Despite occasional hiccups in the source elements, these HD transfers look incredibly good.
A foundational text for modern thrillers, The Day of the Jackal looks and sound superb on Arrow’s Blu-ray.
Shout! Factory outfits David Lynch’s worst film with a competent yet weirdly retro Blu-ray that squanders the possibilities of the medium.
La Cava’s supple but cutting romantic comedy is one of the finest works of class-conscious comedy in Hollywood history.
Twilight Time’s brings a crucial film in Cassavetes’s canon to high-definition.
Cox’s punk western has been dug up from the dregs of oblivion by Kino and handsomely given a long-overdue director’s cut Blu-ray treatment.
Fonda’s beautiful, unjustly overlooked western has been outfitted with a gorgeous transfer and an eclectic collection of supplements.
The extras on this edition of Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom feel almost as dully prescribed as the film itself.
Tarkovsky’s magisterial historical epic receives a definitive reissue from Criterion.
Both versions of Bergman’s epic marital battle royale have been outfitted with grittily beautiful and highly detailed new transfers.
The Tree of Life is the culmination of Malick’s artistry, and Criterion treats it as such with this totemic release.
This warm, literate, erotic sports film receives an appropriately vibrant refurbishing courtesy of the Criterion Collection.
Arrow brings three of director Makhmalbaf’s films to vivid life with The Poetic Trilogy.
Gutiérrez Alea’s complex, daring rumination on the Cuban revolution is one of the finest films about living within a revolutionary realm.
Seidelman’s seminal film augurs our era of social media and self-branding.
This high-def upgrade calls new attention to just how much the film’s florid images match the beauty of Samson Raphaelson’s script.
This definitive package will be essential for both fans of the film and scholars interested in the transition of Old Hollywood to New.
The set affirms the profound emotional power of these idiosyncratic collaborations.
Criterion resurrects the film with a luminous restoration, pairing it with a helpful handful of extras on its production and legacy.
The supplements on Kino’s Blu-ray offer a robust spectrum of perspectives on both Grace Jones as a performer and the film itself.
Fans of Rodrigues’s breakout film will wish for a more definitive transfer and generous heaping of supplements.