Criterion has outfitted Cholodenko’s breakthrough debut with a good-looking transfer.
Dennis Donnelly’s The Toolbox Murders is part slasher, part queasy psychological horror, and all grimy.
Jaw-dropping in both packaging and content, the set is a gorgeously appointed promise of further riches to come.
Arrow has outfitted this harrowing wartime tale with a beautiful transfer and a top-notch slate of extras.
Severin’s presentation of Blood for Dracula is a release that you can really sink your teeth into.
Criterion’s release of Time affirms its place among the essential docs of its era.
Mario Bava’s film stretches the gap between lurid material and sophistication of execution to its breaking point.
This release of The Piano makes for yet another stunner in Criterion’s expanding 4K UHD catalog.
Flicker Alley’s set will go a long way toward restoring Julien Duvivier’s reputation as one of the early masters of French cinema.
This 4K disc renders the ragged, antic beauty of Richard Lester’s delirious Beatlemania caper in all its splendor.
Denis Villeneuve’s gets a 4K release that, with its crystal-clear images and boisterous soundtrack, makes the most of the UHD format.
Yuasa Noriaki’s wonderfully weird film gets a solid transfer and a couple of excellent extras from Arrow Video.
This startlingly personal and ambitious fantasy receives a top-notch transfer as well as supplements that honor its emotional acuity.
This 4K UHD release boasts a stellar image and an abundance of extras that fans will delight in digging into from the inside.
Béla Tarr’s doom-laden noir is treated to a long-awaited 4K restoration of exquisite clarity by Arbelos Films.
A wonderful assortment of extras pays tribute to Gordon Parks’s breakthrough film.
Criterion’s 4K UHD release is as comprehensive a release of the Hughes brothers’ debut as anyone could’ve hoped for.
It took a dozen years, but we finally get a transfer that does full justice to the glory of this most sumptuous of all Technicolor films.
Hard Target marries John Woo’s wild formalist techniques with a host of late-’80s and early-’90s American action tropes.
This Blu-ray is a budget-conscious option for those seeking to dip their toes into an Italian maestro’s work.
There’s comfort to be found in the predictably steady pulse of a given week’s home video releases.