Night Gallery’s final season gets a stunning 2K restoration and a cornucopia of bonus materials.
Mike Hodges’s oddball noir Pulp gets a terrific Blu-ray upgrade and a handful of essential new supplements from Arrow Video.
Criterion’s generous helping of supplements goes a long way in contextualizing the achievement of Carroll Ballard’s entrancing vision.
This third and supposedly final edition in the franchise is nothing more than an uncomfortably transparent contractual obligation.
Signs of the push-pull of commerce and art that have always been present within TCMFF were more apparent this year.
For a three-hour, epoch-ending epic made by a comedy neophyte, it yields a treasure of showbiz lore on a par with the loot buried under the Big W.
A top-heavy double feature that provides an excellent representation of one of Disney’s most underrated works.
Have some of what Groucho’s having and discover Preminger’s lovably batshit-crazy paean to changing times.
The story attempts to tap into the sense of extraordinary childhood wonder that typified Amazing Stories.
The Fox and the Hound has been consistently underrated, if not downright forgotten.
An acceptable disc for one of Disney’s best and most unheralded animated features.
I bet you thought I’d go from unpacking Hepburn’s ying to examining George Peppard’s ying-a-ling
Hey, Paramount. The 45th anniversary is the sapphire anniversary.