Displaying items by tag: Imprint Films
Warner launches 4K pre-orders for North by Northwest, Blazing Saddles & Terminator, plus new catalog announcements from Imprint & Kino Lorber Studio Classics!
We’re starting Tuesday off here at The Bits with three new disc reviews for all of you to enjoy, including...
Dennis’ look at Arkasha Stevenson’s The First Omen (2024) on Blu-ray from 20th Century Studios.
Stuart’s thoughts on Teruo Ishii’s Prison Walls: Abashiri Prison I-III (1965) on Blu-ray from Eureka Entertainment.
And Stephen’s take on Don Seigel’s original sci-fi classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) in 4K Ultra HD from Kino Lorber Studio Classics.
In announcement news today, Kino Lorber Studio Classics has revealed a few more great new catalog releases, including Sidney Lumet’s Garbo Talks (1984) and Claude Autant-Lara’s Enough Rope (1963) on Blu-ray on 10/15, followed by William Friedkin’s Rules of Engagement (2000) and Peter Collinson’s Fright (1971) on 4K Ultra HD, as well as Carlo Carlei’s Fluke (1995) and Andre Gower’s Wolfman’s Got Nards (2018) on Blu-ray on 10/22. And coming soon to 4K Ultra HD from the company is Roy Ward Baker’s Scars of Dracula (1970), while coming soon to Blu-ray is the Film Noir: The Dark Side of Cinema XXV box set which features John H. Auer’s The Flame (1947), City That Never Sleeps (1953), and Hell’s Half Acre (1954). [Read on here...]
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- Back the Bits
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Bluray
- My Two Cents
- The Digital Bits
- Bill Hunt
- 4K Ultra HD
- Alfred Hitchcock
- North by Northwest (1959) 4K
- James Cameron
- The Terminator (1984) 4K
- MGM
- Mel Brooks
- Blazing Saddles 4K
- Stuart Galbraith IV
- Dennis Seuling
- Stephen Bjork
- The First Omen (2024) BD review
- Prison Walls: Abashiri Prison BD review
- Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) 4K review
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- Garbo Talks
- Enough Rope
- Rules of Engagement 4K
- Fright 4K
- Fluke
- Wolfman's Got Nards
- Scars of Dracula 4K
- Film Noir: The Dark Side of Cinema XXV
- Via Vision Entertainment
- Imprint Films
- Convoy 4K
- Sam Peckinpah
Indicator’s November includes a Pryor & Wilder Blu-ray box in the UK, plus We Were Soldiers, SpongeBob, The Garfield Movie, a new Wizard of Oz 4K Steelbook & more
We’re starting today with a bunch of new and recent disc reviews here at The Bits, including...
Stephen’s look at Michael Mann’s Collateral (2004) in a new 4K Steelbook from Paramount, The Flash: The Original Series (1990) on Blu-ray from the Warner Archive Collection, and Bosco Lam and Kin-Nam Cho’s A Chinese Torture Chamber Story 1 & 2 (1994 & 1998) on Blu-ray from Vinegar Syndrome.
Tim’s thoughts on Park Chan-wook’s JSA: Joint Security Area (2000) in 4K Ultra HD from Umbrella Entertainment.
Dennis’ take on Philip Kaufman’s Twisted (2004) on Blu-ray from Paramount via Kino Lorber Studio Classics.
And finally, Stuart’s reviews of George King’s Tomorrow We Live (1943) and Barbet Schroeder’s Single White Female (1992) on Blu-ray from Powerhouse Films’ Indicator label.
Speaking of Indicator, they’ve just unveiled their November slate, which includes a UK-only box set called Pryor & Wilder that features Sidney Poitier’s Stir Crazy (1980), Arthur Hiller’s See No Evil, Hear No Evil (1989), and Maurice Phillips’ Another You (1991) on Blu-ray. Look for that on 18 November. In the US, Indicator will release Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat’s Left Right and Centre (1959), Ken Loach’s Family Life (1971), and John Krish’s The Man Who Had Power Over Women (1970) all on Blu-ray on 11/19. [Read on here...]
