Hud is a mournful lament for a passing of a way of life and a meditation on the ways forward.
This tale of a motorcycle odyssey gone wrong remains timeless for its diagnosing of the early stages of a social ennui that’s now fully bloomed.
This entrancing magnum opus is one of the singular works of the decade to date, and Kino’s excellent Blu-ray belongs in any cinephile’s collection.
To have the film’s youth restored in a new HD transfer is, like you at the L’Oréal counter, worth it.
Cutter’s Way belongs on the shelf of fans of both Cassavetian hyperreal melodrama and Pakula-esque political thrillers.
Arrow tells you to drop that hero and get with the zero—The Zero Boys that is, with their fantastic new Blu-ray transfer of Mastorakis’s uneven film.
This rough, lurid, pointedly un-preachy work of macho outlaw cinema, one of the best of the many John Dillinger movies, deserves to be better known.
Hardly a fling, David Lean’s seminal Brief Encounter looks better than ever in 4K resolution on Criterion’s new Blu-ray.
We should be thankful that these films are still in viewable condition at all, much less the pristine presentations found in this collection.
A violent and occasionally subversive lot of tales about Goro the Assassin, the series receives a beautifully rendered Blu-ray package.
Christian Petzold’s meditation on individual and cinematic ouroboros lands on Blu-ray with a masterful transfer from the Criterion Collection.
Shout! has refurbished this camp dud with a beautiful and informative new home-video release.
Language is a weapon in Stillman’s films, but so is the writer-director’s cunning use of framing and editing.
This political thriller from director John Frankenheimer’s spotty late period is a much richer film than its reputation implies.
Hawks’s resonant, prescient, entertaining, enormously influential pre-war adventure receives the A/V refurbishing it richly deserves.
Arrow provides monthly evidence that there’s an entire sector of European cinematic production that’s gone long underappreciated.
It has all the charm of the best entries in the Star Wars series, and it arrives on a pristine Blu-ray primed to delight the next generation of fans.
The film is an endlessly complex, universal testament to the ills of valuing commerce over compassion.
One of Blank’s most mercurial works receives a spectacular restoration on Blu-ray.
Twilight Time honors another key American noir with a beautiful transfer that’s complemented by an affectionate and informed commentary.
It became a key reference point for postmodern mash-up artists, but the film’s socio-political jungle is not all fun-and-grindhouse games.