Fleischer’s sci-fi mystery remains a cheesily effective snapshot of 1970s paranoia.
A politically and emotionally evocative cult classic in the making receives a beautiful transfer courtesy of Kino Lorber.
The set boasts crisp new 2K transfers and a cornucopia of bonus materials, all wrapped up in one gorgeously designed package.
This socially observant chess drama looks spectacular on Disney’s Blu-ray release.
Lambert Hillyer’s 1919 silent film Wagon Tracks is a surprisingly ambivalent portrait of a purported hero of westward expansion.
The Man Who Fell to Earth receives a serviceable 4K transfer and a bounty of bonus materials from Lionsgate Home Entertainment.
This luminous and informative Blu-ray release should ensure at least some degree of collective reconsideration in the years to come.
The restoration of Sembène’s seminal debut feature makes this disc an early highlight of Criterion’s 2017 slate.
The film arrives on Blu-ray with an immaculate transfer and a lacking slate of extras from Criterion.
This bleak and blackly humorous film gets a sharp new 4K transfer and a handful of edifying new supplements from Dark Sky Films.
The Girl on the Train arrives on Blu-ray in a serviceable, if unremarkable, packaging from Universal.
This is an important restoration of a neglected melodrama that deserves immediate admission into the canon of great American films.
This is a gorgeous, well-contextualized restoration of one of the greatest and most mercenary of all American comedies.
Anderson’s Heart of a Dog seems more prescient, brilliant, beautiful, and simply necessary than ever before.
Clark’s holiday-themed shocker gets a striking 2K upgrade and a thick-stacked slate of extras.
Fellini’s hallucinatory Roma gets a pristine 2k transfer and a few meaty bonus features from Criterion.
To Live and Die in L.A. gets a vibrant 4K transfer and a slate of solid new extras.
Ferrara’s grisly exploitation feature belies an iconoclastic vision that’s all the more easily spotted in Arrow’s gorgeous 4K restoration.
One of the best performances from one of classical Hollywood’s greatest actors is finally given the red-carpet Blu-ray treatment it deserves.
Blood and trauma make an irresistible mix in The Asphalt Jungle, which receives a stellar Blu-ray presentation from Criterion.
The riches made available to cinephiles on home video proves again that the rumors about the death of physical media have been greatly exaggerated.