The film is a satirical skewering of the legacy of French imperialism.
Paramount Home Entertainment’s UHD discs add to an already impressive 4K roster for Spielberg’s filmography.
Mae West’s fervent belief in the healing powers of sex was only equaled by her epic and rather unlikely confidence in herself.
Son of the White Mare is a masterpiece of the medium that deserves a place of honor on every collector’s shelf.
Masters of Cinema has outfitted its release with extras that offer ripe interpretations of the film and the undersung Ritt’s work.
The fantastic slate of extras on this Arrow release help to contextualize the work of a criminally underrated filmmaker.
Kwan’s metatextual melodrama is one of the finest films from Hong Kong’s ’90s golden age of cinema.
This extraordinary, once rare, horror noir has been outfitted with a transfer that honors its beautiful, nearly blasphemous power.
Arrow Video’s 4K Ultra HD release of Corbucci’s landmark spaghetti western is the label’s best release of the year so far.
The beauty of the presentation makes this a must-own release, even if the relatively by-the-numbers extras don’t fully rise to the occasion.
Hopper’s eccentric, fetishistic, and very sexy neo noir film from 1990 receives a red-hot facelift.
Arzner’s film is a healthily skeptical, if nowhere near jaundiced, take on the prospects of modern love in the era of Prohibition.
Severin’s 4K transfer of Santa Sangre ensures that this is the definitive home-video release of Jodorowsky’s carnivalesque masterwork.
Trances is a fascinating glimpse into a culture and musical style rarely seen on film.
Hawks’s thrilling, conflicted, and viscerally charged film gets a stellar assortment of extras from Viva Vision’s Imprint label.
Barring a UHD release, the film is unlikely to ever look better than it does on Criterion’s superlative package.
Shout! Factory’s release is stacked with enough goodies to satisfy a king-sized appetite for all things Kong.
The film sees Boetticher operating on a more epic scale but still with his distinctively ruthless efficiency.
Criterion has fully honored and even redefined the film’s robustly imagined, terrifying, and humorous aesthetic.
These two obscure British noirs are ready for rediscovery, but the Blu-ray’s lack of extras is disappointing.
Love stories don’t come much more loveless than they do in the culminating film in de Oliveira’s Tetralogy of Frustrated Love.