When it comes to playing at revolution, Leone suggests, it’s best not to get involved.
4K UHD Blu-ray Review: Richard Loncraine’s The Haunting of Julia Joins the Shout! Factory
The Haunting of Julia is a melancholy and eerily ambiguous horror film.
Radiance offers a faithful transfer of one of Fukasaku Kinji’s gnarliest yakuza classics.
Comencini’s film is absorbing, frequently amusing, and exceedingly well directed.
Severin’s release captures Greenaway’s black comedy in all its sumptuous beauty.
The film asks us to eat the rich, but Criterion’s release is at best a delicious light snack.
Kino’s stacked 4K edition requires no deliberation before adding it to your shopping cart.
Warner has outfitted this classic tale of teenage angst and rebellion with a stellar transfer.
This 4K transfer improves on Warner’s 2008 home video release in every way.
Even by the standards of the poliziotteschi, these films are truly gritty and wild.
Laugh for laugh, the film stacks quite well against Lubitsch’s most lauded masterpieces.
Rivette’s street musical looks gorgeous on Cohen’s excellent Blu-ray.
Gilliam’s visually inventive film gets a phenomenal 4K UHD upgrade from Criterion.
John Frankenheimer’s film is a propulsive examination of international terrorism.
The most famous of all Ingmar Bergman’s films receives a spotless 4K presentation.
The four Star Trek: TNG films receive best-to-date video presentations.
Though different in setting and mood, both films are ruled by the uncertainty principle.
The film jumps recklessly (and, often, exhilaratingly) from coarse comedy to cutting drama.
The late Joan Micklin Silver’s star continues to rise thanks to Criterion.
The film is a tranquil nocturne compared to the scherzo standards of German expressionism.
Warner Bros. honors a touchstone of film noir with a definitive home-video transfer.