Turns out, Hammer was still making entertaining and even innovative films in the 1970s.
Hong Sang-soo’s brilliantly bleak third film announced the arrival of a master.
Mark Rappaport’s film is a poetically evocative, thematically harsh account of one of cinema’s great anti-stars.
Twisting the Knife collects four taut late-period exercises in ambiguity from the great Claude Chabrol.
Rock Hudson’s Home Movies presents the allusions to the ’50s matinee idol’s secret as a double-edged sword.
Kino’s 4K release is now the definitive home video edition of Jewison’s best picture winner.
Theodore Witcher’s eloquent and underseen ensemble dramedy receives a sparkling 4K transfer from the Criterion Collection.
Warner Bros. gives its greatest musical yet another substantial home-video upgrade.
A cult film receives a sterling A/V transfer, while its miscalculation of a sequel makes its high-def debut.
Classic film noir’s epitome and epitaph, Orson Welles’s Touch of Evil gets a stunning new UHD upgrade from Kino Lorber.
Kino’s exquisite 4K transfer is easily the best that Eastern Promises has looked on home video to date.
Blu-ray Review: ‘Rogue Cops and Racketeers: Two Crime Thrillers from Enzo G. Castellari’
This two-disc set provides fine transfers, insightful extras, and enough slam-bang action to satisfy the most ardent Eurocrime fan.
Joan Micklin Silver’s Hester Street is a distinctly ’70s-era mix of stylistic sparseness and thematic revisionism.
Kino’s 4K of The Apartment provides the definitive home-video presentation of one of Billy Wilder’s greatest films.
An overlooked gem of ’80s Japanese cinema makes its way onto Blu-ray with a stellar image transfer and robust slate of extras.
The beautiful transfer helps make the argument that the film is more than just a curio in neorealist history.
One of the Shaw Brothers Studio’s greatest masterpieces lands on Arrow Video boasting a revelatory audio-video presentation.
A film as misshapen and compelling as its central creature, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is a beautiful monstrosity in 4K.
Brutal, trenchant, and unsettlingly surreal, Alex Cox’s Walker gets a spiffy new Blu-ray upgrade from Criterion.
Arrow’s 4K UHD Blu-ray is sure to be the definitive release of RoboCop for years to come.
This release of Márta Mészáros’s most well-known film teasingly peels back the curtain on a fascinating and underappreciated career.