The film remains a conscientious depiction of the bitter realities of race in America.
Criterion’s Blu-ray release goes lean on supplemental material, but rewards with stellar picture and sound presentation.
The excellent supplements that lends more context to Capra the artist than the film itself.
This beautifully composed, workmanlike noir will be enjoyable to those looking to trace the evolution of Sirk’s complex mise-en-scène.
Ford’s hugely fascinating and troublesome debut in color gets a serviceable but unremarkable A/V transfer from Twilight Time.
We’ve rounded up 15 movie weddings that—aw, hell—take the cake.
Smooching mannequins, campy tantrums, and repressed sexuality. And just in time for Valentine’s Day.
Notoriously, Colbert always wanted her left profile to be favored in two-shots, and this was a defining obsession.
I’m not going to lie: With these movies I expected the Lubitsch touch to at least cop a feel.
DVD Review: Preston Sturges: The Filmmaker’s Collection on Universal Home Entertainment
Having almost all of Preston Sturges’s films in one set is an irresistible prospect.
Even though Henry Fonda is uncharacteristically stiff here, it’s easy to see why he became Ford’s leading man of choice.
Those seeking another 1939 Ford revisionist history lesson should seek out Young Mr. Lincoln.