This adaptation of Donald E. Westlake’s 1963 novel is the epitome of hard-boiled.
This Blu-ray beautifully illustrates the beguiling contradictions of the funniest and most polemical film of Godard’s career.
This release is among the most jaw-dropping transfers ever encoded onto Blu-ray.
Criterion offers a rough and gorgeous transfer of Welles’s audaciously personal Othello.
A great A/V transfer and outstanding critic commentary make Kino’s disc an essential purchase for fans of Jean-Luc Godard.
Criterion presents a contemporary treasure on Blu-ray that’s likely to endure with future audiences as a staple of European cult cinema.
Kino Lorber issues a slim but attractive restoration of John Irvin’s nasty and woefully underappreciated crime thriller.
Serra’s meticulous attention to ambient sound and the bodily noises of impending death are excellently conveyed on this release.
This is a stellar Blu-ray printing of what’s arguably Lina Wertmüller’s most internationally acclaimed film.
Criterion’s restoration of a horror masterpiece achieves a nearly contradictory state of ghostly clarity.
Kino’s Blu-ray preserves the hypnotic, oneiric beauty that undercuts the film’s chaotic violence.
Perhaps the defining performance of Isabelle Huppert’s career is now on vibrant display in this Criterion Blu-ray.
Criterion emphasizes sensorial texture over context, with a sparse supplements package that leaves quite a bit to the imagination.
The Criterion Collection honors the ghostly delicacy of a new classic of American loneliness.
It look both old and new, subtly insisting that our hopeful and tortured past is also possibly our present.
A good transfer and a great audio commentary pivotally contextualize this neurotic and lastingly influential American melodrama.
This Blu-ray reveals the film as an essential origin point for historicizing the trajectory of effects-driven cinema.
A superlative restoration of a key film in Alfred Hitchcock’s evolution as a master explorer of sexual neuroses.
A commendable Blu-ray presentation that will be of interest to novices and connoisseurs of Sacha Guitry alike.
The film is Cox’s bravura confrontation of fairy tales and drug-addled bodies.
Hopefully, a re-issue of Ronald Neame’s greatly underrated Hopscotch will introduce the film to younger cinephiles in training.