Desperate Living is Waters’s most furious political statement.
This radical advancement of the concert documentary receives a superlative transfer from the Criterion Collection.
King Hu’s 1966 film gets an excellent release that maximizes its opulent beauty.
The Godfather films have set home-video standards for decades, and that trend continues with Paramount’s astonishing 4K restorations.
This disc’s 4K transfer abounds in extraordinary image detail and texture, which is befitting of the film’s exacting and meticulous maker.
Disney’s 4K transfer is an early contender for the best-looking home video release of the year.
John Landis’s landmark horror-comedy takes another bite out of Blu-ray, this time with a colorful new 4K HDR transfer.
Bullet-riddled and crackling with quotable dialogue, the film gets a handsome new 2K transfer and a handful of insightful extras.
Frantisek Vlácil’s film is a shrewd, harrowing examination of the conflict between religion and science in medieval times.
Matrix Resurrections is the most personal, vision-driven blockbuster of its era, and Warner’s 4K disc maximizes its unorthodox beauty.
While Criterion’s edition is light on extras, the fine presentation of the 4K restoration is worth the price alone.
Grasshopper’s excellent home video release highlights the aesthetic and tonal complexity of its minimalist approach.
If the film is undoubtedly Sirk’s giddiest trash entertainment, it’s also the shallowest example of his less-heralded humanist acuity.
This box set offers five of Chabrol’s finest efforts from the ’80s and ’90s in a handsome new package with hours of bonus materials.
Ann Hui’s harrowing and profoundly human Boat People receives a gorgeous and loaded home video release.
Zou Zou and Princess Tam Tam are among the most bittersweet musical comedies ever made.
These two films show that Douglas Sirk’s genius bore fruit decades prior to his mid-1950s masterpieces.
Tsukamoto’s grisly, goofy second feature, which cemented his status as a new master of Japanese extremity, gets a solid HD presentation.
Sexual aberrations have rarely looked and felt as seductive as they do in The Laughing Woman.
This release of a long unavailable and unusual noir fantasy features a gorgeous transfer and a number of illuminating extras.
Eternals makes a brooding impression on 4K UHD, but don’t expect the extras to make a case for it as some misunderstood triumph.