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Limited Edition deluxe Blu-ray releases of long requested & previously unreleased films. 📀

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April New Releases

We’re bringing three new releases to the Imprint Collection in April - that’s twelve films, including eight worldwide firsts on Blu-ray. From cinephile classics to rare gems ripe for rediscovery, there’s something for everyone in April. 

A new avenue for Asian cinema

The time has come for our very first edition of Imprint Asia - our brand-new line of contemporary & classic Asian cinema. These three remarkable films are coming to Blu-ray in March. 

Recent reviews

Ingmar Bergman’s Oscar-nominated psychological drama now on Blu-ray for the first time worldwide!

Starring Liv Ullmann (Persona) in her Academy Award-nominated, gripping performance, alongside the screen debut of Lena Olin (Chocolat).

A successful psychiatrist (Ullmann) who suffers from profound depression and mental illness finds herself teetering on the brink of a nervous breakdown, haunted by disturbing images and emotions from her past.

“Mr. Bergman is more mysterious, more haunting, more contradictory than ever, though the style of the film has…

Patrick Bergin, Iain Glen and Richard E. Grant star in this biographical drama, depicting the journey of Richard Francis Burton and John Hanning Speke through the Nile River in the 1850s.

Directed by Bob Rafelson, one of the key figures in the New Hollywood movement of the 1970s, and based on the novel Burton and Speke by William Harrison.

In the 1850’s, two British officers, Capt. Richard Burton and Lt. John Speke, set out on a spectacular adventure to discover…

Emily Blunt stars in the thrilling horror ride, Wind Chill, coming to Blu-ray for the first time in Australia.

For two college students, sharing a quiet ride home together becomes a twisted nightmare when the car they’re driving is forced off a lonesome road in the middle of a snowstorm. Now, with the car inoperable and the temperature dropping, they soon realise the cold is the least of their worries.

Produced by George Clooney and Steven Soderbergh, and directed by…

Jim Dodge is a smooth-talking small-town guy with a knack for putting up a front – but no talent for holding down a job. Jim’s life suddenly takes a turn for the fantastic when he finds himself locked inside the local department store one night with Josie McClellan, the daughter of the town’s wealthiest citizen.

This romantic comedy was written by beloved filmmaker John Hughes (Ferris Bueller’s Day Off), and stars Jennifer Connelly alongside Frank Whaley (Pulp Fiction), as well…

Liked reviews

Spectacular filmmaking. Very little else out there at this level or this scale. It’s honestly quite breathtaking. 

The spectacle is unreal. Production and costume design informing world building in a way that is just constantly riveting. There’s a moment where after it’s long been established that the Harkonen aesthetic is stark contrast of black and white authoritarian… then just for a shot it genuinely feels like a lifted shot from Triumph of the Will but not in that typical way…

All About Eve

All About Eve

★★★★★

i was the only one in the theater for this, which is a shame.

actually, before the film started, there was a couple a few rows back, but when the black and white fox logo appeared, one of them said "this isn't La La Land," and then they walked out.

damn straight this ain't La La Land, it actually won best picture.

All About Eve

All About Eve

★★★★½

This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.

damn!!! the cross dissolve near the end that goes from eve’s hair on the bed to the flowers at the banquet where she accepts the award, wowza

Cage and Pascal fully commit to their absurd roles, so it's unfortunate this film never rises above the facile memefication of its amusing enough concept, or its sitcom-level writing. Sure, it's a big ol' cartoon but I didn't believe a moment of its world (or that Haddish and Barenholtz, two comic actors I usually like, were agents of any kind), and once it establishes Cage and Pascal's emerging friendship it has absolutely nowhere to go. Plus the whole thing looks so flat and cheap and over-lit, the action scenes are tedious and rote, and the sentimentality overbearing. Unbearable is right.