The film is a satirical skewering of the legacy of French imperialism.
Streetwise and Tiny: The Life of Brockwell are social documents as searingly personal street art.
Tarkovsky’s elegiac rumination on time and memory receives a superlative transfer and bounty of bonus features from Criterion.
Howard Hawks’s screwball classic looks and sounds sharper than ever thanks to this magnificent release.
Throughout Sicilia!, Straub-Huillet consistently and vividly blur the boundaries between the personal and political.
Now it’s easier than ever to appreciate both the sunny pleasures of Cameron Crowe’s ode to his youth and its self-doubting underbelly.
Jaume Collet-Serra’s remake of House of Wax is a nostalgia trip worth taking for fans of noughties horror.
Josef von Sternberg’s strikingly idiosyncratic gangster film gets its long overdue home-video debut.
To dive into this comprehensive, vital tribute to Marlon Riggs is to come out on the other side with a degree from the Institute of Snap!thology.
Arrow’s release is now the definitive edition of Sam Peckinpah’s 1965 near-masterpiece.
Dee Rees’s deeply personal film gets a sparkling new transfer and an assortment of revealing interviews courtesy of Criterion.
The film has endured as a key text in the emergent queer cinema thanks to its largely empathetic view of same-sex desire.
Todd Haynes’s 1991 feature-length debut rings in its 30th birthday with a solid Blu-ray package from Kino Lorber.
Arrow’s box set conducts a gratifying investigation into a lesser-known Italian genre that’s still underrepresented on Blu-ray.
Criterion’s release of Visions of Eight offers plenty of goodies not found in their 100 Years of Olympic Films box set.
Irezumi is a worthwhile reflection of Japan’s changing post-war attitudes toward sex, art, and liberation.
Reach out and grab a copy of this special edition of Wiene’s body horror classic.
One of the titanic accomplishments of Japanese cinema receives a sparkling Blu-ray update from Criterion.
This low-key tour de force finally has a video release worthy of its greatness.
Across Cartouche and Le Magnifique, Philippe de Broca truly manages to have his cake and eat it too.
Godzilla vs. Kong receives a robust ultra-high-def release from Warner Bros. Home Entertainment.