- Paper Moon 4K
- CC40
- Funny Girl 4K
- The Shape of Water (4K)
- Scarface (1932) 4K
- Seven Samurai 4K
- Godzilla (1954) 4K
- Imprint Films
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- Indicator
- Criterion's November 2024 slate
- Tim Salmons
- Dennis Seuling
- Stuart Galbraith IV
- Stephen Bjork
- Back the Bits
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Bluray
- My Two Cents
- The Digital Bits
- Bill Hunt
- 4K Ultra HD
- Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- Collateral 4K Steelbook review
- The Flash: The Original Series BD review
- A Chinese Torture Chamber Story BD review
- Paramount Home Entertainment
- Warner Archive Collection
- Vinegar Syndrome
- JSA: Joint Security Area 4K review
- Umbrella Entertainment
- Twisted BD review
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- Tomorrow We Live BD review
- Single White Female BD review
- Powerhouse Films
- Pryor & Wilder BD box
- Stir Crazy
- See No Evil Hear No Evil
- Another You
- Family Life
- Left Right and Centre
- The Man Who Had Power Over Women
- We Were Soldiers 4K
- The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie 4K
- Planes Trains and Automobiles 4K
- Gladiator 4K
- Star Trek: Prodigy Season Two BD
- The Wizard of Oz: 85th Anniversary 4K Steelbook
- The Garfield Movie
- Film Masters
- Klaus Kinski
- Creature With the Blue Hand
- Web of the Spider
- Ballyhoo Motion Pictures
- Inside Out 4K
- Before Dawn
- Well Go USA
- Lakeshore Records
- Star Trek: Picard Season Three
- CC40 BD box set
BREAKING: Skydance “15% Cuts on Paramount Global US Workforce” Cut Deep in Some Studio Divisions Including Home Entertainment
All right, Bits readers, today is a tough one news-wise, and it has little to do with specific title release news or announcements.
We’ve learned from multiple sources now that the 15% US workforce cuts at Paramount Global—a restructuring that’s happening in advance of the company’s merger with Skydance Media to reduce annual costs by some $500 million—have landed very heavily on the Melrose lot. As reported widely last week, the layoffs amount to about 2,000 people, with most expected to be gone by the end of next month and the rest by year’s end.
Current co-CEOs George Cheeks, Brian Robbins, and Chris McCarthy have described the layoffs thusly in a memo to the workforce: “As we continue to advance our plan, we announced on our earnings call last week that we will be reducing our US-based workforce by approximately 15%, focusing on redundant functions and streamlining corporate teams.”
The expectation was that every division would be impacted. As reported last week, Paramount Television Studios has been shuttered completely. What’s not been reported widely yet is the impact on overall studio operations.
The Digital Bits sources indicate that nearly every department has been affected—in a few cases severely—from marketing, legal, and accounting, to production, post-production, finance, mastering, vault and library services, and unfortunately also Paramount Home Entertainment. The cuts are reportedly not so deep as to result in a complete loss of institutional knowledge, but they’re more than deep enough to result in major workflow disruptions. [Read on here...]
- Imprint Films
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- Back the Bits
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Bluray
- My Two Cents
- The Digital Bits
- Bill Hunt
- 4K Ultra HD
- Shout! Studios
- Vinegar Syndrome
- Skydance
- Paramount Global US job cuts
- Paramount Home Entertainment
- Paramount Television Studios shut down
- Paramount job cuts impact Home Entertainment deeply
Criterion’s November includes Godzilla, Seven Samurai, Scarface, Funny Girl, Shape of Water & Paper Moon in 4K, plus Friday Night Lights (2004) & more!
We’ve got a good bit of ground to cover here at The Bits today, so let’s start as always with new disc reviews...
Now available here are Stephen’s take on Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation (1974) in 4K Ultra HD from StudioCanal, David Allen’s The Primevals (2023) as released on Blu-ray by Umbrella Entertainment, and the Blu-ray Audio version of Jonathan Demme and Talking Heads’ Stop Making Sense (1984) live album, which includes Dolby Atmos.
