Hud is a mournful lament for a passing of a way of life and a meditation on the ways forward.
This revelatory restoration of Welles’s masterpiece could play a significant role in the film’s subsequent place in cinema’s history.
Criterion has performed an invaluable service to cinephilia by refurbishing another of Orson Welles’s obscure late-career masterworks.
One of the most heralded films of the Japanese New Wave is back in print on a solid new Blu-ray edition.
A Taste of Honey is an essential title in global cinema’s shift toward investigating the inner lives of quotidian folk.
Arrow Video’s thoroughly awesome Blu-ray set is sure to remain among the year’s most essential releases.
Shout! Factory’s disc is an attractive restoration of a funny and terrifyingly sensual portrait of conformity.
Compassionate and structurally intriguing, Stig Björkman’s documentary is a stellar portrait of a great artist.
Despite its punctilious aesthetic of detachment, The Girlfriend Experience exerts a sneaky emotional pull.
The film receives a fine transfer and a nearly nonexistent supplements package.
This lively, melancholic, quite prescient Humphrey Bogart film receives a sturdy restoration and an excellent audio commentary.
The film is simultaneously exhilarating, gorgeous, and tedious, operating as a weird fusion of auteur project and craven franchise start-up.
Despite an inconsistent video transfer, Russell’s lascivious neo-noir gets a fine Blu-ray from Arrow Video.
The inclusion of each cut of The New World marks this as the definitive home-video edition of Malick’s greatest film.
This gorgeous package perfectly complements the bounty of sensory delights offered by Bava’s influential and still extraordinary giallo thriller.
It’s hard to imagine many films being more suited for the Blu-ray format than Hu’s sensual wuxia epic.
Resnais’s third feature pushes the director’s formal interests into a tangible political realm.
No film about human-made catastrophe has ever been as concise and evocative as Night and Fog.
Cohen elevates Van Gogh to its rightful status as the work of a world-class auteur at his peak.
Linklater’s rowdy, sensual party odyssey is accorded a sturdy transfer that’s in dire need of a few evocative extras.
The In-Laws looks swell in its Blu-ray debut thanks to another stellar release from the Criterion Collection.