Villeneuve’s film is a milestone of precision craftsmanship on a gargantuan scale.
The sensibilities of Quentin Tarantino and Tony Scott come together to fashion one of the cornerstone films of the early 1990s.
Thanks to its smart, sophisticated direction and sharp performances, Apple TV+’s Severance mercifully doesn’t feel like work.
This Blu-ray makes a fine case for the film being a highpoint in the careers of David Cronenberg, Stephen King, and Christopher Walken.
Jamie Dornan is a stiff whom Jon Hamm immediately upstages, and this dynamic underscores why the film is so tedious and unsatisfying.
Only when left to their own devices do the film’s stars enter the less manic, more heartfelt realm of the book.
It’s a relief to have Schrader’s underrated sexual psychodrama outfitted with the ravishing transfer it deserves.
Arrow Video offers a miraculously gorgeous restoration of Ferrara’s grubby and neurotic work of lo-fi horror expressionism.
The film is fascinated and captivated by the kind of man who’d want to put on a bat costume and save people.
Disney’s exceptional, gorgeous update of Rudyard Kipling’s adventure classic is one of the studio’s best films in a generation.
There’s emotional heft to Baxter and Annie’s relationship, but that’s thanks more to the actors than the script.
Jon Favreau doesn’t know how to fit the material’s familiar elements into his own coherent vision.
It’s more committed to printing the uplifting legend of its title character than in actually examining the human beings underneath.
Kino’s stunning 1080p transfer should more than satisfy Jonathan Demme completists.
The end result evokes the life of working artists without sentimentality or undue grandeur.
It’s not the past’s ugliness that terrifies us in Cimino’s film, but its far more intimidating immensity.
This hodgepodge of a crime film looks great on Sony’s Blu-ray, but the package offers only crumbs in the extras department.
The film is a sloppy cross-mutation of overused generic plot templates.
Paramount offers a bold, beautiful A/V transfer Spielberg’s magnificently paced film.
With Criterion’s Blu-ray release of Heaven’s Gate, late New Hollywood’s most famous hot mess gets a little bit hotter.