It’s hardly surprising that the series’s mysteries are rarely meant to withstand scrutiny.
Kino rolls out a well-deserved red carpet for Leni’s expressionist 1927 silent classic.
Borden’s ultra-low-budget Born in Flames is one of the most exciting films of 1980s.
This anthem of aspiration and struggle leaves no doubt about Coppola’s beliefs.
The film recalls the themes of Rebecca and the temporal displacements of Alain Resnais’s work.
The overriding suspense here is largely created by watching truth become negotiable.
As a director and co-writer, Scott Thomas’s instincts lean toward the literal.
The film powerfully depicts an immigration process that offers no clear path to success.
The film adopts a diaristic, epistolary form that flattens its emotional topography.
Zwerin’s documentary is essential for its implicit reflection on the ethics of portraiture.
The film is most convincing in its depiction of an ongoing struggle to define oneself.
This excellent 4K release rolls into town on a gravy train with biscuit wheels.
This hard-sci-fi procedural slash disaster thriller pushes the envelope in subtle ways.
As in his stand-up, Pryor deftly mixes humor and tragedy throughout the film.
Kino’s release marks the finest North American home-video presentation of the film to date.
The Antichrist is an intriguing pastiche of ’70s movie trends.
In & Out struts onto 4K UHD with a superb transfer and a positively gay array of extras.
This 4K digital restoration of the original director’s cut looks outstanding.
Claire Denis’s sophomore feature is a clear-eyed portrait of a world of violence and exploitation.
Twister is so 1990s it hurts.