If the film is undoubtedly Sirk’s giddiest trash entertainment, it’s also the shallowest example of his less-heralded humanist acuity.
Imprint’s Blu-ray is further proof that Terence Malick’s sophomore feature is among the most visually dazzling films ever made.
Mann goes northward and skewers the myth of western pioneering in The Far Country.
This Blu-ray is light on contextual supplements, but nearly immaculate on a technical level.
The film’s atmosphere of simultaneous intimacy and disconnection is haunting.
The most valuable reason to reinvest in the film after Paramount’s bare-bones 1999 release is this disc’s impeccable widescreen transfer.