Arrow’s 4K UHD Blu-ray is sure to be the definitive release of RoboCop for years to come.
This gnarly, amazing, quasi-hypocritical action thriller has been outfitted with an improved transfer and a superb bounty of extras.
Lynch’s misunderstood film receives a transformative restoration that brings its tarnished beauty to life.
The latest episode of Twin Peaks is most remarkable for its numerous arrivals and departures.
The episode’s frequent matched pairs and expository repetitions seem to draw attention to themselves.
Many of the events in the latest episode of Twin Peaks seem to depend on the toss of a coin.
The episode’s emotional epicenter is Bobby Briggs, now white-haired and working as a deputy for the department.
Parts of the episode play like one of David Lynch’s hermetically sealed surrealist short films.
The primetime debut of one of Criterion’s indies-in-residence, Soderbergh’s Oscar-winning drug war epic gets a terrific HD upgrade.
Paul Verhoeven’s fantastic commentary from the Criterion Collection DVD version is, sadly, not duplicated here.
So far, the new Bionic Woman seems unable to find its footing.
Verhoeven’s film set the tone for much of the Dutch auteur’s career in America.
This RoboCop release is like the DVD version of Delta City.
The Ghosts of Christmas Past, Showtime, and Taxi seemingly haunt every shot of the film.
Do you have dreams of owning The Manchurian Candidate?
The past is constantly being interrupted in the film, intruded on by a more pressing and paranoia-stricken present.
Silver City is about a prefab political puppet and the Haliburton-like corporation that pulls his strings.
A flimsy package, yes, but a great way to shush conservatives during painful get-togethers.
John Sayles’s agenda is a very leftist one yet his execution is so carefully and subtly pointed to ever rely on smarmy, easy answers.
While Lynch did intend to pack the film’s DVD with deleted scenes, rights issues prevented him from doing so.