Full transparency: all Blu-rays reviewed were provided by Kino Lorber, Arrow Video, Vinegar Syndrome, Fun City Editions, and Imprint Films. Believe it or not, I’ve been doing these reviews for over a year at this point and it’s been lovely watching how much it’s all grown. This originally started with me desperately wanting to review… Read more »
Feature Articles
Physical Media Isn’t Dead, It’s Undead: Blu-ray Reviews for October 2021
Full transparency: all Blu-rays reviewed were provided by Kino Lorber, Arrow Video, and Synapse Films. Finally, the best month of the year is here: OCTOBER! The one I’ve been waiting for, folks. There’s nothing quite like the thrills and chills of a month marinated in the macabre. As the days dwindle and the nights grow… Read more »
Islands of Resilience
Guest post by David Stringer, Associate Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies at the Department of Second Language Studies. “I am water, only because you are the ocean.” — from “Kissing the Opelua” by Donovan Kūhiō Colleps Over the last decade or so, there has been an ocean swell of indigenous filmmaking highlighting… Read more »
Physical Media Isn’t Dead, It Just Smells Funny: Blu-ray Reviews for September 2021
Full transparency: All Blu-rays reviewed were provided by Kino Lorber, Criterion, Code Red, and Arrow Video. This month’s round-up is an eclectic bunch, which, if you know me at this point, is a good thing. Things are beginning to lean towards the change of seasons thematically. There is a Carl Reiner/Steve Martin comedy-noir collab called… Read more »
Glenn Close, Anthony Powell, and Cruella de Vil
Guest post by Kelly Richardson, Director and Curator, Elizabeth Sage Historic Costume Collection. In 1996, Disney released a live-action version of the beloved 1961 animated film 101 Dalmatians starring Glenn Close as the fur-crazed Cruella de Vil. The reframing of Cruella de Vil as a fashion designer — as opposed to a mere fur-loving clotheshorse —… Read more »
Seeing God in a Lightbulb: Gene Tierney and the Work of Viewed
Guest post by Emma Kearney. Gene Tierney worked at Twentieth Century Fox between 1940 and 1955, most notably in the film noirs Laura and Leave Her to Heaven. In these roles, she played two poles of the femme fatale trope: the New York dame who isn’t really all that fatal and the housewife who really… Read more »