Gilliam’s visually inventive film gets a phenomenal 4K UHD upgrade from Criterion.
Review: Francis Ford Coppola’s Bram Stoker’s Dracula Gets 30th Anniversary 4K UHD Edition
The film gets a gorgeous new UHD presentation that you can really sink your teeth into.
Universal brings Licorice Pizza to home video with a beautiful Blu-ray, though the lack of a UHD option for such a gorgeous film is frustrating.
It’s the hints of danger, employed like ghost notes in a shuffling rhythm, that lend the film its sneaky depth of feeling.
In the film, what starts as a subtle undercurrent of knowing humor curdles into overt self-referentiality.
It will be exciting to see how Jarmusch takes his transcendence of genre conventions to its breaking point.
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs is a silly, mood-shifting shaggy-dog anthology that feels at once structurally ambitious and almost perfunctory.
Chemistry counts for something, and Robert Redford and Sissy Spacek have it in spades in The Old Man & the Gun.
One of Francis Ford Coppola’s most underrated and deeply felt films receives a gorgeously ephemeral restoration.
Altman’s sprawling tragicomic testament to fate and infidelity gets an impressive 4K upgrade from Criterion.
Criterion’s Blu-ray for The Fisher King packs an audio/visual wallop, but is undermined by its transparent interest in communal naval-gazing.
Epstein provides only a cursory understanding of Marvin as cultural icon.
Starting tomorrow, we will predict the winners in all four general field categories of the 55th Annual Grammy Awards.
This hodgepodge of a crime film looks great on Sony’s Blu-ray, but the package offers only crumbs in the extras department.
In places, McDonagh’s follow-up to In Bruges evokes Charlie Kaufmann’s more methodically thought-through structuralist exercises.
No, it’s not just you.
All of the extras are recycled from the DVD, so there's some standard-definition content that's suffered upscaling.
Bad As Me is a brash return to form that finds Tom Waits still occupying his usual comfort zones.
Resurrection is The Book of Eli’s game, from its tale of a post-apocalyptic society’s reformation, to its hero emerging from the ashes of a nuclear holocaust.
The film is a galumphing bacchanal of illusionist clutter that’s frequently unwieldy but rarely less than deeply felt.