This Blu-ray reveals the film as an essential origin point for historicizing the trajectory of effects-driven cinema.
This package boasts an excellent visual transfer, but it arguably comes up short in the audio department.
A minor work and a masterpiece from the silents’ most kinetic clown, with peeks at the magician's methods.
The story of Marie Dressler’s career is one of the most anomalous and curious of show business tales.
The proscenium arch that marks the difference between theater and film doesn’t get obliterated in Cukor’s film.
Dinner at Eight is entitled to a more deluxe treatment.