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More than 40 years later, “Cries and Whispers,” on Criterion Blu-ray this week, feels like Ingmar Bergman ‘s gloomiest, and most glorious, creation.
Created to honor the Swedish writer-director’s centenary, “Ingmar Bergman’s Cinema” pairs 39 films on 30 Blu-ray discs (regrettably, there is no DVD edition) with a nearly 250-page coffee ...
But the new Criterion Blu-ray of Cries and Whispers (1972) — a necessary HD thing, given the film’s unarguable reputation as one of the most appallingly beautiful color films ever photographed ...
The Criterion Collection’s impressive and almost exhaustive Blu-ray set, “Ingmar Bergman’s Cinema,” released Tuesday, makes a fresh case for his continuing importance.
While Criterion's Blu-ray is mostly ported from the 2005 DVD (minus one: a letter from Bergman explaining the rape scene didn't make it) the film itself has a new 2K scan so crisp you could lose ...
Blu-ray film review by Mark KidelIngmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal (1957) was a revelation. As we staggered out of the packed hall, still haunted by the unforgettable shot of Death leading those whose ...
High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation Original English mono audio (uncompressed LPCM) Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing Audio Commentary by actor David Carradine ...