Columbo remains one of the most appealing and iconic TV series of the 1970s.
Wenders’s fantasy of angels in Berlin before the end of the Cold War takes flight on 4K UHD.
Criterion outfits one of Cassavetes’s greatest and most daring films with a stunning transfer and updated supplements.
With this beautiful and lively transfer, Criterion brings Elaine May’s neglected masterpiece of male alienation back to pulsating life.
The In-Laws looks swell in its Blu-ray debut thanks to another stellar release from the Criterion Collection.
In an efficiently run universe, Criterion’s set would come with any film-school acceptance letter.
It’s easy to see what displeased critics and audiences alike at the time of the film’s release.
The most miserable thing about melancholy is that it has no object.
Blue Underground rescues another solid and deserving B movie from the vaults.
Even for non-fanatics, this packaging of perhaps the most beloved European film of a generation is heaven-sent.
The grand theme of Wim Wenders’s film is storytelling in all its forms as a coping mechanism of the human race.
To be worth a damn, the material must avoid insincerity.
The audio is surprisingly lush, with Peter Falk’s farts resonating dynamically across the entire sound stage.
Paul Reiser is mad about Dad in The Thing About My Folks, an infuriatingly bad tale of father-son bonding.
Shark Tale made me want to immediately start polluting the ocean.
In the end, there’s nothing hiding beneath all the brio.
Corky Romano gets a very limited DVD treatment.
That sound, ladies and gentleman, is that of Kattan’s movie career smashing into a brick wall.