Desperate Living is Waters’s most furious political statement.
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.
Boasting an upgraded transfer that blows its standard-def forbearer, Masculin Féminin is ripe for renewed appreciation.
In the vein of other daring ’50s-era noirs and melodramas, the film is a lyrical work eaten up with psychosexual sickness.
Switchblade Sisters is the rare grindhouse joint that fully lives up to its reputation.
Leone truly came into his own with the capper to his Man with No Name trilogy, and it now looks better than ever home video.
This disc’s beautiful transfer attests to the undiluted aesthetic pull of Borzage’s paean to love conquering all.
This disc’s treasure trove of extras attest to the dizzying flurry of ideas and emotions that fuel Assayas’s uncategorizable film.
Each film that Wong has made is, to a great extent, a response to and revision of the one that came before it.
Criterion outfits Leigh’s extraordinarily moving Palme d’Or winner with a transfer that honors its granular intensity.
The Producers gets a sparkling new 4K transfer that blows previous home-video editions out of the water.
While the extras are sadly limited, the film’s own rewards are more than enough to compensate.
Perry’s cynical western receives an impressive transfer and an illuminating commentary by Alex Cox.
The disc’s quality extras ultimately outweigh its less-than-perfect visual presentation.
Anne Baxter’s riotous pursuit of Charlton Heston has never looked better than it does on this 4K edition of DeMille’s epic.
Kino’s release highlights the harsh beauty and bitter bombast of Konchalovsky’s outsized action drama.