- Joined
- Sep 30, 2018
I have:
Being John Malkovich (case cracked when I was moving, but the movie itself still works)
Hausu (my first)
Brazil
Pans Labyrinth
OG Godzilla
Fantastic Planet
Fantastic Mr Fox
The Breakfast Club (which I got for free)
all the releases are pretty good imo
Also Target and Bluray.com accidentally leaked the #1000 spine
it's going to be a collection of Shojo era Godzilla films
It's a product line by arthouse distributor Janus Films that licenses movies from all over the world, from very obscure films like the early works of Akira Kurosawa; to blockbusters like Armageddon or The Rock; Dark Comedies like John Waters early films, the Belgian satire Man Bites Dog, or the 2001 Thora Birch/Scarlet Johannson film Ghost World; to even Music Video Collections and Concert Films
What makes it different from all other home video lines though:
The thing is though, these come with a hefty price. You can usually find movies for like, $10-20, but with Criterion you will usually spend $20-50 depending on the title. But I and several other posters here mean this when I say, you get what you pay for.
en.wikipedia.org
they're up to almost 1000 releases on DVD and Bluray
Being John Malkovich (case cracked when I was moving, but the movie itself still works)
Hausu (my first)
Brazil
Pans Labyrinth
OG Godzilla
Fantastic Planet
Fantastic Mr Fox
The Breakfast Club (which I got for free)
all the releases are pretty good imo
Also Target and Bluray.com accidentally leaked the #1000 spine
it's going to be a collection of Shojo era Godzilla films
WALL OF TEXT COMING THROUGH (I have nothing better to do so I typed this up)What even is a Criterion?
It's a product line by arthouse distributor Janus Films that licenses movies from all over the world, from very obscure films like the early works of Akira Kurosawa; to blockbusters like Armageddon or The Rock; Dark Comedies like John Waters early films, the Belgian satire Man Bites Dog, or the 2001 Thora Birch/Scarlet Johannson film Ghost World; to even Music Video Collections and Concert Films
What makes it different from all other home video lines though:
- is that they restore the films to the highest possible quality, with the director's supervision if possible. (if not, they go with someone close to the production of the film, like the cinematographer. If no one who made the film is alive, they just do what they can)
- Release films that would almost never get released here without them. EX: Hausu (a film that was forgotten until colleges around the US began watching it and requesting for a print which got sell out crowds), White Dog (famously anti racism film from 1980 that was suppressed by Paramount due to allegations that the film promoted racism, with very sporadic releases happening until Criterion released it in 2009)
- Get extras you would never find with the regular releases of the films (examples: Criterion is the only way to watch the uncut version of Brazil in North America (long story short, Universal fucked with the American release), Breakfast Club includes an extra hour of footage that was never released outside their version, Heaven's Gate has the definitive directors cut that Michael Cimino intended, True Stories comes with the original soundtrack for the film and not the studio mandated Talking Heads version)
- Comes with a booklet essay explaining why the film is important to film culture, usually be a famous author, film critic, or a historian. And these aren't just normal booklets, sometimes they fold out to make posters like the Fantastic Planet release.
The thing is though, these come with a hefty price. You can usually find movies for like, $10-20, but with Criterion you will usually spend $20-50 depending on the title. But I and several other posters here mean this when I say, you get what you pay for.

List of Criterion Collection releases - Wikipedia

they're up to almost 1000 releases on DVD and Bluray
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