Criterion gives Gilliam’s dark children’s tale a jolly good UHD upgrade.
Criterion’s new 2K Blu-ray adeptly demonstrates why the film is ready for its (redux) close-up.
As you’d expect from a series with such a dismal track record of successful weddings, its idea of presents isn’t much better, and even the most sincere, like Sam’s, comes with a disclaimer.
The problem these men face is that there are plenty of boys who find themselves in positions of power, and that’s not even mentioning King Tommen in King’s Landing.
It’s fitting that the titular House of Black and White is home to No One, for if there’s anything true of Westeros, it’s that nothing is ever black and white.
It’s seen many home-video releases over the years, but Criterion’s Blu-ray finally gives the film the package it deserves.
This minimal setup stands in sharp contrast to the previous season’s showstoppers.
Criterion continues to show enduring love for Gilliam’s wondrous magnum opus with their generous Blu-ray package.
Yes, the title of Albatross is a metaphor.
Fox gives Peckinpah’s ferocious near-masterpiece a killer visual/audio upgrade.
An underwhelming Blu-ray to remind viewers that the problems with Terry Gilliam’s recent films are not an entirely new development.
It’s a testament to Michael Caine that Is Anybody There? is even sporadically palatable..
A strained farce in which lots of one-dimensional Brits converge at the memorial service for their family’s patriarch and proceed to act like buffoons.
Yes, folks, people over 50 still like to get their groove on.
You won’t be able to take your eyes off Anne Reid, whose performance is a thing of rare beauty.
As Straw Dogs makes clear, the consequences of enduring a violent rite of passage is ultimately suffering and alienation.
Straw Dogs deservedly gets the deluxe treatment from the always-exceptional Criterion Collection.