Tag: criterion
Deals
Essential Art House, Vol. 3 for $29.99
These affordable movie-only DVD editions of the true classics of art house cinema are perfect for schools, libraries, and rental stores, where their lower cost and sturdy packaging make them a practical alternative to the more elaborate Criterion Collection special editions. Available individually or in box sets of six, Essential Art House editions feature beautiful digital transfers, accompanied by informative liner notes. For the devoted cinephile, these are the must-own fundamentals; for the novice film-lover, this is precisely where to begin
Posted 2 years ago
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Movies & Music
Kuroneko (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] for $21.49
Carlos (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] for $26.99
The Rules of the Game (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] for $21.49
Consistently cited by critics worldwide as one of the greatest films ever made, Jean Renoir's bittersweet drama of life, love, class, and the social code of manners and behavior ("the rules of the game") is a savage critique undertaken with sensitivity and compassion. Renoir's catch-phrase through the film, "Everyone has their reasons," develops a multilayered meaning by the conclusion. A young aviator (Roland Toutain) commits a serious social faux pas by alluding to an affair on national radio. To avert a scandal, the cultured Robert de la Chesnaye (Marcel Dalio), husband to the aviator's mistress, Christine (Nora Gregor), and a philanderer in his own right, invites all to a weekend hunting party in his country mansion. The complicated maze of marriages and mistresses (social register and servant class alike) is plotted like a bedroom farce, but the tone soon takes a darker cast.
Posted 2 years ago
Categories:
Movies & Music
12 Angry Men (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] for $21.49
Sidney Lumet's directorial debut remains a tense, atmospheric (though slightly manipulative and stagy) courtroom thriller, in which the viewer never sees a trial and the only action is verbal. As he does in his later corruption commentaries such as Serpico or Q & A, Lumet focuses on the lonely one-man battles of a protagonist whose ethics alienate him from the rest of jaded society. As the film opens, the seemingly open-and-shut trial of a young Puerto Rican accused of murdering his father with a knife has just concluded and the 12-man jury retires to their microscopic, sweltering quarters to decide the verdict. When the votes are counted, 11 men rule guilty, while one--played by Henry Fonda, again typecast as another liberal, truth-seeking hero--doubts the obvious.
Posted 2 years ago
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Video Games



![Kuroneko (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]](http://cdn.gtln.us/img/deals/64/i6454.jpg)
![Carlos (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]](http://cdn.gtln.us/img/deals/64/i6455.jpg)
![The Rules of the Game (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]](http://cdn.gtln.us/img/deals/64/i6456.jpg)
![12 Angry Men (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]](http://cdn.gtln.us/img/deals/64/i6462.jpg)
![The Killing (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]](http://cdn.gtln.us/img/deals/64/i6457.jpg)


