most riotous American film receives a solid upgrade to UHD.
This is a 4K UHD release fit for one of the masterpieces of the cinema.
This release finally puts the theatrical cut back into circulation with a flawless transfer.
Throughout Chan’s film, comic irreverence intermingles with cosmic coincidences.
Schlesinger’s film presents ’30s L.A. as a nightmarish circle in Dante’s Inferno.
In the contemporary field of Japanese animation, no one makes films and TV shows like Yuasa.
The precision of the film’s images only exacerbates the alienation of its protagonist.
Columbo remains one of the most appealing and iconic TV series of the 1970s.
This UHD disc, sourced from a recent 4K remaster, is a massive upgrade over its predecessor.
The film’s sexual undertones propel much of the drama, even some of the action scenes.
This outrageous ode to all things “psychedela” gets Arrow’s typically sumptuous packaging.
The film communicates its feminist ideas through fascinatingly fetishistic images.
4K UHD Blu-ray Review: Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture Show on the Criterion Collection
Bogdanovich’s affecting look at small-town Americana gets a terrific UHD upgrade.
This release enshrines the film’s position as one of the pivotal works of the New Hollywood era.
Lucas’s massively influential nostalgia fest receives a sadly dismal transfer.