Criterion+collection+dvd+video

For All Mankind (1989) [The Criterion Collection #54 Reissue] [DVD + BluRay]

For All Mankind (1989) [The Criterion Collection #54 Reissue]
Full BluRay 1:1 | 1080p MPEG-4 AVC @ 34799 Kbps | 01:20:06 | 41,37 Gb
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 @ 2859 Kbps + Commentary track | Subs: English
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DVD9 (VIDEO_TS) | NTSC 4:3 (720x480) | 01:19:59 | 7,39 Gb
Audio: English AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps + Commentary track | Subs: English
Genre: Documentary, History | USA

In July 1969, the space race ended when Apollo 11 fulfilled President Kennedy’s challenge of “landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth.” No one who witnessed the lunar landing will ever forget it. Al Reinert’s documentary For All Mankind is the story of the twenty-four men who traveled to the moon, told in their words, in their voices, using the images of their experiences. Forty years after the first moon landing, it remains the most radical, visually dazzling work of cinema yet made about this earthshaking event.

Harakiri / Seppuku (1962) [The Criterion Collection #302] [ReUp]  Movies

Posted by Someonelse at March 8, 2015
Harakiri / Seppuku (1962) [The Criterion Collection #302] [ReUp]

Harakiri (1962)
A Film by Masaki Kobayashi
DVD9 + DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | 02:12:47 | 6,76 Gb + 1,85 Gb
Audio: Japanese AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles: English | Cover + Booklet
Genre: Drama | The Criterion Collection #302

Following the collapse of his clan, an unemployed samurai (Tatsuya Nakadai) arrives at the manor of Lord Iyi, begging to be allowed to commit ritual suicide on the property. Iyi’s clansmen, believing the desperate ronin is merely angling for a new position, try to force his hand and get him to eviscerate himself—but they have underestimated his beliefs and his personal brand of honor. Winner of the Cannes Film Festival’s Special Jury Prize, Harakiri, directed by Masaki Kobayashi is a fierce evocation of individual agency in the face of a corrupt and hypocritical system.
Onibaba (1964) (The Criterion Collection/Masters of Cinema) [2 DVD9s]

Onibaba (1964) (The Criterion Collection/Masters of Cinema) [2 DVD9s]
A Film By Kaneto Shindo
Art-House/Horror | 2.35:1 | Black & White | Japanese Dolby Digital | English Subtitles
2 Full Original DVD Images (.ISO) + Scans = >14.68GBs | 1GB RARs | NL/FSe/FSo
Jean Cocteau's Orphic Trilogy (1930/1950/1959) [Criterion Collection]

Jean Cocteau's Orphic Trilogy: The Blood of a Poet (1930) + Orpheus (1950) + Testament of Orpheus (1959) [Criterion Collection, Spine #66]
DVD Video, 2 x DVD5 + DVD9 | NTSC 16:9 | 720x480 | 0hr 52mn + 1hr 35mn + 1hr 20mn | ~ 14.5 Gb
French (Français): Dolby AC3, 1 ch | Subtitles: English
Genre: Fantasy, Biography, Drama, Romance

Decadent, subversive, and bristling with artistic invention, the myth-born cinema of Jean Cocteau disturbs as much as it charms. Cocteau was the most versatile of artists in prewar Paris. Poet, novelist, playwright, painter, celebrity, and maker of cinema—his many talents converged in bold, dreamlike films that continue to enthrall audiences around the world. In The Blood of a Poet, Orpheus, and Testament of Orpheus, Cocteau utilizes the Orphic myth to explore the complex relationships between the artist and his creations, reality and the imagination. The Criterion Collection is proud to present the DVD premiere of the Orphic Trilogy in a special limited-edition three-disc box set.
Eclipse Series 30: Sabu! (1937-1942) [The Criterion Collection] [Re-UP]

Eclipse Series 30: Sabu! (1937-1942)
A Films by Zoltán Korda
3xDVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 4:3 | 291 mins | 12,95 Gb
Audio: English AC3 1.0 @ 384 Kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Adventure, Family | The Criterion Collection

In the thirties and forties, the young Indian actor known as Sabu (born Selar Shaik) captured the hearts of moviegoers in Britain and the United States as a completely new kind of big-screen icon. Sabu was a maharaja’s elephant driver when he was cast in Elephant Boy, a Rudyard Kipling adaptation directed by documentary trailblazer Robert Flaherty and Zoltán Korda that would prove to be enormously popular. Sabu went on to headline a series of fantasies and adventures for the British film titans the Korda brothers, transcending the exoticism projected onto him by commanding the screen with effortless grace and humor. This series collects three of those lavish productions (which also included the classic The Thief of Bagdad):Elephant Boy, the colonialist adventure The Drum, and the timeless Jungle Book.
Vampyr / Der Traum des Allan Grey (1932) [The Criterion Collection #437] [REPOST]

