After Hours mines urban anxiety to unsettling yet often hilarious effect.
Kino’s 4K release offers the ultimate experience of one mean, bleak trip to hell.
Kino outfits Eastwood’s bleak western with a sturdy transfer that honors its savage beauty.
Fonda’s beautiful, unjustly overlooked western has been outfitted with a gorgeous transfer and an eclectic collection of supplements.
This Blu-ray release positions the film as a definitive document of the political tumult in late-1960s America.
The significant boost to the film’s image and sound quality alone makes an upgrade to Criterion’s Blu-ray a must.
Eastwood’s other western trilogy won’t be challenged, but this set gives an interesting view of a star at a crucial crossroads in his career.
This amusingly introspective family film, despite its self-analytical conceit, never devolves into cloying narcissism.
It’s a tragedy to show up at work to give away more of your time when you’ve failed to define yourself the night before.
The back of the box calls the film a Chinese puzzle. Are they sure they didn’t mean Chinese Water Torture?
For all the misappropriated hatred spewed about the film back in 1988, it follows the Gospels with diligence and faith.
Clint Eastwood’s dust bowl drama is a sensitive road picture about a mostly luckless aspiring country music singer.
While not enough of a grand statement to be taken as a career turning point, the film nonetheless signaled a change in the winds for Eastwood.