Civil War is intelligent precision filmmaking trained on an impossible subject.
The Power of the Dog receives a 4K UHD release that matches its subtle but sumptuous beauty.
This dreamy, playful, tender ode to having loved and lost instead of never loved at all finally gets the transfer that it deserves.
Sofia Coppola’s hypnotic and elegiac debut feature gets a sterling UHD upgrade from the Criterion Collection.
The film looks at times like a stiff-jawed period piece, but it ripples underneath with a prickly modern sensibility.
The show’s myriad absurdities are resonant reminders of how tough it is to get lost in the labyrinth of capitalism.
Coppola’s luscious and formidable debut feature gets a deserved star treatment from the Criterion Collection.
It’s the obnoxious equivalent of trying to have a serious conversation with people who are high out of their minds.
Sofia Coppola serves up a cautionary revenge tale told from multiple perspectives, and thus none at all.
Coppola is faithful to the trajectory of Thomas Cullinan’s original story while reorienting our allegiances.
Taraji P. Henson triumphantly articulates the pained dignity of Katherine Johnson’s pent-up frustration.
It starts off as a dynamic parable about faith before wilting into a glum and rather disingenuous paean to the family.
Hossein Amini’s sequences are engineered for narrative efficiency, often at the expense of thematic or affectual aims
Lars von Trier’s pretenses of self-interrogation and cross-examination avail themselves as especially useful when considering his work.
The highlight of Juan Solanas’s film is the moment Jim Sturgess’s Adam inadvertently pisses on the ceiling.
The film’s pictorial tone is one of asphalt-crunching, dawn-breaking, icicle-defrosting meditativeness.
The actresses quickly prove that inside-joke-filled bonds are par for the course with close-knit movie shoots.
This nearly pitch-black comedy is better than its tiresome use of ’90s pop references.
These cinematic sisters leave a mark as strong as a thicker-than-water bond.
Bang and whimper all rolled up into one, Melancholia gets a glorious Blu-ray transfer from Magnolia.