Despite occasional hiccups in the source elements, these HD transfers look incredibly good.
Words fail with a masterpiece as hermetically sealed and seamless as Dreyer’s 1928 silent.
Russell’s film, gorgeous as a landscape painting, explicit as the Kinsey Report, gets an essential Blu-ray upgrade.
The film comes to Blu-ray with a gorgeous 1080p transfer and an informative commentary track.
A central work of the New German Cinema movement finally finds its weary way onto Blu-ray courtesy of the Criterion Collection.
This disc correctly insists that the film is an astonishing achievement that belongs in the canon of classic American cinema.
As a slice of sordid Southern gothic nastiness, shot through with a vein of mordant black humor, Scalpel is a cut above.
Sourced from a 4K restoration, Cohen Media Group’s Blu-ray looks marvelous.
This restoration of Suspiria is revelatory and head-spinning.
If Sylvie et le Fantôme is bittersweet in its lack of consolation, Douce, the standout in this Eclipse bundle, is downright dirge-like.
Arrow Video offers a vital, beautiful, and bracingly irreverent presentation of Frank Henenlotter’s cult-film classic.
The 1967 omnibus film The Witches still manages to cast a spell at times, owing to the contributions of its talented cast and crew.
The Blu-ray is as attentive to image and audio detail as the filmmaking is observant about the intersection between art and everyday life.
The film is a morally complex examination of the sometimes vast gulf between life and art.
Coco receives an expectedly resplendent home-video treatment.
Now it’s easier than ever to appreciate these films as crucial stepping stones in Jean-Luc Godard’s mutable, constantly self-analyzing career.
Ichikawa’s amazing revenge melodrama deserves greater fame and recognition. Maybe this beautiful disc will help that come to fruition.
Kusturica’s overwhelming satire of Yugoslavia’s tortured history receives an excellent high-def release.
This honest but warmly sentimental, observational film looks just as beautiful on home video as it does on a big screen.
Without question one of the most important Criterion releases of this or any year.
Criterion superbly refurbishes one of the most disturbing and least conventional love affairs in the history of cinema.