Occasionally, the film reminds you that the man who made Mean Streets is behind the camera.
The riches made available to cinephiles on home video proves again that the rumors about the death of physical media have been greatly exaggerated.
Buñuel’s satiric masterpiece ushered in the director’s mature period, and Criterion’s solid Blu-ray ably preserves its cold beauty.
Lone Wolf and Cub slashes its way onto Blu-ray with a katana-sharp transfer and a baby cartload of bonus materials.
A gorgeous and painterly late-period masterwork, the film gets a stellar 4K transfer and a surfeit of extras from Criterion.
Brando’s vastly influential psychological western is finally accorded proper respect, and allowed to let its unhinged freak flag fly.
Noah Baumbach’s breakthrough still looks like his sharpest, most personally inflected work.
J’Accuse visualizes long-term memory loss as mankind’s ultimate, and seemingly endless, tragedy.
Criterion has outfitted Anderson’s magical and career-redefining whatsit with a shimmering and gorgeously immersive transfer.
Olive Films continues their upgraded Signature series with yet another impressive repackaging of a prior release.
The film receives a stellar HD debut on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber.
Arrow’s restoration is affectionately beautiful and gnarly, though you’re advised to stick with the first, vastly superior film.
Arrow Video serves up a 14-course Herschell Gordon Lewis Feast in one of the most impressively packaged box sets in recent memory.
John Carpenter’s Lovecraftian masterpiece finally receives its home-video due with an exceptional A/V transfer and a slew of extras.
This is about as glorious as Technicolor can get on the small screen.
This set provides an awesome cornucopia of detail and beauty—enough to honor the fastidiousness of del Toro’s exacting art.
Blue Underground delivers Fulci’s film with a gorgeous HD transfer, terrific new bonus features, and a CD of Fabio Frizzi’s glorious score.
Berlanga’s maintenance of an underlying comedic edge gives The Executioner a thoroughly discomfiting quality.
The Marx Brothers debut on Blu-ray with a quintet of high-quality HD transfers from Universal and a wealth of new supplements.
Del Toro’s most thematically ambitious fantasy looks better than ever on Criterion’s Blu-ray.
Altman’s sprawling tragicomic testament to fate and infidelity gets an impressive 4K upgrade from Criterion.