Bullet-riddled and crackling with quotable dialogue, the film gets a handsome new 2K transfer and a handful of insightful extras.
What’s absent here is the murderous lust for power that dovetails with Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s lust for each other.
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs is a silly, mood-shifting shaggy-dog anthology that feels at once structurally ambitious and almost perfunctory.
Everyone in George Clooney’s film is a bastard, worthy of being shot, stabbed, blown up, or poisoned with lye.
Criterion’s Blu-ray should prove to be a landmark release for progressing home-video distribution/filmmaker collaborations.
There’s a simple magnetism inherent in this kind of filmmaking, and the Coens know how to orchestrate it.
The Coen brothers’ sardonic revisionism of Hollywood’s golden era is, ironically, their most earnest feature.
A grippingly expressive espionage yarn, another exemplary entry in Spielberg’s late-career period, receives a top-tier, must-buy transfer.
Joel and Ethan Coen’s idiosyncrasies elevate Hail, Caesar! above the level of a mere creative exercise.
Criterion’s heavyweight disc is a major release for the label that may pass through the market square without much fanfare.
Only rarely does Steven Spielberg observe how queasily at odds our patriotism is with our humanity.
The film’s chief misstep is taking its title too literally, and ultimately depicting Louie as an indestructible, and thus largely inhuman, superhero.
I was telling Sven about the time Edna bought that Blu-ray there and then he told me they came out with another one with a better image, doncha know?
This paean to cinema, and to the kindness of strangers, curdles into miserablism.
Llewyn Davis is arguably the most vivid and complex character the Coens have dreamed up since Marge Gunderson.
Like the folk scene it immerses us in, Inside Llewyn Davis is intrigued by authenticity.
CBS Films will release Inside Llewyn Davis on December 6.
The film has enough latent charm and unique personality to standout amid a career of wild diversions.
Crimewave is a singularly entertaining watch, a platform for its makers’ most wildly unchecked, brazenly silly, excesses.
Instead of understanding the femme fatale as a genre staple, Grossman wants to dispense of the characterization altogether.