This adaptation of Donald E. Westlake’s 1963 novel is the epitome of hard-boiled.
Criterion superbly refurbishes one of the most disturbing and least conventional love affairs in the history of cinema.
The film is legendary for Moreau’s star-making performance and the soundtrack by Miles Davis.
G.W. Pabst’s exhilaratingly beautiful pacifist adventure film is an ode to clarity, aesthetic as well as political.
One of Rossellini’s most important films receives a sterling home-video transfer that does justice to its blockbuster panorama.
The film is a stylistically brilliant and relentlessly bleak illustration of the old chestnut about the infernal nature of our more internecine endeavors.
It’s been a while since Criterion fanatics have gotten to decry a new, cash-grabbing title sullying the purity of their home-movie shelves.
Argento’s late masterwork remains a real eye-opener, and it’s never looked better than in this new Blu-ray presentation.
Ford’s masterful political drama pulses with modern reverberations.
Shout! Factory’s solid A/V transfer and set of extras does justice to Dante’s underseen classic.
D.A. Pennebaker’s thrilling account of the greatest of rock festivals looks better than ever on Criterion’s new release.
Arrow’s most impressive single-feature release to date bolsters an exceptional A/V transfer with a glut of substantive extras.
Grasshopper Film makes an immediate impression with the first entry of their massive Straub-Huillet reissue series.
Mike Hodges’s oddball noir Pulp gets a terrific Blu-ray upgrade and a handful of essential new supplements from Arrow Video.
This fiery piece of pulp shrapnel receives a beautifully ugly transfer, along with a handful of negligible supplements.
In terms more familiar to the Olympiad, let’s call this set the Criterion Collection’s record time.
If boutique home-video distribution trends in the same upward direction in 2018, we’ll all need personal assistants just to keep track.
Silent Night, Deadly Night receives a festively colorful 4K restoration and several stockings’ worth of supplements from Shout! Factory.
Olive Films easily supplants their earlier release of the film with a vast improvement in video quality and a slew of quality extras.
This disturbing documentary portrait of power and delusion gets a satisfying Blu-ray upgrade.
America is to this day hell-bent on holding Tracy Flick down. But she will have her revenge.