Car movies remind us of all the things that can happen when we turn the key.
It’s safe to say our cultural fascination with the blood-sucking undead isn’t going away anytime soon.
Review: Francis Ford Coppola’s Bram Stoker’s Dracula Gets 30th Anniversary 4K UHD Edition
The film gets a gorgeous new UHD presentation that you can really sink your teeth into.
The Godfather films have set home-video standards for decades, and that trend continues with Paramount’s astonishing 4K restorations.
This new release finally allows one to savor the unexpected gothic intensity of Francis Ford Coppola’s debut film.
This re-edit clarifies The Godfather Part III as a bombastic yet ultimately insular morality play.
Lionsgate’s lavish presentation of the film’s various cuts represents the latest high-water mark for a catalog studio release.
These films are as elegant as they are expansive, acutely perceptive and operatic in their high emotions.
The film remains as legendary for its artistry as it is for the difficulty of its making.
One of Francis Ford Coppola’s most underrated and deeply felt films receives a gorgeously ephemeral restoration.
In one ill-conceived decree, Coppola transformed himself from cinema’s godfather into cinema’s helicopter parent.
While female filmmakers might be in short supply at the festival, female subjects initially seem common.
Coppola’s ambition had always been his best friend and worst enemy.
This edition makes a weak, halfhearted case for Coppola’s latest oddity, which can use all the defense it can get.
Monstrosity, terror, and horror all correspond in some way to chaos in its old-fashioned sense and with chaos in its scientific sense.
It bears mentioning that one of the two times we’ve gotten this category wrong was when we disregarded the almost always reliable frilliest-always-wins rule.
The posters chicly suggest this won’t be just another tour of Charlie Sheen’s twisted brain.
This is a father-son love story, and it’s caustic, complex, and utterly compelling.
They’re also unassailable in their perfection, and could easily fall at the top of any all-time best list arrived at by consensus.
This is a novel driven by craft as much as it is by weighty themes.