George Armitage’s captivatingly eccentric neo-noir is assisted by three magnetic leads and a healthy dose of black comedy.
Kino’s UHD upgrade of The Silence of the Lambs presents the film at theatrical-grade quality.
Criterion superbly refurbishes one of the most disturbing and least conventional love affairs in the history of cinema.
Kino’s stunning 1080p transfer should more than satisfy Jonathan Demme completists.
Demme’s film provides a rhythm to which we can revolutionize our private lives.
One part ’70s rogue male action movie, another part innovative Hollywood blockbuster pushed all the way to 11.
Thoroughly rehashed and oddly misanthropic, The Goods, frankly, doesn’t deliver the goods.
As his overactive jump cuts prove, Russ Meyer directs films as though he’s perpetually on the cusp of a fantastic orgasm.
The original Valley of the Dolls was a Bentley. Meyer and Ebert’s Beyond is a Rolls.
Hotchi Motchi! The Critic gets a respectful and well-deserved DVD treatment.