Glazer’s eerie, melancholy film maudit finally makes its way to high-definition home video.
Get that slow-motion button on your remote control ready.
Warner Home Video does an amazing job preserving Vilmos Zsigmond’s legendary cinematography.
This is perhaps the closest thing to a definitive Blue Velvet DVD one can expect.
There are enough features on Universal’s disc to make anyone crazy.
A terrible video transfer for a remarkable film that, at the very least, is still wonderful to listen to.
For the half dozen people who actually liked Rollerball, this DVD edition is a keeper.
Crowe’s trip down pop-culture lane gets the kind of ethereal DVD treatment it so deserves.
The commentary is an engaging reminder that good cinema can come from very small budgets.
Snow Dogs gets the hearty DVD treatment even though someone should have thrown this film to the dogs.
Corky Romano gets a very limited DVD treatment.
This awesome DVD package exposes the technical brouhaha behind Linklater’s magical concept art.
From the killer interactive menus to the gruesome, richly informative featurettes, this is one of the more stylish DVDs of the year.
This is an essential purchase for fans and novices of Arnold’s films and ’50s sci-fi flicks.
Trumbull is no Kubrick but fans of his campy Silent Running will applaud Universal’s generous DVD treatment.
The folks at Universal have given Scott’s cult classic a legendary DVD treatment.
A flawed but intimate DVD presentation for Australia’s critically acclaimed Lantana.
A flawed film about boxing’s greatest heavyweight gets a lightweight DVD treatment.
Just in time for Christmas in July. Wrap it up and give it to that woman in your life still hung up on Meg Ryan faking orgasms.
A splendid package from First Run Features for a little-seen gem perhaps best savored on a rainy, meditative day.
Live at the Albert is a must-have for Williams fans and it might just recruit a few more.