Stuart’s look at the Philo Vance Collection on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber Studio Classics—which includes The Canary Murder Case (1929), The Greene Murder Case (1929), and The Benson Murder Case (1930)—as well as George King’s The Shop at Sly Corner (1947) and the Columbia Film Noir #6: The Whistler box set—which includes The Whistler (1944), The Mark of the Whistler (1944), The Power of the Whistler (1945), Voice of the Whistler (1945), Mysterious Intruder (1946), The Secret of the Whistler (1946), The Thirteenth Hour (1947), and The Return of the Whistler (1948)—both on Blu-ray from Indicator.
Dennis’ thoughts on Basil Dearden’s The Man Who Haunted Himself (1970) on Blu-ray from Imprint and Welcome Back, Kotter: The Complete Series (1975-1979) on DVD from Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment.
And finally, Tim has taken a look at Arch Oboler’s Bwana Devil (1952) on Blu-ray 3D from Kino Lorber Studio Classics with the help of the 3-D Film Archive.
More reviews are forthcoming, so stay tuned!
Now then, before we get to the big release news today, I wanted to alert you all to the fact that we’ve just posted a big update to our Cover Art section here at The Bits, aka the Release Dates & Artwork section (thanks to our own Russell Hammond)! It now features TONS of new Blu-ray, DVD, and 4K Ultra HD cover art, all with Amazon.com pre-order links. You can browse and sort the titles by street date and format, and of course The Bits is an Amazon Affiliate, so anytime you click through one of our Amazon links and order literally anything from them, you’re helping to support our work and we really do appreciate it. It makes a real difference for us. [Read on here...]
- 4K Ultra HD
- Bill Hunt
- The Digital Bits
- My Two Cents
- Bluray
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Back the Bits
- Stephen Bjork
- Russell Hammond
- Stuart Galbraith IV
- Dennis Seuling
- Tim Salmons
- The Conversation 4K review
- StudioCanal
- Francis Ford Coppola
- Akira Kurosawa
- Criterion's November 2024 slate
- The Primevals BD review
- Umbrella Entertainment
- Talking Heads: Stop Making Sense BD Audio review
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- Philo Vance Collection BD review
- The Shop at Sly Corner BD review
- Indicator
- Columbia Film Noir 6: The Whistler BD review
- The Man Who Haunted Himself BD review
- Welcome Back Kotter: The Complete Series DVD review
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- Imprint Films
- Bwana Devil BD 3D review
- 3D Film Archive
- Release Dates & Artwork update
- Cover Art update
- Godzilla (1954) 4K
- Seven Samurai 4K
- Scarface (1932) 4K
- The Shape of Water (4K)
- Funny Girl 4K
- CC40
- Paper Moon 4K
- Ishiro Honda
- Howard Hawks
- Guillermo del Toro
- Peter Bogdanovich
- William Wyler
- Fox Seachlight
- Criterion is licensing Fox titles from Disney
- Universal Studios Home Entertainment
- Friday Night Lights 4K
- Peter Berg
- Jordan Peele
- Five Nights at Freddys
- Get Out
- Us
- Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K
- Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- Shout! Studios
- The Stranger 4K
- Vinegar Syndrome
- Devil Times Five 4K
Warner’s A-List tips its hand on 4K catalog titles under consideration, plus Godzilla Minus One 4K, Blu-ray & DVD pre-orders
We have two more new disc reviews to share with you today here on The Bits, with more on the way...
Tim has reviewed Walter Colmes’ Woman Who Came Back (1945) on Blu-ray from Imprint Films.
And Stephen has offered his thoughts on Tai Katô’s Eighteen Years in Prison (1967) on Blu-ray from Toei via Radiance Films.
Now then, the big news today is that Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment has apparently conducted another of its “A-List” Community surveys asking which of its many catalog titles fans would like to see the studio release in 4K Ultra HD. And of course, as happens every time, the details of that list got leaked immediately online and so it becomes something we have an obligation to report on here at The Bits. In any case, dozens of people have shared the information either privately or widely online. Because of course they’re going to—they’re enthusiasts.
Having said that, it’s probably unreasonable to assume that the studio will get around to every one of these titles any time soon, but if more of them start being released in 4K UHD, that would certainly represent a big improvement in the studio’s 4K catalog release strategy to date. So which titles were on this list? [Read on here...]
