If given the option, voters will break for a lighter or more unambiguously inspirational film.
We’re going to break with tradition here by not rallying behind the period film.
Culkin has practically run the table this Oscar season, and with good reason.
This is destined to be among the best home video releases of the year.
‘The Damned’ Review: Thordur Palsson’s Atmospheric, If Narratively Thin, Morality Tale
Place here is less important than its function as an allegorical echo chamber.
This German silent drama is a stirring vision of the world gripped by a sinister moral vice.
The film’s sense of evasion is as much a hindrance as it is a badge of honor.
Triet’s film builds a strong case as one of the best courtroom dramas in recent memory.
I Am Cuba’s politics are crude and transparent but poetically revealed.
Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire’s Asphalt City is less a film than a guttersnipe’s wallow.
Diop’s riveting meta-drama receives a series of extras that exalt its wide-ranging themes.
The extras further attest to Nan Goldin’s commitment to intertwining the personal and political.
We may as well just light it up and acquiesce to the inevitable all-consuming blast.
The film makes a convincing case for Torres’s belief in art as a narcissistic act of self-care.
With Criterion’s glorious 4K restoration of Videodrome, the new flesh lives anew.
Roeg’s Don’t Look Now is driven by a crushing sense of emotional desolation.
The sirenic, jittery sensuality of the film’s images benefit from the 4K uplift.
The Exorcist still gets under the skin after 50 years.
The first season of gets an image/sound presentation that’s practically beyond reproach.
Godard’s debut feature feels immortal on Criterion’s 4K UHD Blu-ray release.