Roeg’s Don’t Look Now is driven by a crushing sense of emotional desolation.
The sirenic, jittery sensuality of the film’s images benefit from the 4K uplift.
The Man Who Fell to Earth receives a serviceable 4K transfer and a bounty of bonus materials from Lionsgate Home Entertainment.
At the center of Roeg’s stylistic excess is Houston, balancing effortlessly between high camp and horror.
One of the greatest and most devastating of all romantic mysteries arrives just in time for Valentine’s Day.
M83 has teamed up with actress turned director Bryce Dallas Howard for the music video for “Claudia Lewis.”
Andrzej Zulawski’s first movie made in exile is a meditation on the preposterousness of being a couple.
Image’s barren single-disc of this cheeky fairy tale is essential for Roeg-ians, but an optional curiosity for most.
Four proto-celebrities go Roeg, and Gary Busey enters the Criterion Collection for the second time. What’s not to like?
Descriptions of plot are likely to suggest a preachiness that isn’t at all present in the film’s rhythmic, heady form.
Roeg’s is a singular, haunting sci-fi experience.
Even when you have no idea what’s going on in The Man Who Fell to Earth, you won’t want to look away.
It figures that the sex scene from Don’t Look Now has become more legendary than the film itself.
Until Criterion gets its hands on the film, keep this DVD in the permanent collection.
Walkabout suggests that the precarious relationship between industry and nature isn’t so easily reconciled.