Criterion gives Franju’s 1960 horror classic a remarkable facelift.
Criterion’s release of the film is a fitting tribute to a titanic career.
Dwan’s 1949 war film gets a marvelous visual upgrade.
It remains at once the most bracingly concrete and amorously diffuse of Antonioni’s films.
Wenders’s psychologically complex, beautifully stylized international breakthrough arrives in a richly outfitted Blu-ray package.
Criterion’s latest Eclipse set reveals an artist whose deceptively delicate touch helped French filmmaking transition into a new era of modernity.
These films find Varda at a succession of cultural and cinematic crossroads which evidence her uncommon adaptability and insatiable curiosity.
This influential, eternally enigmatic classic arrives on a lush new Blu-ray.
One of cinema’s great romantic tragedies, Chaplin’s Limelight continues to exude a very real weight in each of its rich, elegant images.
Reed’s post-war thriller arrives on Blu-ray from Criterion looking appropriately atmospheric.
Herzog’s intended opus, like the task of his unintended surrogate, was at once hampered and heightened by its leader’s creative vision.
Kinoshita’s first five films are a bastion of cinematic grace and gentility.
Review: Allan Dwan’s ‘Sands of Iwo Jima,’ Starring John Wayne, on Olive Films Blu-ray
Dwan’s film is an intimate rendering of a monumental event, featuring John Wayne in one of his most emotionally complex roles.
These 14 films, modest yet irrepressible in their curiosity, are once geographically small scale and sociologically vast.
Mann’s last great film carries with it an unshakeable aura of finality in its world-weary temperament.
The film’s formal construction and ideological constitution stands at the nexus of tradition and progression.
Raoul Walsh’s film is notable for its unique sense of period and locale, character, and consequence.
Pialat’s film makes its Region 1 home-video debut in a gracious, appropriately reverential Blu-ray package.
Kiarostami’s turn-of-the-millennium masterpiece arrives on a pristine-looking Blu-ray with an essential commentary track.
The film remains a fascinating, occasionally prophetic snapshot of a young filmmaker figuring out his political and aesthetic ideologies.