The 4K presentation affirms the film’s position among the gutsiest Golden Age crime epics.
Kino’s vibrant transfer breathes new life into Lewis Allen’s wonderfully strange, sexually charged Technicolor noir.
This release is a knockout on points, at least, with a strong transfer and a meaty mono track.
This non-classic has plenty of boilerplate pulp-Guignol appeal.
This hardboiled, emotionally potent Cinemascope sonata of addiction and self-defeatism gets one of the best Blu-ray releases of the year.
Understanding Screenwriting #56: The Other Guys, Edge of Darkness, Great Day in the Morning, & More
I always thought Harry Langdon was creepy. Jerry Lewis seemed mostly silly.
The Hustler reaffirms your faith in the movies.
There is no lonelier American movie than The Hustler, and no better a flawed hero than “Fast” Eddie Felson.
The Roaring Twenties revels in a relativism that keeps its momentum fresh and elusive.
Raoul Walsh’s fast-paced film makes its own case.