Criterion has outfitted Cholodenko’s breakthrough debut with a good-looking transfer.
Murnau’s light-hearted, self-reflexive film gets a solid video upgrade and an illuminating commentary track.
This release is cause enough to introduce a new generation to the sure-to-be-eternal concept of pooping back and forth, forever.
The film is less a parody than a surprisingly beautiful and somber precursor to many autumnal “late” westerns.
Herz’s incendiary film shines a light on one man’s ruthless quest for power.
Halperin’s film is a genre-straddling gem from the pre-Code Hollywood era.
The film now burns bright like a lucid fever dream thanks to Kino Lorber’s new Blu-ray.
This German expressionist masterpiece stomps its way onto Blu-ray with an astonishing 4K transfer and several choice extras.
Melville’s somber saga of the French Resistance gets a satisfyingly tweaked restoration from the Criterion Collection.
One of the naughtiest and most erotic pre-Code films gets a sparkling new transfer and erudite commentary track.
Stick a straw in that Campbell’s soup can and settle in for the bonkers Beyond the Door.
It’s a lightning strike of glamor worship, melodramatic storytelling, abnormal psychology, and irreducible, airport-paperback frisson.
Two key early filmmakers finally stand to get the widespread appreciation they’ve long deserved.
Criterion’s new transfer brings out the unruly beauty of Spike Lee’s lurid, violent, daring political satire.
Cannibal Apocalypse suggests that war isn’t just hell, it’s also contagious.
Flicker Alley’s smartly packaged Blu-ray release is your essential introduction to an overlooked master of early Russian cinema.
One of the great and influential American films receives a notable visual upgrade.
An unfairly overlooked film gets a solid high-def release from Kino Lorber.
A zen-like study of aging and male friendship, Reichardt’s sophomore feature remains one of her best.
Kino honors Clouzot’s post-war classic with a vivid presentation and some illuminating extras.
A criminally underrated late-period Altman film gets a burnished Blu-ray upgrade and a full slate of fine extras.