Turns out, Hammer was still making entertaining and even innovative films in the 1970s.
The full four-part, 220-minute cut of the film receives a stunning transfer and a small but illuminating assortment of extras.
Anderson’s strident, often uproarious, satire takes on a lot more than just the National Health.
The quality and scope of this set makes it one of the most impressive home-video releases of all time.
Blue Underground presents Franco’s dreamy slice of lifestyle porn in a new 2K restoration.
Renoir’s film is an exquisite, idyllic ode to love and loss among the working classes.
Criterion’s Blu-ray judiciously preserves a critical time capsule in public political discourse.
Nelson’s rancorous revisionist western forces us to peer into the heart of an all-too-human darkness.
Beyond their plot parallels, both films are further united by the grounding presence of Barbara Stanwyck.
Still the most urgent and probably the most accessible film of the New German Cinema.
This sterling Blu-ray will hopefully cement the underseen film’s reputation as one of the essential documentaries of the French New Wave.
This Blu-ray should prompt a much-deserved rediscovery of Phil Goldstone’s strange and inventive pre-Code melodrama.
McKee’s disturbing satire about family values gone horribly awry gets a superlative new Blu-ray package.
Making its Blu-ray debut, Uchida’s film is a highly stylized ode to love and disorder.
Criterion’s Blu-ray provides a comprehensive window into Streisand’s creative process.
Criterion gives new life to Kiarostami’s lovely, understated rumination on existential quandaries.
Paramount’s newly remastered 4K transfer ensures that the film looks better than it ever has on home video.
Sturges’s farce remains a canny deconstruction of romantic-comedy tropes.
The film is one of the most influential and beautiful of all American sci-fi horror epics.
Criterion offers an invaluable reference guide for lovers of the groundbreaking stage musical.
Criterion’s release of Noah Baumbach’s latest is built to last.