The A/V transfers and extras on this collection will satisfy even the most obsessed Star Trek fan.
Terry Gilliam’s prescient and visionary 12 Monkeys gets a sterling UHD upgrade.
This atmospheric marrying of fact and fiction still resonates with its themes of political corruption and abuse of power.
The film largely evades any perspectives that might question the institutions that put our soldiers in harm’s way.
Rian Johnson’s film revives the comic whodunit, a la Clue, for an era of especially heightened class consciousness.
Kino’s release should help bring new eyes to this wonderfully offbeat Canadian thriller.
Time has been kind to 12 Monkeys, a compelling and unnerving genre exercise that boasts what may be Bruce Willis’s finest performance.
Writer-director Shana Feste’s film alternates between cutesy comedy and undercooked emotional drama.
Sam Rockwell did more on the campaign trail to legitimize unlikely redemption than anything Martin McDonagh gave him to work with.
The film is by and large a conspicuously manufactured thriller that moves between manipulative psych-outs.
Bharat Nalluri’s The Man Who Invented Christmas doesn’t seem remotely aware of the scenario’s ultimate irony.
Director Timothy Reckart’s The Star turns the greatest story ever told into just another kids’ movie.
He discusses staying excited about new projects, the luscious power of the theater, and more.
David Leveaux’s film cannily incorporates elements of spycraft and sheer trash into a familiar formula.
The inclusion of each cut of The New World marks this as the definitive home-video edition of Malick’s greatest film.
Atom Egoyan is only interested in using the Holocaust as fodder for carrot-dangling plot contrivances.
A sluggish fusion of a disease-of-the-week tearjerker with a comedic family crime romp that abounds in Boston-crime-movie details.
The chemistry between Pacino and his cast mates gives this lightly amusing contrivance surprising emotional resonance.
It culminates in a weepy climax that verifies its status as a proud hunk of propaganda from America’s massive self-help industry.
One of the most accomplished American dramas of the 1990s arrives on Blu-ray sporting a suitably exceptional A/V transfer.