- Godzilla
- Toho
- Godzilla Minus One
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- 4K Ultra HD
- Bill Hunt
- The Digital Bits
- My Two Cents
- Bluray
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Back the Bits
- A Nightmare on Elm Street 4K
- A List 4K poll
- Woman Who Came Back BD review
- Imprint Films
- Toei
- Radiance Films
- Eighteen Years in Prison BD review
- Tim Salmons
- Stephen Bjork
- Them
- Speed Racer
- Forbidden Planet
- Sean Connery Bond films
- Lethal Weapon
- Amadeus
- Once Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
- Lolita
- Stanley Kubrick
- Barry Lyndon
- Eyes Wide Shut
- Se7en
- Gravity
- Logan's Run
- Boogie Nights
- THX 1138
- Gremlins 2
- Warner catalog 4K titles
- Warner Bros A List Community
Paramount sets Zodiac & Addams Family Values for 4K, plus A Nightmare on Elm Street in Ultra HD, House of the Dragon: Season 2, an exclusive Terror Firma clip & see the Star Trek films in 70mm!
Welcome to a new week, folks! Boy, have we got some great new 4K and Blu-ray announcement news to share with you today! Naturally, we also have more new disc reviews here at The Bits as well. So as always, let’s start with the latter first...
Stephen has taken a look at Paul Schrader’s American Gigolo (1980) which is now available in a new 4K UHD release from Arrow Video.
Tim has offered his thoughts on Lamberto Bava’s Demons (1985) and Demons 2 (1986) in 4K Ultra HD from the good folks at Synapse Films. Both of those street next week.
Dennis has checked in with a look at Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett’s Abigail (2024) on Blu-ray from Universal.
And Stuart has weighed in with his review of Imprint’s recent Directed by John Farrow Blu-ray box set, which includes Commandos Strike at Dawn (1942), The Hitler Gang (1944), Night Has a Thousand Eyes (1948), Submarine Command (1951), and Botany Bay (1953), and the John Farrow: Hollywood’s Man in the Shadows (2021) documentary.
More reviews are forthcoming all this week, so be sure to watch for them!
Now then, we’re awaiting official press releases, but Paramount has just listed David Fincher’s Zodiac (2007) for release on 4K Ultra HD on 10/29, along with Barry Sonnenfeld’s Addams Family Values (1993) in long-awaited 4K UHD! Both titles we first revealed here at The Bits back in June (click here and here). The good news is that each will include Dolby Vision HDR. You can see the cover artwork at left and also below! [Read on here...]
- Terror Firma
- Dark Arts Entertainment
- Imprint Films
- Dennis Seuling
- Stuart Galbraith IV
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- Stephen Bjork
- 4K Ultra HD
- Bill Hunt
- The Digital Bits
- My Two Cents
- Bluray
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Back the Bits
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- Paramount
- Tim Salmons
- American Gigolo 4K review
- Arrow Video
- Synapse Films
- Demons 4K review
- Demons 2 4K review
- Abigail BD review
- Universal
- Directed by John Farrow BD review
- David Fincher
- Zodiac 4K
- Barry Sonnenfeld
- Addams Family Values 4K
- South Park: Not Suitable for Children BD
- A Nightmare on Elm Street 4K
- Wes Craven
- HBO Max
- House of the Dragon: The Complete Second Season 4K
- Eli Roth
- Thanksgiving 4K
- Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- Universal Classic Monsters: The Essential Collection 4K
- My Favorite Spy
- Below the Bent
- Red Mountain
- Vice Squad 4K
- The Ballad of Josie
- MVD Entertainment
- Terror Firma (2023) clip
- Fine Arts Theater in Beverly Hills
- Super 70mm Star Trek 60th Anniversary Screening Series
- Star Trek in 70mm
- A Quiet Place: Day One 4K
The Warner Archive LIVES and teases Looney Tunes: V4 on Blu-ray, plus A24’s The Zone of Interest on 4K Ultra HD & Kino Lorber’s Shelf Space!
We start as always today with more new disc reviews, including…
Stephen’s look at Jonathan Demme’s Last Embrace (1979) in 4K Ultra HD from Vinegar Syndrome’s excellent Cinématographe line, as well as John Waters’ Cry-Baby (1990) in 4K Ultra HD from Kino Lorber Studio Classics.
