This all-star courtroom thriller is also an underrated study of a master artist’s social demons.
Chabrol’s ironic and elegiac take on Shakespeare’s Hamlet makes its Region A Blu-ray debut with a gorgeous transfer and little else.
Franju’s 1960 classic continues to represent a pivot point between classic and modern horror idioms.
Lisa and the Devil is easily the oddest duck in Bava’s filmography, sumptuously photographed and exceedingly surreal.
Luchino Visconti’s The Leopard is quite simply the most lavish historical epic ever captured on celluloid.
This three-disc set of 1900 is significant for presenting Bertolucci’s most epic epic in its most complete form.
The title is the only amusing thing about this dull work of nunsploitation cinema.
A near-definitive, personal work of cunning artifice, buffed to a digital sheen and supplemented with persuasive views of its iconoclastic creator.
The film examines a modern post-war environment where people’s lives are treated as nothing more than a means to financial success.
An already near-essential DVD release of an essential noir, updated for the high-def age.
It’s a landmark genre film for the simple fact that it shows just how scary something as simple as a mask can be.
A well-rendered package for a creepy but somewhat underwhelming film.
Dario Argento undervalues his material, but his set pieces are glorious enough that the film’s plot contrivances can be forgiven.