When it comes to playing at revolution, Leone suggests, it’s best not to get involved.
This gorgeous release attests to the breadth of scope of the American and European avant-garde.
Heart of Dragon only realizes its potential when fists finally start flying.
A cult object of underground queer cinema receives a welcome, if barebones, release.
Jacques Rivette’s Secret Defense feels in many ways like a culmination.
It may be flat-out bugshit, but Argento’s film looks uncannily gorgeous in 4K UHD.
4K UHD Blu-ray Review: Richard Linklater’s Dazed and Confused on the Criterion Collection
An unimpeachable American masterpiece receives a gloriously shaggy and vital 4K upgrade.
This satire of Hollywood racism gets a sharp new transfer and an essential audio commentary.
Inland Empire retains its low-res, subterranean power on Criterion’s Blu-ray release.
This disc offers a pristine window on a future master learning his craft.
The Three Colors trilogy looks more vibrant and mesmerizing than ever.
The House That Screamed is a seminal slice of Spanish gothic.
The film looks better on this disc than it did when you first saw it in high school English class.
The film revels in the force of will that a virtuosic Joan Crawford allows Mildred Pierce.
Tobe Hooper’s original The Texas Chain Saw Massacre still cuts the competition to the bone.
Career of Evil: Jess Franco’s Adaptations of the Marquis de Sade’s Justine and Eugenie
Across these two films, Franco finds fresh fodder for his own personal preoccupations.
Rivette’s beguiling, minor-key manor mystery receives a solid Blu-ray release.
Arrow’s set is sure to be remembered as of the most impressive home video releases of 2023.
This release brings needed attention to a once lost film from an often neglected filmmaker.
Welles’s noir gets a sterling new transfer as well as a fine roster of extras both old and new.
Review: Hype Williams’s 1998 Crime Drama Belly Gets Lionsgate 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Edition
Hype Williams’s cult noir looks more eye-popping than ever on Lionsgate’s UHD.