Stuart’s reviews of Andrzej Żuławski’s L’important c’est d’Aimer... (1975) on Blu-ray from Film Movement via Vinegar Syndrome, along with John Guillermin’s The Whole Truth (1958) on Blu-ray from Powerhouse Films’ Indicator label.
And Dennis’ take on Boaz Yakin’s Fresh (1994) on Blu-ray from Via Vision’s Imprint Films.
Now then, there’s some exciting release news for us to share with you today, but first we want to take a moment to clear up some confusion: The Warner Archive Collection is still the Warner Archive Collection!
Many of you have probably seen that their Facebook page was suddenly rebranded as Warner Classics (click here for the link). But rest assured, the Warner Archive Collection remains! Warner is simply trying to unite all of its “classic film” marketing activity in one social media space. So while the Warner Archive Collection remains the core of this page, you’ll also learn here about forthcoming classic film releases on Blu-ray and 4K UHD from the studio proper, as well as theatrical screening activity, and the like. So everyone can relax—Warner Archive has not disappeared!
In fact, Warner Archive has just shared some excellent release news: The Looney Tunes Collector’s Choice: Volume 4 Blu-ray is officially coming on 11/26! You can see their official Facebook post here. Details of the actual shorts the set will include are yet to be announced, but the release is definitely now in production. Great news indeed! [Read on here...]
- Murder on the Orient Express (1974) 4K
- Paramount
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- Back the Bits
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Bluray
- My Two Cents
- The Digital Bits
- Bill Hunt
- 4K Ultra HD
- Stephen Bjork
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- Stuart Galbraith IV
- Dennis Seuling
- Warner Archive Collection
- Warner Classics
- Last Embrace 4K review
- Vinegar Syndrome
- Cinématographe
- Cry Baby 4K review
- L’important c’est d’Aimer BD review
- Film Movement
- The Whole Truth BD review
- Indicator Films
- Via Vision
- Imprint Films
- Fresh BD review
- Looney Tunes Collector’s Choice: Volume 4
- Collateral 4K Steelbook
- A24
- The Zone of Interest 4K
- Rick and Morty: The Complete Seasons 1 to 7 DVD
- Criterion Collection
- About Dry Grasses
- Janus Contemporaries
- Ultraman Taiga: The Complete Series
- Mill Creek Entertainment
- Dark Arts Entertainment
- Terror Firma
- Young Sheldon: The Complete Series
- Black Belly of the Tarantula
- Celluloid Dreams
- High Crime
- Blue Underground
- Kino Lorber
- Shelf Space YouTube chat
- Frank Tarzi
- Eric D Wilkinson
- Xanadu 4K
- Darkroom
- When the Bullet Hits the Bone
- Cheerleaders Wild Weekend
A Quiet Place: Day One is official, plus Ghost, Paramount Scares V2, Arrow & Shout’s October slates, Super Friends! on Blu-ray, Seven Samurai & Watership Down in 4K from the BFI & more!
We’re starting the new week as always with more new disc reviews…
First, our own Tim Salmons has turned in his thoughts on Imprint Films’ new double feature of The Uninvited (1944) and The Unseen (1945) on region-free Blu-ray, a pair of film noir titles both directed by Lewis Allen.
And Stephen has weighed in with a look at a hefty title of his own: Full Moon Features’ new The Primevals: Ultimate Collector’s Edition Blu-ray box set, featuring the restored 2023 David Allen film, which was originally greenlit in 1978 but wasn’t filmed until 1994. Sadly, Allen passed away in 1999 before the film was completed. But thanks to an Indiegogo campaign, it’s finally completed as much as is possible and available on disc. And what a nice package it is too.
