Fleischer’s sci-fi mystery remains a cheesily effective snapshot of 1970s paranoia.
Chabrol’s ironic and elegiac take on Shakespeare’s Hamlet makes its Region A Blu-ray debut with a gorgeous transfer and little else.
Riccardo Freda and Mario Bava team up for a curious (and sometimes unwieldy) fusion of sci-fi and gothic horror elements.
With this gorgeous and obsessive four-disc set, Donnie Darko fanatics may have found their ultimate bible, at last.
Demy’s film, more than The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, elevates the banal vicissitudes of lives spent dreaming.
Itami’s “ramen western” is a zesty concoction that investigates the often surreal intersections of sex, death, and other human appetites.
Von Sternberg’s final feature receives a sparkling Blu-ray, marking it as the best-looking home-video release yet of the director’s work.
Dash’s seminal work of African-American historical fiction receives a valuable and hauntingly beautiful transfer.
Criterion grants the royal treatment to the first film to team Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy.
Visconti’s magisterial character study receives a stunning 2K restoration and a brace of excellent supplements.
Miike’s haunting gangster flicks receive appropriately rough and lurid transfers, as well as a must-listen of an audio commentary.
If you’re looking to step into a rain shower before diving headfirst into Demy’s cinematic pool, this release is the best place to start.
This dark satire on ownership and its discontents makes its Blu-ray debut with a remarkable 4K restoration.
It’s difficult to imagine a House fan who will feel poorly served by this extensive and affectionate cornucopia of nerd-centric context.
Takashi Miike’s films get reasonably robust transfers and a few solid supplements from Arrow Video.
The piercing supplements manage to contextualize an essential film without smothering it with over-explanation.
Ashby’s plangent fable receives a smashing 4K restoration and a fine brace of bonus materials from Criterion.
The flawless A/V transfer of Disney’s Blu-ray fully translates the film’s aesthetic beauty.
This is a desperately needed home-video upgrade that at last presents Leos Carax’s film in its correct aspect ratio.
This preordained cult classic has been outfitted with a magnificently rough and colorful transfer.
Waters’s film receives a pristine 4K restoration and some solid supplements from Criterion.