Fleischer’s sci-fi mystery remains a cheesily effective snapshot of 1970s paranoia.
The well-versed and distinctively empathetic audio commentaries render this Twilight Time release a must-own.
This Blu-ray arrives at a moment when the film’s warning against a simplistic understanding of human fallibility seems as urgent as ever.
Confrontational and often corrosively funny, Elle gets a suitably subdued transfer from Sony Home Entertainment.
Haigh’s haunting film receives a flawless transfer and a helpful lot of production-oriented supplements from Criterion.
Emiliano Rocha Minter’s outrageously transgressive We Are the Flesh gets a solid transfer and some instructive extras from Arrow Video.
Disney’s best animated film in a generation arrives on Blu-ray as one of the finest home-video releases of the year so far.
Linklater’s The Before Trilogy receive stunning 2K transfers and a comprehensive compilation of bonus materials from Criterion.
Marvel’s best film to date is a surprisingly beautiful, eccentric, and generous fable of interpersonal, political, and cosmic communion.
Criterion’s 2K restoration of Pedro Almodóvar’s breakthrough feature looks gorgeous.
Moonlight’s unlikely success hopefully implies that the world has yet to slide entirely down a rabbit hole of unbridled bigotry.
Psychomania roars onto Blu-ray with a colorful restoration and a few solid supplements from Arrow Video.
Suddenly in the Dark makes its North American debut with a reasonably strong Blu-ray transfer and some welcome bonus features.
A great and resonant Hollywood melodrama has never looked more beautiful.
Kino presents One Million Years B.C. in phenomenal 4K restorations of both the uncut international and U.S. theatrical versions.
Villeneuve’s moving yet disappointingly cautious mind-bender is accorded a robustly beautiful transfer.
Criterion restores this quotidian epic of peasant life in late-19th century Italy to its simultaneously vibrant and dismal self.
Kino presents Verneuil’s compelling caper film in two newly restored versions, along with some top-notch extras.
The finest American teen film in at least a generation, The Edge of Seventeen arrives on home video ripe for discovery as a new cult classic.
Criterion’s home-video release provides Johnson’s elliptical, ruminative documentary with the swift canonization it deserves.
The film makes its Blu-ray debut with a clean, colorful transfer from Lionsgate’s recently inaugurated Vestron Video Collector’s Series imprint.