More reviews are on the way of course, but today we’ve got a TON of Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD release news to catch up all up on. It starts with Arrow’s Friday morning announcement of their October slate, which includes John Boorman’s Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977) on Blu-ray (in the UK only) on 10/7, William Peter Blatty’s The Exorcist III (1990) on 4K (in the UK only) on 10/7, the Hellraiser: Quartet of Torment box set—which includes Clive Barker’s Hellraiser (1987), Tony Randel’s Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988), Anthony Hickox’s Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth (1992), and Kevin Yagher’s Hellraiser: Bloodline (1996)—on Blu-ray and 4K (in the US and Canada only, it was already released in the UK) on 10/22, Michael Dougherty’s Trick ‘r Treat (2007) on 4K (in the UK, US, and Canada) on 10/28, and the J-Horror Rising: Limited Edition Blu-ray box set—which includes Shunichi Nagasaki’s Shikoku (1999), Toshiyuki Mizutani’s Isola: Multiple Personality Girl (2000), Masato Harada’s Inugami (2001), Ten Shimoyama’s St. John’s Wort (2001), Kōji Shiraishi’s Carved: The Slit-Mouthed Woman (2007), Takashi Komatsu’s Persona (2000), and Koji Shiraishi’s Noroi: The Curse (2005)—on Blu-ray (in the UK, US, and Canada) also on 10/28. [Read on here...]
- The Hitcher 4K
- Second Sight UK
- Universal Studios Home Entertainment
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- Arrow Video
- Stephen Bjork
- 4K Ultra HD
- Bill Hunt
- The Digital Bits
- My Two Cents
- Bluray
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Back the Bits
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- Paramount
- Tim Salmons
- A Quiet Place: Day One 4K
- Ghost: Paramount Presents 4K
- Paramount Scares: Volume 2 4K
- Shout! Studios
- Shout! Factory
- Scream Factory
- Super Friends: The Complete Collection BD
- Seven Samurai 4K
- BFI
- Watership Down 4K
- The Uninvited BD review
- The Unseen BD review
- Imprint Films
- Full Moon Features
- The Primevals: Ultimate Collection BD review
- The Exorcist III 4K
- Exorcist II: The Heretic
- Hellraiser: Quartet of Torment 4K
- Trick 'r Treat 4K
- J Horror Rising BD box set
- Breakdown 4K
- World War Z 4K
- Friday the 13th: Part II 4K
- Orphan: First Kill 4K
- Twisters 4K
- Neon
- Decal
- Longlegs 4K
- DC Studios
- Superfriends!
- Body and Soul
- First Love
- Murder on the Orient Express (1974) 4K
- Nightlife
- The Rundown 4K
- As Above So Below
- The Blob (1988) 4K Steelbook
- Arcane: League of Legends 4K
- Devil 4K
- Land of the Dead 4K
- Death Becomes Her 4K
- George A Romero
- Robert Zemeckis
- The Wolfman (2010) 4K
- Shocker 4K
- Drag Me to Hell 4K
Succession comes to Blu-ray, plus Arrow’s September includes Chronicles of Riddick 4K, summer sales from Criterion & KLSC, 1982: Greatest Geek Year Ever! from MVD Rewind & more
All right, we haven’t had a lot of news updates this week, because frankly there just hasn’t been a lot of news to report. And also because we’ve all been working on a lot of disc reviews for you to enjoy. In fact, today we have no less than TEN to share with you, including...
My thoughts on Guy Ritchie’s The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare (2024) in 4K Ultra HD from Lionsgate, Akira Kurosawa’s Dreams (1990) in 4K UHD from The Criterion Collection, and Gil Kenan’s Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire (2024) in 4K UHD from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
Tim’s review of Ernie Fosselius’ Hardware Wars (1978) on Blu-ray and Albert Band’s Ghoulies II (1987) in 4K UHD from the MVD Rewind Collection, Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi’s Goodbye Uncle Tom (1971) in 4K from Blue Underground (which is definitely not for the faint of heart), and Jason Reitman’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife (2021) in 4K UHD from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
Dennis’ take on Ted Geoghegan’s Brooklyn 45 (2023) on Blu-ray from Shudder.
And Stephen’s look at Mark Waters’ Mean Girls (2004) on 4K Ultra HD from Paramount, as well as the import version of Michael Mann’s Ferrari (2023) in 4K UHD from Neon and Sky via Universal in UK.
