With this extraordinary transfer, Criterion honors the profound hothouse intensity of Spike Lee’s greatest film.
Cox’s punk western has been dug up from the dregs of oblivion by Kino and handsomely given a long-overdue director’s cut Blu-ray treatment.
The film thrillingly plays out as an almost-Lynchian duet between warring states of consciousness.
Beyond being asinine and unwittingly cryptic, the film is also a slice of unintentional sleaze.
Repo Chick mostly feels tired and more scattershot than usual for Alex Cox.
As a writer and director, Victor Nunez is earnest and compassionate, but also crushingly literal.
Do the Right Thing is an undiluted representation of its creator’s artistic command.
As Mister Señor Love Daddy commands, “WAKE UP” to this absolutely essential home video.
Patricia Arquette’s voice is kind of narcotic.
After Sideways and, now, Bottle Shock, it’s official: I love wine as much as I hate movies about people who love wine.
A bad movie is worst when you can sense the meaningful intentions of its creators.