Barry Lyndon gets a new, suitably jaw-dropping 4K digital restoration.
Stanley Kubrick’s Paths of Glory gets a superlative 4K transfer and an enlightening commentary track from Kino Lorber.
Boldly stylized and intricately structured, The Killing gets a sterling 4K transfer and one very satisfying supplement from Kino Lorber.
A fantastic commentary track and sparkling new 4K transfer make this an essential release.
A Clockwork Orange, possibly the most polarizing film in a much-debated filmography, receives a remarkable visual upgrade.
This release is among the most jaw-dropping transfers ever encoded onto Blu-ray.
This Blu-ray continues Criterion’s marvelous minting and contextualization of beloved Columbia classics.
Nicholson wears her erudition lightly, her swift, pared prose allowing the resonances of Cruise’s career to sneak up on you.
This scathing Vietnam War-set film finds an army cameraman embedded with a small infantry platoon on their final search-and-destroy mission.
That multitude, with regard to films, is rather restricted to a specific kind of cinephilia, primarily an overt emphasis on Classical Hollywood.
Today, A24 released its first U.S. trailer for Jonathan Glazer’s latest.
Stanley Kubrick’s The Killing is a blisteringly taut decimation of post-World War II entitlement.
The randy I’m So Excited got us thinking of other films that take to the skies
It positions The Shining as standing in for cinema, for history, for obsession, for postmodern theory buckling under the film’s heft.
It’s been part of the film canon for so long that it’s valuable to remind audiences how gloriously alive and just plain fun it is.
Reportedly, people have been living at the Highclere site for roughly 1,300 years.
There’s no reason for Kino’s welcome release of his impressive debut to feel like anything but an overdue, completists-only offering.
From L.A. to Vegas to Thailand, the stops on our list boast some very memorable hotels, which vary in their abilities to accommodate, relax, and terrify.
You thought Dolph Lundgren, Meryl Streep, and Darth Sidious couldn’t co-habitate. You were wrong, Padawan.
Room 237 is more companion piece than standalone work.