Posts Tagged ‘Twilight Time’
Twilight Time Presents: All for the Glory of Love
From Peckinpah to Price and from Scott to Sinatra, this assortment of classics from Twilight Time doesn’t mess around.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Moral Outcasts, Musicals, and Hey, Is That Charles Bronson?
Spies, human chameleons, horse thieves, sanitized sex, and less-than-subtle dance routines featuring a multitude of bananas highlight this round of goodies.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Party Poopers, Poor Sports, Sore Losers, and Bad Romances
From pubescent tweens and nightmarish games to pornographers and people who love to shoot things up, there’s an awful lot of foul play afoot here.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Something I Can Never Have
From the unconditional (or unwanted) affection of one’s parental unit, to the ever-classic pursuit of maximum financial units, these five flicks have more to offer than just a nude Ornella Muti (although that’s just fine on its own!).
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Breaking the Rules of a Lovelorn, War-torn World
From bitter one-armed, one-legged, one-eyed veteran vigilantes in Santa Barbara to faithful female Jewish writers smuggling money into Nazi Germany, this lot of features proves all is indeed fair in love and war.
Read MoreThe Twilight Time Roundup for July
Twilight Time delivers another solid spate of titles in July.
Read MoreChato’s Land (1972) Blu-ray Review: A Million Ways to Die Hard in the West
Charles Bronson is turned loose for the first time in a marvelously bleak western now available from Twilight Time.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Sprawling Epics, Sidney Poitier, and a Serial Killer?
Five films from both film and real life history alike make their High-Definition debuts.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Dramatic Epics from Time (and Even Space!)
An infinite number of stars. Six movies. Positively no refunds.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Our Own Personal Freedoms
A quintet of moving pictures that are guaranteed to hear your prayers (or at least be your friends when you’re feeling unknown and all alone).
Read MoreFatherland (1986) / Sense and Sensibility (1995) Blu-rays Review: Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes
Two transitionary tales from the West make their HD debut from Twilight Time.
Read MoreShadows and Fog Blu-ray Review: or, Smoke and Mirrors
Even with an unmistakable style and fine supporting cast, Woody Allen’s final Orion Pictures production is a bittersweet one indeed.
Read MoreScorpio (1973) Blu-ray Review: A Different Kind of Zodiac Killer
Burt Lancaster and Alain Delon shoot the breeze ‒ and just about everything else in sight ‒ in Michael Winner’s oft-criticized (but still enjoyable) espionage flick.
Read MoreBroken Lance Blu-ray Review: The Open Range (Robert) Wagnerian Opera
Twilight Time presents the Oscar-winning western remake that inspired even more movies.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Various Vamps, Visitors, Bats and Vats
As another dreadful holiday season falls upon us, there is perhaps no better time to re-celebrate Halloween with this line-up of killer October chillers.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Hard Pills to Swallow and Hard Acts to Follow
From tales of vengeance to yarns of violence, this quintet of feature films shows some great men who are truly down on their luck.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Five Selections of Summer
From Peter Gallagher’s superfluous face and body hair to the bloody waters of a Samuel Fuller bathhouse, this quintet has it all.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Five Features from the Escalator of Life
“The Best Country Places in the Fabulous World,” or “The Month Henry Baker Hearts Everything.”
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Absolute Beginnings and Bitter Endings
From Bowie to Brando to Blofelds, this selection of five fairly forgotten flicks has an awful lot going on.
Read MoreA Month in the Country Blu-ray Review: The Film Birth of Branagh and Firth
Twilight Time releases this beautifully rendered ode to art and life for the first time on Blu-ray.
Read MoreState of Grace Blu-ray Review: Characters Anchor Crime Drama Neo-Noir
Twilight Time releases this underseen 1990s noir.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents: Rebellion! Turmoil! Endless Talking!
From the hormonally-charged historical wrongdoings of King Henry VIII to David Mamet’s acclaimed verbal diarrhea, this batch of flicks has all bases covered.
Read MoreTwilight Time Presents European Dramas, American Musicals, and Zardoz
Caution: Musicals, intense British drama, and ’70s cinematic hallucinogens lie ahead.
Read MoreJourney to the Center of the Earth / First Men in the Moon Blu-rays Review: In & Out
Twilight Time explores the various space in-between the minds of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells.
Read MoreThe Bounty (1984) / U Turn (1997) Blu-rays Review: Twilight Time Goes South
The two best bad trips you can possibly book this season.
Read MoreSolomon and Sheba (1959) Blu-ray Review: A Show with Everything (Including Yul Brynner)
A tale as old as recorded time. The script isn’t that fresh, either.
