When it comes to playing at revolution, Leone suggests, it’s best not to get involved.
This 4K UHD release boasts a stellar image and an abundance of extras that fans will delight in digging into from the inside.
Arrow’s release is now the definitive edition of Sam Peckinpah’s 1965 near-masterpiece.
Criterion’s Blu-ray release of The Great Escape offers an abundance of goodies to dig into from the inside.
Hill’s pummeling debut feature starring Charles Bronson arrives on Blu-ray looking as muscular and stout as ever.
Here’s everything you wanted to know about The Great Escape but were too lazy to ask.
Twilight Time’s high-def restorative efforts prove that Major Dundee is anything but minor Peckinpah.
Yes, it has an inventive score and a game James Coburn, but In Like Flint is still a lumbering, hypocritical dinosaur.
Pitched somewhere between homage and parody, the film looks snazzier than ever in Twilight Time’s impressive Blu-ray transfer.
Pixar’s overlooked gem arrives in a worthwhile collector’s edition bursting with features and exceptional A/V presentation.
It’s refreshing to experience a Pixar film in the theater with a head and heart full of nostalgia instead of expectations.
It’s no Seven Samurai, but The Magnificent Seven is worthy of the flag it waves.
Charade, one of the great entertainments of the 1960s, finds its way onto Blu-ray with a spectacular visual transfer.
A stunning release of one of Pixar’s most sadly underappreciated works.
The President’s Analyst has aged slightly better than The Manchurian Candidate.
My mistake. Four coffins for all previous video versions of these films.
Cross of Iron would almost seem a proper mea culpa by Sam Peckinpah for his controversial career.
I don’t know whether Peckinpah is saying that war is hell or that war is gay. Either way, it’s all about the boys.
It offers a scathing critique of the military establishment, war, and its pervasive glorification.
The all-time favorite film of men who like to walk in on their friends having sex.