Occasionally, the film reminds you that the man who made Mean Streets is behind the camera.
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.
A lovely Blu-ray transfer, but those hoping for any contextual supplements about the film’s complex politics or adaptation will be left wanting.
Long a hidden gem in Carpenter’s filmography, the film receives a strong A/V upgrade from Shout! Factory.
Criterion offers a vital and macabrely beautiful rendering of an underrated and pivotal film in Bergman’s career.
The film is a fine example of Wilder’s mid-career eccentricity and cosmopolitan curiosity.
Coppola’s luscious and formidable debut feature gets a deserved star treatment from the Criterion Collection.
The flimsy extras verge on making this a barebones release.
Au Hasard Balthazar is a masterpiece that deserves an updated edition with a wider range of commentary.
One of the greatest fantasy films of the 1980s receives a beautiful transfer from Arrow Video, making it ripe for rediscovery.
This buckaroo of a disc does not blow it on the image and sound front at least.
This Blu-ray release should cement the film’s reputation among North American audiences as a watershed work of martial-arts cinema.
Few films are as deserving of the label “masterpiece” as Visconti’s Rocco and His Brothers.
Arrow Video offers a precise and loving restoration of a daring and legendarily unlovable milestone in horror cinema.
Paramount’s fine-tuned Blu-ray should be an essential addition to the libraries of horror fans and audiophiles alike.
A worthwhile curio in Mann’s filmography receives an excellent A/V transfer from Kino Lorber.
Criterion releasing it during Pride Month proves that their sense of humor is just as sick as that of John Waters and Divine.
Arrow Video offers a miraculously gorgeous restoration of Ferrara’s grubby and neurotic work of lo-fi horror expressionism.