Vampyr / Der Traum des Allan Grey (1932) [The Criterion Collection #437] [REPOST]
DVD9+DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC | 4:3 | 720x480 | 7200 kbps | 11.7Gb
Audio: German AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles : English
01:13:00 | Germany | Fantasy, Horror

Young traveller Allan Grey arrives in a remote castle and starts seeing weird, inexplicable sights (a man whose shadow has a life of its own, a mysterious scythe-bearing figure tolling a bell, a terrifying dream of his own burial). Things come to a head when one of the daughters of the lord of the castle succumbs to anaemia - or is it something more sinister?

Overlord (1975) [The Criterion Collection #382] [Repost]  Movies

Posted by Someonelse at Sept. 1, 2011
Overlord (1975) [The Criterion Collection #382] [Repost]

Overlord (1975) [The Criterion Collection #382]
DVD9 | ISO | NTSC 16:9 (720x480) | Scans + Booklet | 01:23:03 | 7,49 Gb
Audio: English AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps + Commentary track | Subs: English SDH
Genre: Drama, War, Art-house | 2 wins | UK

Seamlessly interweaving archival war footage and a fictional narrative, Stuart Cooper’s immersive account of one twenty-year-old’s journey from basic training to the front lines of D-Day brings all the terrors and isolation of war to life with jolting authenticity. Overlord, impressionistically shot by Stanley Kubrick’s longtime cinematographer John Alcott, is both a document of World War II and a dreamlike meditation on man’s smallness in a large, incomprehensible machine.

A Canterbury Tale (1944) [The Criterion Collection #341] [ReUp]  Movies

Posted by Someonelse at Feb. 4, 2015
A Canterbury Tale (1944) [The Criterion Collection #341] [ReUp]

A Canterbury Tale (1944)
A Film by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger
2xDVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 4:3 | Cover | 02:04:47 | 8,38 Gb + 5,31 Gb
Audio: English AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps + Commentary track | Subs: English SDH
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Mystery | Criterion Collection #341

Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s beloved classic A Canterbury Tale is a profoundly personal journey to Powell’s bucolic birthplace of Kent, England. Set amid the tumult of the Second World War, yet with a rhythm as delicate as a lullaby, the film follows three modern-day incarnations of Chaucer’s pilgrims - a melancholy “landgirl,” a plainspoken American GI, and a resourceful British sergeant - who are waylaid in the English countryside en route to the mythical town and forced to solve a bizarre village crime. Building to a majestic climax that ranks as one of the filmmaking duo’s finest achievements, the dazzling A Canterbury Tale has acquired a following of devotees passionate enough to qualify as pilgrims themselves.
Pigs, Pimps & Prostitutes: 3 Films by Shohei Imamura (1961-1964) [The Criterion Collection ##471, 472, 473, 474] [Re-UP]

Pigs, Pimps & Prostitutes (1961-1964)
3 Films by Shohei Imamura
3xDVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | 381 mins | 21,30 Gb
Audio: Japanese AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama, Crime, Comedy | The Criterion Collection #471

In the 1960s, Japanese filmmakers responded to a stale studio system by looking for fresh ways to tell stories, and Shohei Imamura was one of the leading figures of this new wave. With the three films in this set—Pigs and Battleships, The Insect Woman, and Intentions of Murder—Imamura truly emerged as an auteur, bringing to his national cinema an anthropological eye and a previously unseen taste for the irreverent. Claiming his interests lay in “the relationship of the lower part of the human body and the lower part of the social structure,” Imamura dotted the decade with earthy, juicy, idiosyncratic films featuring persevering, willful heroines. His remains a unique cinematic voice.
Story of a Prostitute / Shunpu den (1965) [The Criterion Collection #299] [ReUp]

Story of a Prostitute (1965)
A Film by Seijun Suzuki
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 2.35:1 | Cover + Booklet | 96 mins | 7,87 Gb
Audio: Japanese AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles: English, French, Chinese
Genre: Art-house, Drama, War | The Criterion Collection #299

Volunteering as a “comfort woman” on the Manchurian front, where she is expected to service hundreds of soldiers, Harumi is commandeered by the brutal Lieutenant Narita but falls for the sensitive Mikami, Narita’s direct subordinate. Seijun Suzuki’s Story of a Prostitute is a tragic love story as well as a rule-bending take on a popular Taijiro Tamura novel, challenging military and fraternal codes of honor, as seen through Harumi’s eyes.