Criterion+collection

The Complete Lady Snowblood (1973-1974) [The Criterion Collection #790 and #791]

The Complete Lady Snowblood
Lady Snowblood (1973) + Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance (1974)
2xDVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | 01:37:07 + 01:29:16 | 7,65 Gb + 5,95 Gb
Audio: Japanese (日本語) AC3 1.0 @ 384 Kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Action, Drama, Thriller | The Criterion Collection #790 and #791

A young woman (Meiko Kaji), trained from childhood as an assassin and hell-bent on revenge for the murders of her father and brother and the rape of her mother, hacks and slashes her way to gory satisfaction in turn-of-the-twentieth-century Japan. Rampant with inventive violence and spectacularly choreographed swordplay, Toshiya Fujita’s pair of influential cult classics Lady Snowblood and Lady Snowblood: Love Song of Vengeance are bloody, beautiful extravaganzas composed of one elegant widescreen composition after another. The first Lady Snowblood was a major inspiration for Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill saga, and both of Fujita’s films remain cornerstones of Asian action cinema.
Eclipse Series 23: The First Films of Akira Kurosawa (1943-1945) [The Criterion Collection]

Eclipse Series 23: The First Films of Akira Kurosawa (1943-1945)
Sanshiro Sugata / The Most Beautiful / Sanshiro Sugata, Part Two / The Men Who Tread on the Tiger's Tail
4xDVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 4:3 | 305 min | 15,96 Gb
Audio: Japanese (日本語) AC3 1.0 @ 384 Kbps | Subs: English
Genre: Action, Adventure, Drama | The Criterion Collection

Years before Akira Kurosawa changed the face of cinema with such iconic works as Rashomon, Seven Samurai, and Yojimbo, he made his start in the Japanese film industry with four popular and exceptional works, created as World War II raged. All gripping dramas, those rare first films - Sanshiro Sugata; The Most Beautiful; Sanshiro Sugata, Part Two; and The Men Who Tread on the Tiger’s Tail - are collected here and include a two-part martial arts saga, a portrait of female volunteers helping the war effort, and a kabuki-derived tale of deception. These captivating films are a glorious introduction to a peerless career.
The Great Chase (1962) + The Love Goddesses (1965) + Paul Robeson: Tribute to an Artist (1979) [Criterion Collection]

The Great Chase (1962) + The Love Goddesses (1965) + Paul Robeson: Tribute to an Artist (1979) [Criterion Collection]
DVD Video | NTSC 4:3 | 720x480 | 1hr 20mn + 0hr 29mn + 1hr 18mn | 7.51 Gb
English: Dolby AC3, 1 ch | Subtitles: English
Genre: Documentary

In these three delightful documentaries—The Great Chase, a rollicking compendium of the greatest hits of silent-cinema chase sequences, The Love Goddesses, a look at cinema's most alluring female sex symbols, and Paul Robeson: Tribute to an Artist, an Oscar-winning remembrance of the ground-breaking American stage and screen star—director Saul J. Turell pays tribute to the movies in engaging, eclectic ways.

The Underground Railroad (2021) [The Criterion Collection]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at July 18, 2024
The Underground Railroad (2021) [The Criterion Collection]

The Underground Railroad (2021) [The Criterion Collection, Spine #1223]
BDRip 1080p | MKV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~ 4.1 Mbps | ~ 585 min | ~ 21,9 GB
English: AC3, 6 ch, 640 kbps \ English: AC3, 2 ch, 192 kbps \ English: AC3, 2 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama, Fantasy, History, Mini-Series, War

A monumental reimagining of American history, Barry Jenkins’s adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize–winning 2016 novel is a harrowing and rhapsodic journey through a still-echoing past. Weaving together historical fiction with moments of magical realism, The Underground Railroad is a full sensory immersion into the world of Cora (Thuso Mbedu), who, fleeing slavery, embarks on a treacherous quest for freedom—and is menaced by violence, supported by a clandestine community fighting for liberation, and haunted by the people she loses along the way. With images of searing power and stirring poetry, Jenkins delivers an epic saga of survival and resilience that pushes the limited-series format to new heights of cinematic transcendence.
After the Curfew / Lewat Djam Malam (1954) [Criterion Collection]

Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project № 3: After the Curfew / Lewat Djam Malam (1954) [Criterion Collection, Spine #1050]
DVD Video | 1hr 43mn | NTSC 4:3 | 720x480 | 7.11 Gb
Indonesian: Dolby AC3, 1 ch | Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama

Giving voice to the anguish of a nation fighting for its soul, Usmar Ismail’s After the Curfew follows the descent into disillusionment of a former freedom fighter who is unable to readjust to civilian life following the revolution that gave Indonesia its independence from the Netherlands. Steeped in moody atmospherics and psychological tension, the film struck its national cinema like a bolt of lightning, illuminating on-screen, for the first time and with unflinching realism, the emotional toll of Indonesian society’s postcolonial struggles.
After the Curfew / Lewat Djam Malam (1954) [Criterion Collection]

Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project № 3: After the Curfew / Lewat Djam Malam (1954) [Criterion Collection, Spine #1050]
BDRip 1080p | MKV | AVC 1480x1080, ~ 3.8 Mbps | 1hr 43mn | 3.03 GB | Indonesian: AC3, 1 ch, 448 kbps
BDRip 720p | MKV | AVC 988x720, ~ 2.6 Mbps | 1hr 43mn | 2.04 GB | Indonesian: AC3, 1 ch, 256 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama

