Displaying items by tag: The Eagle Obsession documentary
Lionsgate Limited’s May 4Ks will include The Crazies & Kick-Ass, plus Clueless, Black Bag, new Vinegar Syndrome, Via Vision & Second Sight titles & more!
We start today with three new disc reviews, including...
Stephen’s look at Lucio Fulci’s Don’t Torture a Duckling (1972) in 4K Ultra HD from Arrow Video.
Stuart’s take on Stephen Soucy’s Merchant Ivory: The Documentary (2023) on Blu-ray from the Cohen Media Group via Kino Lorber.
And Tim’s thoughts on Shane Black’s The Nice Guys (2016) in 4K Ultra HD from Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment.
We’re all working on more new disc reviews here this week as well, including yours truly. So watch for those over the coming week.
Over on The Digital Bits’ Patreon on Sunday afternoon, I shared another new 30-minute My Two Cents: A Video Blog update with our subscribers, talking more about Tombstone and Dogma, as well as other recent industry developments. And we’re now taking questions for an Ask Me Anything session we’re planning next weekend. Supporting The Digital Bits via Patreon is a great way to help ensure that we can keep bringing you all great industry coverage here on the site. Do keep in mind that since we’ve been covering this industry since the very beginning of the DVD format back in 1997, nobody has better connections, sources, and knowledge of this industry that we do here on The Bits. So thank you all very much for reading and for your support!
Now then... in release news today, we’ve got exclusive details on the next pair of Lionsgate Limited 4K Ultra HD Steelbook titles, due to become available in May! Look for the studio to release Breck Eisner’s The Crazies (2010) and Matthew Vaughn’s Kick-Ass (2010) on 5/13! Both will include Dolby Vision HDR and new Dolby Atmos mixes, and they’ll both be released on 100GB discs. Each will also include new and legacy special features! [Read on here...]
- Space: 1999
- The Eagle Obsession documentary
- Jeffrey Morris
- A Fistful of Dollars 4K
- The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers 4K Steelbook
- The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring 4K Steelbook
- A Minecraft Movie
- The Monkey
- Osgood Perkins
- Decal Releasing
- Neon
- The Wolf Man (1941)
- She Wolf of London
- Werewolf of London
- The Wolf Man Collection
- The 7th Voyage of Sinbad BD
- Prom Night (2008)
- Via Vision Entertainment
- When Evil Lurks
- Shane Black
- Ti West
- The Coffee Table
- The House of the Devil
- Talk to Me 4K
- Second Sight Films UK
- Cinématographe
- Lucio Fulci
- Murderock
- The Nesting
- Curse of the Voodoo
- Devil Doll 4K
- Drop Zone 4K
- Last Tango in Paris 4K
- Vinegar Syndrome
- Universal Studios Home Entertainment
- Black Bag 4K
- Steven Soderbergh
- Clueless (1995) 4K
- Paramount Home Entertainment
- Matthew Vaughn
- Breck Eisner
- Kick Ass 4K Steelbook
- The Crazies (2010) 4K Steelbook
- Lionsgate Limited
- Ask Me Anything (AMA)
- Cohen Media Group
- Kino Lorber
- The Nice Guys 4K review
- Merchant Ivory: The Documentary BD review
- Don't Torture a Duckling 4K review
- Stuart Galbraith IV
- Stephen Bjork
- Arrow Video
- Bluray Disc
- Back the Bits
- Support The Digital Bits via Patreon
- My Two Cents
- The Digital Bits
- Bill Hunt
- 4K Ultra HD
- My Two Cents: A Video Blog on Patreon
- Warner Bros Discovery Home Entertainment
- Tim Salmons
- The Cell (2000) 4K replacement disc
The Cameron 4K reviews are in, plus Hatari!, new Paramount “All Four Formats” UHDs, a doc about Eagles & remembering the great David Bordwell
All right, welcome to a new week Bits readers!
Today is all about James Cameron here at the website, and to that end I’ve just finished knocking out in-depth reviews of the filmmaker’s The Abyss (1989), Aliens (1986), and True Lies (1994) in long-awaited physical 4K Ultra HD and remastered Blu-ray from 20th Century Studios!
The gist is that all three of these discs are worth picking up for Cameron fans and cinephiles, though one of the three titles is a bit complicated. The Abyss is the best looking of the three, nearly on par with the recent Titanic 4K release. Aliens is not far behind in terms of A/V quality and both titles include a nearly complete archive of all past special features created for the films.
True Lies is... well, it looks a lot better than the previous DVD, LaserDisc, and D-VHS releases. Sometimes, it looks fantastic. But at other times, the remastering is a little bit heavy-handed.
It’s still way better looking than StudioCanal’s Terminator 2 4K release though, so it’s a very solid upgrade over previous physical media releases, and it includes some nice features too.
Anyway, you’ll find all of the details in the linked reviews.
But while we’re on the topic of Cameron—and speaking the Terminator—producer Gale Anne Hurd shared over the weekend that plans to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Cameron’s original The Terminator (1984) are soon to be revealed. And we have good word that a new 4K Ultra HD release will chief among them. In the meantime, you can see her post on X/Twitter here. [Read on here...]
- Film Art: An Introduction
- The Eagle Obsession documentary
- Indiegogo
- Jeffrey Morris
- Space: 1999
- Oscars
- Best Director
- Best Picture
- Christopher Nolan
- Oppenheimer
- The 96th Academy Awards
- A Queen's Ransom
- The Philo Vance Collection
- Submarine Command
- Thunder in the East
- 1,000 Convicts and a Woman
- Botany Bay
- Fright 4K
- Hatari! 4K
- 4K Ultra HD Release List
- Terminator 40th anniversary
- Gale Anne Hurd
- University of Wisconsin Madison
- David Bordwell RIP
- Eagle Transporter
- All Four Formats
- Paramount Home Entertainment
- True Lies 4K review
- Aliens 4K review
- The Abyss 4K review
- James Cameron
- 20th Century Studios
- 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