This set compiles a slate of overlooked films alongside an equally idiosyncratic series of extras.
Olive kicks off its Signature line in style with an essential update of one of their early Blu-rays.
In a perfect world, Fleischer’s rowdy super-production would be in regular 70mm rotation at our few surviving repertory movie houses.
Nicholas Ray’s Johnny Guitar is a film that’s many things to many people, from camp spectacular to revisionist genre epic, and nearly every reading seems viable.
The red-headed stepchild of Sam Peckinpah’s career is accorded an uneven A/V clean-up by Kino Lorber.
Easily the best home-video release to date of this sci-fi spectacle, with a near-perfect audio track and enough extras to satisfy any diehard.
The film exploited the possibilities of shaking the audience up with carefully planted, obtrusive noise in a sea of uneasy silence.
Criterion may not adorn Jubal with much more than a reliably top-shelf transfer, but the salvaging of a lost masterpiece is reward enough.
Craven’s deep-seated ambivalence with his own religious upbringing sometimes sparks the rote Jesus freakery of Deadly Blessing to life.
Ray’s subversive, still-radical film finally makes its North American home video debut with an impressive transfer from Olive Films.
The film fairly oozes with the tempestuous emotions that point back to Nicholas Ray.
The film alternates between third-rate combat sequences designed to cover up the athletically challenged nature of its leads.
The new edition of The Poseidon Adventure is as hefty as Shelly Winters.
Producer Irwin Allen’s first of a neverending cycle of disaster epics is a guilty pleasure to end all guilty pleasures.
Title be damned, Sturges’s classic isn’t a bad way to spend a day.
John Sturges transforms the expansive emptiness of his frame into an omnipresent character.
For fans of Carpenter’s cult classic, MGM restores the film’s infamous first reel. An A-number-1 DVD package.
With Snake’s final act of subversion, Carpenter heralds the power of analog to bring together sparring nations.
Just as the show got better with every episode, so did the animation.
You’re not buying this for the snow on the ground, but for SpongeBob’s bipolar breakdowns.