Red Rooms is intensely aware of our always-on, always-plugged-in culture.
Arrow’s box set feels like the definitive home video release of Rodriguez’s trilogy.
Woo’s old-school methods are in full effect, but they lose their elegance on digital.
Fede Álvarez maximizes what made the original movies so compelling.
Brooks’s film epitomizes his singular voice in the varied comedy landscape of the 1970s.
Warner’s disc looks magnificent in native 4K with Dolby Vision enhancement.
For Mendonça Filho, to reflect reality isn’t enough, as cinema has to find its own truth.
A24 offers a flawless A/V presentation of Glazer’s masterwork.
Godard’s sci-fi curio makes the leap to UHD with a revelatory 4K presentation.
To a considerable extent, Ritchie appropriates Henry Cavill’s effortless sleekness as his own.
The film generates stakes that are far too heavy for the threadbare structure to support.
Berri’s despondent neo-noir looks gorgeous on Radiance’s gleaming transfer.
‘Fly Me to the Moon’ Review: Greg Berlanti’s Space Age Rom-Com Gets Far on Star Chemistry
The shift toward the weighty throws off the pace of what had been a charming rom-com.
This four-disc set of Peckinpah’s great film maudit represents a profound labor of love.
Wenders’s autumnal, Ozuian drama receives a gorgeous UHD release from Criterion.
Criterion resurrects one of the first great films of the millennium from video neglect.
With this film, Welles laid out the blueprint for future revisionist takes on Shakespeare’s works.
‘Eephus’ Review: A Playful, Melancholic Ode to a Fading Universe and the Ties that Bind
Carson Lund treats the power of a shared interest with profound, elegiac empathy.
Review: Vittorio De Seta’s ‘Bandits of Orgosolo’ on Limited Edition Radiance Films Blu-ray
De Seta’s evocative work of ethnographic fiction looks gorgeous on Radiance’s Blu-ray.
Schrader’s Bressonian anti-erotic thriller looks gorgeous on Arrow Video’s 4K UHD release.