Hawks’s resonant, prescient, entertaining, enormously influential pre-war adventure receives the A/V refurbishing it richly deserves.
This Blu-ray release illustrates how Lubitsch aided the resistance, as only he could: with dignity, always dignity.
Slender but lovingly textured, The Wedding Night is worth discovering.
A bare-bones DVD, but this is a forgotten 1930s melodrama worth discovering.
Perhaps unjustly, To Be or Not to Be’s wit continues to be overshadowed by its touchy plot.
It’s good to have To Be or Not to Be on DVD, but it deserved more in the extras department.
The self-reflectivity of The Errand Boy is so pervasive it truly becomes the content of the film.
The film organizes its space within a nodal web of slightly claustrophobic locations, always shrouded in fog or cigarette smoke.