Giving voice to the anguish of a nation fighting for its soul, Usmar Ismail’s After the Curfew follows the descent into disillusionment of a former freedom fighter who is unable to readjust to civilian life following the revolution that gave Indonesia its independence from the Netherlands. Steeped in moody atmospherics and psychological tension, the film struck its national cinema like a bolt of lightning, illuminating on-screen, for the first time and with unflinching realism, the emotional toll of Indonesian society’s postcolonial struggles.
Stromboli / Stromboli (Terra di Dio) (1950) [The Criterion Collection]

Stromboli / Stromboli (Terra di Dio) (1950) [The Criterion Collection, Spine #673]
Blu-Ray | BDMV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~23.0 Mbps | 1hr 46mn / 1hr 40mn | 45.0 GB
English / Italian: LPCM Audio, 1 ch, 1152 kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Drama | Director: Roberto Rossellini

The first collaboration between Roberto Rossellini and Ingrid Bergman is a devastating portrait of a woman’s existential crisis, set against the beautiful and forbidding backdrop of a volcanic island. After World War II, a Lithuanian refugee (Bergman) marries a simple Italian fisherman (Mario Vitale) she meets in a prisoner of war camp and accompanies him back to his isolated village on an island off the coast of Sicily. Cut off from the world, she finds herself crumbling emotionally, but she is destined for a dramatic epiphany. Balancing the director’s trademark neorealism—exemplified here in a remarkable depiction of the fishermen’s lives and work—with deeply felt melodrama, Stromboli is a revelation.
The Signifyin' Works of Marlon Riggs (1986-1995) [Criterion Collection]

The Signifyin' Works of Marlon Riggs (1986-1995) [Criterion Collection, Spine #1082]
BDRip 1080p | MKV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~ 4.1 Mbps | 58+55+10+8+80+38+87 mn | 10,6 GB
English: AC3, 2 ch, 448 kbps | Subtitles: English
Genre: Documentary, Short

There has never been a filmmaker like Marlon Riggs: an unapologetic gay Black man who defied a culture of silence and shame to speak his truth with resounding joy and conviction. An early adopter of video technology, Riggs employed a bold mix of documentary, performance, poetry, and music in order to confront the devastating legacy of racist stereotypes, the impact of AIDS on his community, and the very definition of what it means to be Black. Bringing together Riggs’s complete films—including his controversy-inciting queer landmark Tongues Untied and Black Is . . . Black Ain’t, the deeply personal swan song that was completed after his death at the age of thirty-seven—The Signifyin’ Works of Marlon Riggs traces the artistic and political evolution of a transformative filmmaker whose work is both an electrifying call for liberation and an invaluable historical document.

Daisies / Sedmikrásky (1966) [The Criterion Collection]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at Nov. 21, 2022
Daisies / Sedmikrásky (1966) [The Criterion Collection]

Daisies / Sedmikrásky (1966) [The Criterion Collection, Spine #1157]
Blu-Ray | BDMV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~35.9 Mbps | 1hr 16mn | 44.3 GB
Czech: LPCM Audio, 1 ch, 1152 kbps \ English: AC3, 1 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Comedy

If the entire world is bad, why shouldn’t we be? Adopting this insolent attitude as their guiding philosophy, a pair of hedonistic young women (Ivana Karbanová and Jitka Cerhová), both named Marie, embark on a gleefully debauched odyssey of gluttony, giddy destruction, and antipatriarchal resistance, in which nothing is safe from their nihilistic pursuit of pleasure. But what happens when the fun is over? Matching her anarchic message with an equally radical aesthetic, director Věra Chytilová, with the close collaboration of cinematographer Jaroslav Kučera, unleashes an optical storm of fluctuating film stocks, kaleidoscopic montages, cartoonish stop-motion cutouts, and surreal costumes designed by Ester Krumbachová, who also cowrote the script. The result is Daisies, the most defiant provocation of the Czechoslovak New Wave, an exuberant call to rebellion aimed squarely at those who uphold authoritarian oppression in any form.

Daisies / Sedmikrásky (1966) [The Criterion Collection]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at Nov. 3, 2022
Daisies / Sedmikrásky (1966) [The Criterion Collection]

Daisies / Sedmikrásky (1966) [The Criterion Collection, Spine #1157]
BDRip 1080p | MKV | AVC, 1480x1080, ~ 3,8 Mbps | 1hr 16mn | 2.38 GB
Czech: AC3, 1 ch, 448 kbps \ English: AC3, 1 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Comedy

If the entire world is bad, why shouldn’t we be? Adopting this insolent attitude as their guiding philosophy, a pair of hedonistic young women (Ivana Karbanová and Jitka Cerhová), both named Marie, embark on a gleefully debauched odyssey of gluttony, giddy destruction, and antipatriarchal resistance, in which nothing is safe from their nihilistic pursuit of pleasure. But what happens when the fun is over? Matching her anarchic message with an equally radical aesthetic, director Věra Chytilová, with the close collaboration of cinematographer Jaroslav Kučera, unleashes an optical storm of fluctuating film stocks, kaleidoscopic montages, cartoonish stop-motion cutouts, and surreal costumes designed by Ester Krumbachová, who also cowrote the script. The result is Daisies, the most defiant provocation of the Czechoslovak New Wave, an exuberant call to rebellion aimed squarely at those who uphold authoritarian oppression in any form.