The native 4K presentation makes this the best-ever home video presentation of the film.
‘Picnic at Hanging Rock’ Review: Peter Weir’s Ethereal Portrait of Young Lives on a Precipice
The film’s sun-hued, bucolic images convey nature’s eerie, ambivalent power over all.
Gilliam’s film is a lysergic-tinged lament for the death of the American dream.
Leone’s classic plays out, as the title infers, as a dream image of the cruel Old West.
Boyle’s addiction to the cinematic image is as unremitting as Renton’s love affair with the spike.
With Criterion’s glorious 4K restoration of Videodrome, the new flesh lives anew.
Thelma & Louise is a legitimately unique rethinking of genre structure.
Warner Bros. honors a touchstone of film noir with a definitive home-video transfer.
Quentin Tarantino’s generation-defining classic receives a sterling, detail-rich 4K transfer.
Laika’s wry, sentimental work of kiddie horror receives a dazzling new A/V transfer.
James William Guercio’s offbeat counter-culture cult classic gets a timely Blu-ray release.
Warner Bros. gives its greatest musical yet another substantial home-video upgrade.
This disc’s 4K transfer abounds in extraordinary image detail and texture, which is befitting of the film’s exacting and meticulous maker.
Kino gives Billy Wilder’s racy comic masterpiece its best-ever home video presentation.
This 4K UHD release boasts a stellar image and an abundance of extras that fans will delight in digging into from the inside.
Criterion brings this quintessentially vital film into present-tense greatness once again.
The film finds pitch-black humor, horror, tragedy, and violence in a series of asides and digressions.
Ben Stiller Stiller had a taste for satire, and with The Cable Guy his strides toward more serious comedy grew more ambitious.
Warner Bros.’s 4K upgrade brings theatrical-level clarity to Edwards’s bold reboot of Toho’s Godzilla franchise.
Now on 4K Ultra HD, Mad Max reminds us anew that few contemporary action films match its appetite for risk.