This nearly free-associational thriller has been outfitted with a beautiful transfer that underscores all its eerie nooks and crannies.
The supplements may not be new, but they’re still meaty, and the 4K restoration accentuates the brutal, beautiful punch of an essential noir.
This is, to date, the best-looking home-video release of Hitchcock’s most underrated film.
Conrack is the rare inspirational film that bothers to elucidate on both the benefits and the classist perils of bold, unfettered do-gooding.
The addition of a few Frankenstein sequels and James Whale's Edgar Allen Poe films would have made horror fans all over Region-1 ecstatic.
Thomas is back on Broadway in the Manhattan Theatre Club’s revival of Henrik Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People.
Howard’s cutely innocuous sci-fi tale of an alien race helping elderly white people arrives in an adequate Blu-ray package.
Shadow of a Doubt is about awakening, the simultaneous darkening and enlarging of the world.
The extras may be recycled, but Hitchcock’s view of fragile normalcy is seminal viewing.
Like so many of Alfred Hitchcock’s movies, Lifeboat is a deeply Catholic work.
Lifeboat is a very underrated Hitchcock film that deserves serious reexamination.