More reviews are on the way for Monday, including my look at Luc Besson’s La Femme Nikika (1990) in 4K from Sony, and Alex Garland’s Civil War (2024) in 4K from Lionsgate, so be sure to watch for them.
Also, just a heads up: Our very own Russell Hammond has posted the new update of our ever-popular Release Dates and Cover Art section (see Cover Art above), which includes all the latest Blu-ray, DVD, and 4K Ultra HD cover art and Amazon.com pre-order links. As always, you can sort by date, by format, even isolate the Criterion titles! And as an Amazon Affiliate, literally anything you order from Amazon after clicking to them through one of our links (like this one) goes to help support our work here at The Bits and we greatly appreciate it! [Read on here...]
- Neon
- Knuckles
- Lionsgate
- Criterion Collection
- Stephen Bjork
- Dennis Seuling
- Imprint Films
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- 4K Ultra HD Release List update
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics
- 4K Ultra HD
- Bill Hunt
- The Digital Bits
- My Two Cents
- Bluray
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- Back the Bits
- HBO
- Succession: The Complete Series BD
- Arrow Video September 2024 slate
- Guy Ritchie
- The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare 4K review
- Akira Kurosawa's Dreams 4K review
- Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire 4K review
- Ghostbusters: Afterlife 4K review
- Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- Hardware Wars BD review
- MVD Rewind Collection
- Ghoulies II 4K review
- Tim Salmons
- Goodbye Uncle Tom 4K review
- Blue Underground
- Shudder
- Brooklyn 45 BD review
- Mean Girls (2004) 4K review
- Paramount Home Entertainment
- Michael Mann
- Ferrari 4K review
- Russell Hammond
- Release Dates & Artwork update
- Cover Art update
- The Chronicles of Riddick 4K
- Friday the 13th (2009) 4K
- The Threat BD
- Torso 4K
- Kinji Fukasaku
- Alex de la Iglesia
- Acción Mutante
- The Day of the Beast
- Perdita Durango
- Knuckles 4K
- Totem BD
- Janus Contemporaries
- The Covenant
- Synapse Films
- 1982: The Greatest Geek Year Ever! documentary Kickstarter
- Kevin Costner
- Horizon: An American Saga 4K
- Aces High
- The White Dawn
- Bruce Timm
- Batman: Caped Crusader trailer
- Criterion sale
- Kino Lorber Studio Classics sale
Paramount sets Bringing Out the Dead for 4K Ultra HD, plus Sony signs a new distribution deal with SDS that includes Lionsgate, Disney & 20th Century
We’re starting the new week here at The Bits, as always, with more new disc reviews...
Stephen has turned in his thoughts on Albert Magnoli’s celebration of all things Prince, Purple Rain (1984), in 4K Ultra HD from Warner Bros. Discover Home Entertainment. The film celebrates its 40th anniversary this summer, and the city of Minneapolis has been partying all weekend in honor of it (more on that here).
Also, I’ve shared my thoughts on Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999) in 4K Ultra HD from Paramount Home Entertainment. I’m not sure the title actually needed a 4K upgrade, but what the heck—blame Canada. You can read all the details here.
And Dennis has shared his perspective on The Wachowskis’ Bound (1996), which is new on Blu-ray (and 4K UHD) from our friends at The Criterion Collection.
More reviews are forthcoming this week, so be sure to stay tuned for them.
Now then... we’ve got a pretty significant piece of industry news to share with you today. Sony Pictures Home Entertainment has completed an “umbrella” distribution deal with Studio Distribution Services (SDS) that covers not only their own Blu-ray, DVD, and 4K Ultra HD product, but also titles from Lionsgate and Disney (along with 20th Century Studios, Touchstone, Hollywood Pictures, and the other Disney-owned labels), which Sony produces for those studios. We first broke the news of this for our Patreon subscribers over the weekend.
The reason this deal is important is that it guarantees Sony, Disney, 20th Century Studios, and Lionsgate a direct and stable distribution channel for their physical media product into Walmart stores. And as we’ve reported previously, Walmart is the biggest disc retailer in North America with a whopping 45% share of the disc sales market (as of earlier this year—that number may have grown a bit with the recent exit of Best Buy, which had approximately 4% of the business). [Read on here...]
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