Fleischer’s sci-fi mystery remains a cheesily effective snapshot of 1970s paranoia.
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.
The film is an exquisite stage-setter for Ray’s career that has never looked better on home video.
A gorgeous, perceptively supplemented restoration of a pivotal early masterwork in Leigh’s career.
This neurotic psychodrama in monster-movie clothing is accorded a deservedly top-notch A/V presentation.
Arrow Video has achieved the seemingly impossible, culling together an ultimate edition of an endlessly reissued cult classic.
Arrow’s sharp box set perfectly preserves the late Suzuki’s most challenging works.
Criterion is resurrecting Curtiz’s reputation and legacy, illustrating to young cinephiles that there’s more to this underrated director than Casablanca.
A slim and somewhat inconsistent package, though Fuller’s poignant and dynamic film is still a beautiful sight to behold.
Criterion’s restoration of Lost in America is important for rightfully contextualizing the film as an American masterpiece.
The exquisite Blu-ray transfer makes an argument for the film’s remarkable production design and audio/visual construction.
One of the most beautiful and mysterious of all existentialist adventure films receives a deservedly lush and subtle transfer.
Whatever its faults, such an edition of the violent, well-acted, yet emotionally monotone The Hunting Party would’ve been unimaginable once.
Tarkovsky’s transfixing spiritual thriller receives the most revelatory A/V upgrade of the year.
The film stands alongside Gertrud, Eyes Wide Shut, and Imitation of Life among directors’ final films that are also arguably their finest.
The sight of Rossellini’s war trilogy remastered in HD will be cause alone for some to double dip.
Davies’s witty, formally audacious biopic is the latest showcase for his uniquely impressionistic cinematic style.
One of the most ambiguous, neurotic, and disturbing of all American films receives a revelatory new restoration.
This poignant, elegiac horror film remains one of the high-water marks of cinema’s forays into the sociological and emotional impact of the internet.
Hitchcock’s first great film looks stellar on Criterion’s Blu-ray, lacking nearly all of the usual decay endemic to silent movies.