Read MoreLenny (1974) Blu-ray Review: They Call Dustin Hoffman Bruce?
Yep, it’s a happy kind of picture, kids. But at least you’ll be able to see sultry Valerie Perrine in the buff!
Read MoreTo Sir, With Love (1967) Blu-ray Review: Twilight Time Goes to School
Sidney Poitier’s students have a bad reputation. What they need is a little adult education.
Read MoreStormy Weather (1943) Blu-ray Review: What an Eye for Beauty This Storm Has!
Twilight Time brings an early precursor to the blaxploitation subgenre (seriously, it is!) to Blu-ray.
Read MoreLove and Death (1975) Blu-ray Review: Dying is Easy. Loving is Hard.
The Woody Allen film that even Woody Allen likes gets the High-Def treatment.
Read MoreThe St. Valentine’s Day Massacre (1967) Blu-ray Review: Corman Slays ‘Em
The movie that almost put gangsters films back on the map returns for another round (of ammunition).
Read MoreFright Night (1985) 30th Anniversary Edition Blu-ray Review: Brewster’s Thirties
Yes, it’s “Still a better love story than Twilight” time.
Read MoreBandit Queen Blu-ray Review: A Brutal, Boring, Bolly-less Biopic
Twilight Time gives the controversial Phoolan Devi biography an upgrade. But is that really a good thing?
Read MoreThe Bride Wore Black (1968) Blu-ray Review: The Roots of ’70s Grindhouse Cinema
François Truffaut’s homage to Hitchcock makes a stunning Blu-ray debut from Twilight Time.
Read MoreBreaking Away (1979) Blu-ray Review: How Kids Grew Up Before the Internet
Quite possibly the only movie in history to partly focus on cycling and not suck in the process.
Read MoreThe Purple Rose of Cairo Blu-ray Review: When Worlds Collide
Twilight Time continues its legacy of giving a damn about Woody Allen’s classic, truly good movies.
Read More‘Rebel, Rebel’: Six Tales of Defiance from Twilight Time
From Streisand to Stone, controversies to conniving, this sextet offers it all.
Read MoreWhen the Wind Blows (1986) Blu-ray Review: Wild Is the Wind
So, anyone for a nuclear holocaust, then?
Read MoreThe Twilight Samurai (Tasogare Seibei) Blu-ray Review: Ex-Swordsman Blues
Wait, THIS lost to “The Barbarian Invasions”? THIS?!
Read MoreFlaming Star Blu-ray Review: Hunka Hunka Burning Death
Elvis Presley’s best performance? Well, if such a thing was ever possible, this is most assuredly it.
Read MoreJudgment at Nuremberg Blu-ray Review: Picking Up the Pieces
Stanley Kramer’s powerhouse post-World War II courtroom drama gets another chance to shock and delight via Twilight Time.
Read MoreBunny Lake Is Missing Blu-ray Review: Required Viewing Is Found
The only film to ever have employed a couple of Zombies as a Greek chorus hits High-Def courtesy Twilight Time.
Read MoreBirdman of Alcatraz Blu-ray Review: The Cinematic System’s Sympathetic Psychopath
Twilight Time brings us a much-needed High-Def release of the Burt Lancaster/John Frankenheimer classic.
Read MoreUnder Fire (1983) Blu-ray Review: Nick Nolte Knows How to Shoot (a Camera)
Twilight Time’s new Blu-ray release is most assuredly the best possible way to experience this underrated gem.
Read MoreThe Believers (1987) Blu-ray Review: That Old Black Magic Has Me in Its Spell
Martin Sheen is in trouble, for he does not practice Santería. Nor does he have a crystal ball, for that matter.
Read MoreThe Vanishing (1993) Blu-ray Review: So Bad That It Actually Becomes Good
That smudged printing on Jeff Bridges and Kiefer Sutherland’s résumés can be seen in a much clearer light now.
Read MoreAudrey Rose Blu-ray Review: An ‘Exorcist’ for the Neil Simon Crowd
Twilight Time brings vintage horror movie lovers a misaligned tale of reincarnation and possession.
Read MoreThe Blob (1988) Blu-ray Review: Everybody’s in the Pink Now
Twilight Time delivers a dazzling HD re-release of the cult favorite ’80s remake and it’s swell, kids!
Read MoreLa Bamba (1987) Blu-ray Review: Lou Diamond Phillips Debuts as Ritchie Valens
The film that made you rue the day Los Lobos first started saturating radio airplay returns in High-Definition.
Read MoreSalvador (1986) Blu-ray Review: Oliver Stone Finds His Calling
Twilight Time revives the controversial director’s first (notable) film back for another haunting round.
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