The film is a satirical skewering of the legacy of French imperialism.
The disc’s intimate extras attest to the rich, emotional core of Bing’s breakthrough documentary.
Tremors is a pure sugar rush of a monster movie, and it gets a definitive home video release from Arrow.
Criterion outfits Cronenberg’s utterly one-of-kind erotic techno-fable with a mint transfer and a few pertinent archival extras.
Arrow’s handsomely packaged box set offers stunning new HD transfers of the films and a generous heaping of incisive extras.
Aldrich’s 1956 film is a relentless investigation into moral compromise.
Bresson’s Mouchette is a gorgeous valedictory to rebellion and resignation.
Iñárritu’s sprawling, kinetic debut feature gets a solid HD transfer and a generous heaping of varied extras.
Our list just might bring to attention a few choice titles that had previously fallen through the cracks.
Trumbull’s sci-fi fable is both an exploration of environmental issues and the effects of isolation on human beings.
This Blu-ray invites us to reassess an undervalued oddball from the height of Eastwood’s stardom.
This re-edit clarifies The Godfather Part III as a bombastic yet ultimately insular morality play.
Leni’s German Expressionist classic from 1924 effortlessly crosses genres and time periods.
Now on 4K Ultra HD, Mad Max reminds us anew that few contemporary action films match its appetite for risk.
Essential Fellini is one of the most elegantly designed and supplement-packed sets that Criterion has ever released.
This undervalued film receives a beautiful transfer for its Blu-ray debut, but the dearth of extras leaves much to be desired.
Criterion’s exacting presentation of Scorsese’s late-inning masterpiece is a testament to the enduring value of physical media.
Kino outfits the despairing, pioneering film with a beautiful transfer and one of the best audio commentaries of the year.
Criterion’s stacked release helps make the case that the film is more than just an interesting curio in Jarmusch’s canon.
Burst City is a defiantly raised fist in the face of conventional society.
Jewison’s sublime romantic comedy gets a handsome home-video package from Criterion.