Turns out, Hammer was still making entertaining and even innovative films in the 1970s.
Sofia Coppola’s hypnotic and elegiac debut feature gets a sterling UHD upgrade from the Criterion Collection.
Larry Cohen’s batshit-crazy film gets a phenomenal UHD upgrade from the devoted freaks at Blue Underground.
The sensibilities of Quentin Tarantino and Tony Scott come together to fashion one of the cornerstone films of the early 1990s.
One of the best and most inventive rom-coms in recent years gets a beautiful transfer from the Criterion Collection.
Criterion offers a sumptuous release of Stanley Kwan’s dense, masterful melodrama.
This disc’s gorgeous 4K transfer and slate of extras make a strong case for the importance of physical releases of streaming titles.
The Archers’ last great collaborative work gets a stunning and long-overdue high-definition upgrade from the Criterion Collection.
Criterion gives the film the monumental release it deserves, complementing a flawless transfer with head-spinning extras.
David Lean’s gorgeous, aching romance receives a Blu-ray release worthy of its immaculate Technicolor splendor.
Doug Liman’s sci-fi action thriller remains one of the most enjoyable American blockbusters of the previous decade.
One of Soderbergh’s best films, a classic of the American crime film genre, is afforded a beautifully visceral transfer.
A fantastic commentary track and sparkling new 4K transfer make this an essential release.
William Lustig and Larry Cohen team up to bring you this curdled rumination on small-town Americana, jingoism, and the hell that is warfare.
Edge of Sanity is a luridly stylized and slyly subversive adaptation of the Jekyll and Hyde story.
Ford’s bitter Civil War film gets an improved home-video presentation and an excellent new commentary track.
The intriguing and occasionally terrifying Fire in the Sky shimmers with maximum menace on this Blu-ray edition.
Ekwa Msangi’s feature-length debut receives a gorgeous transfer and a handful of illuminating extras courtesy of the Criterion Collection.
Criterion reaffirms their commitment to Waters’s oeuvre with a definitive release of his seminal sensation.
Wayne Wang’s playfully enigmatic debut receives a handsome package that contextualizes its place in ’80s American indie cinema.
Think of Vampire’s Kiss as the screwy, punk flipside of American Psycho.