Criterion’s release of Visions of Eight offers plenty of goodies not found in their 100 Years of Olympic Films box set.
In terms more familiar to the Olympiad, let’s call this set the Criterion Collection’s record time.
Kino impressively beautifies a cult western that’s somehow equally hindered and empowered by its self-conscious eccentricity.
Mizruchi provides analysis that’s offered a bit too much as objective fact.
It’s hard to look at Tuesday Weld’s career without feeling a tiny pang of regret for what could have been.
This sports doc is a handsome but uneven artifact of an era when politics and games seemed inextricable.
Bonnie and Clyde the movie was taken as nothing short of a cinematic revolution in 1967.
If it doesn’t seem to carry the heft expected of a film of its standing, the pillowy lips of its two leads make up the difference.