Despite occasional hiccups in the source elements, these HD transfers look incredibly good.
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.
Kino has delivered a set that admirably preserves the delicate effects of Tarkovsky’s seventh and final film.
Kino offers a lush restoration of Lang’s film, an early and intricate deconstruction of the biases driving noir.
Shout! pulls a rabbit out of its hat with this Blu-ray release, which boasts a solid transfer and a pair of great commentaries.
This is, to date, the best-looking home-video release of Hitchcock’s most underrated film.