Turns out, Hammer was still making entertaining and even innovative films in the 1970s.
Tobe Hooper’s admirers will want to pick up this 4K release for the robust transfer alone.
Johnnie To’s popular capers come to home video with solid transfers and informative extras.
Shout!’s 4K UHD release offers a superior video transfer and a rich commentary track by Paul Schrader.
The extras are slim, but the stellar A/V presentation helps this release rise above the chaff.
Gorgeously shot and affectingly brooding, Hôtel du Nord shows equal amounts of empathy for its occupants one and all.
Stanley Kubrick’s Paths of Glory gets a superlative 4K transfer and an enlightening commentary track from Kino Lorber.
Boldly stylized and intricately structured, The Killing gets a sterling 4K transfer and one very satisfying supplement from Kino Lorber.
Kino Lorber’s disc makes the case that Planet of the Vampires is perhaps the finest Italian science-fiction film of all time.
Sidney Poitier’s directorial debut is a fierce and funny portrait of the Black experience in the American West.
This mordant but oddly nostalgic film receives a strong release that testifies to the Safdie brothers’ then-nascent talent.
Frownland receives a Criterion edition worthy of its status as one of the boldest American indies of the last 20 years.
James William Guercio’s offbeat counter-culture cult classic gets a timely Blu-ray release.
Michael Mann’s moody crime classic gets a definitive release in the UHD format.
Frank Borzage’s paean to the power of love in tumultuous times gets a sparkling new transfer from Kino Lorber.
Gordon Parks’s Shaft is much more than a rollicking crowd-pleaser, as it’s also a snapshot of a bygone era.
The preeminent collaboration between Anthony Mann and John Alton finally gets an HD release that fully showcases its stunning visuals.
George Armitage’s captivatingly eccentric neo-noir is assisted by three magnetic leads and a healthy dose of black comedy.
I’m Dangerous Tonight has looks to kill on Kino Lorber’s Blu-ray.
This dreamy, playful, tender ode to having loved and lost instead of never loved at all finally gets the transfer that it deserves.
Michael Cimino’s confused neo-noir Desperate Hours receives a solid but barebones Blu-ray from MVD.