For Lynch, Joseph Merrick is the ultimate tortured artist.
“Maybe I don’t want to meet someone who shares my interests. I hate my interests.” Steve Buscemi speaks for us all.
The trilogy finally arrives on Blu-ray boasting a radiant image and a boatload of extras worthy of Marcel Pagnol’s inimitable wit and style.
Arrow continues to prove that horror films are as complex, resonant, and worthy of respect as the classics of any other genre.
This beautiful refurbishing of Franju’s film allows the underrated whodunit to assume its rightful place on the cinephile’s mantle.
The films in this collection have been given satisfying transfers and some eye-opening supplements.
Still one of the most fun sugar rushes of the year, the film arrives on home video with a shimmering, chromatic video transfer.
This all-star courtroom thriller is also an underrated study of a master artist’s social demons.
A worthy escalation of its predecessor’s sleek charm, John Wick: Chapter 2 is the finest action film since Mad Max: Fury Road.
The set is best viewed as another fine product from the hopefully ongoing collaboration between Criterion and the World Cinema Project.
This thought-provoking political trilogy makes its Region A Blu-ray debut with sturdy transfers and some essential extras.
Criterion’s release is a luscious, vibrant, must-own restoration of a titanic work of postwar Japanese cinema.
This gnarly gem of 1980s-era punk horror still looks and sounds a little rough, but the film and the supplements justify the plunge.
Criterion has done a commendable job in supplementing Audiard’s film.
It finally gets a home-video release worthy of purchase, sporting excellent video, flawless audio, and a bounty of well-sourced extras.
Akerman’s magnum opus remains one of the definitive showcases of cinematic structuralism.
One of Francis Ford Coppola’s most underrated and deeply felt films receives a gorgeously ephemeral restoration.
Serial Mom looks about as pristine as the image Beverly Sutphin projects onto her little slice of suburbia.
Criterion’s transfer of an overrated musical staple is both rough and beautiful, in meticulously proper proportion.
From its first scenes, The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave basks in its gloomy gothic ambiance.
Chabrol’s ironic and elegiac take on Shakespeare’s Hamlet makes its Region A Blu-ray debut with a gorgeous transfer and little else.