Coming This April to the Criterion Channel

Starting April 1, Criterion Channel will be adding new content including EROTIC THRILLERS, a David Lynch series featuring new restorations of INLAND EMPIRE and LOST HIGHWAY, plus the exclusive streaming premiere of Debbie Tucker Green’s EAR FOR EYE, and more…

Premiering April 1

Sleekly stylish, deliriously plotted, and unabashedly steamy, the erotic thrillers of the 1980s and ’90s are both the ultimate guilty pleasure and an illuminating reflection of an era’s changing attitudes toward sex on-screen. As the ’70s came to a close, with studio filmmaking in decline, home video and cable on the rise, and new X-rated movies ushering in an era of “porno chic,” Hollywood studios and independent filmmakers began pushing boundaries to cash in and create popular films that could never have been made before. Often dismissed as disreputable byproducts of the video-store era, these carnal classics can now be seen as rich cultural texts, laden with tantalizing ideas about gender, the relationship between sex and violence, and the cinematic gaze. Encompassing masterful genre deconstructions by directors such as Brian De Palma (Body Double), Paul Schrader (The Comfort of Strangers), and the Wachowskis (Bound) as well as lesser-known titles now ripe for reappraisal (Color of Night, Dream Lover, Fleshtone), these late-night cable staples are journeys into our collective fears and fantasies.

Dressed to Kill, Brian De Palma, 1980

Body Heat, Lawrence Kasdan, 1981

Crimes of Passion, Ken Russell, 1984

Body Double, Brian De Palma, 1984

The Bedroom Window, Curtis Hanson, 1987

Sister, Sister, Bill Condon, 1987

Call Me, Sollace Mitchell, 1988

The Comfort of Strangers, Paul Schrader, 1990

Poison Ivy, Katt Shea, 1992

Dream Lover, Nicholas Kazan, 1993

Color of Night, Richard Rush, 1994

Criminal Passion, Donna Deitch, 1994

Fleshtone, Harry Hurwitz, 1994

The Last Seduction, John Dahl, 1994

Jade, William Friedkin, 1995

Bound, Lana Wachowski and Lilly Wachowski, 1996

Coming May 1

Single White Female, Barbet Schroeder, 1992

Coming June 1

Basic Instinct, Paul Verhoeven, 1992

Directed by David Lynch

A director of such distinctive, overpowering vision that he has inspired his own adjective, David Lynch makes films that seem telegraphed straight from his unconscious to the screen. Now streaming for the first time, Lynch’s newly restored masterpieces Lost Highway and Inland Empire, as well as a one-month-only limited engagement of his sui generis sci-fi epic Dune, join this retrospective of his mind-altering work. From the unsettling surrealist imagery of his midnight-movie classic Eraserhead to the harrowing suburban nightmare Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me to the Hollywood Dream Factory odyssey Mulholland Dr., Lynch’s labyrinthine puzzle boxes turn the American psyche inside out to reveal its deepest, darkest dimensions. 

Eraserhead, 1977

Dune, 1984

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, 1992

Lost Highway, 1997

Mulholland Dr., 2001

Inland Empire, 2006

Coming May 1

The Elephant Man, 1980*

Starring Harold Lloyd

Featuring the documentary Harold Lloyd: The Third Genius

One hundred years ago, Harold Lloyd gave the movies one of their most meme-able moments—the anxious, thrilling, clock-hanging climax of Safety Last!, a film that still stands as a high-water mark of slapstick invention. Though often overlooked in favor of his more famous silent-clown contemporaries Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton, the bespectacled everyman was easily the equal of those legends in both hilarity and hair-raising derring-do. From the football-field antics of The Freshman to the freewheeling New York odyssey of Speedy, Lloyd’s innovative and endearing classics are packed wall-to-wall with some of the funniest and most unforgettable sight gags ever realized on film.

FEATURES

A Sailor-Made Man, Fred Newmeyer, 1921

Dr. Jack, Fred Newmeyer, 1922

Grandma’s Boy, Fred Newmeyer, 1922

Safety Last!, Fred Newmeyer and Sam Taylor, 1923

Why Worry?, Fred Newmeyer and Sam Taylor, 1923

Girl Shy, Fred Newmeyer and Sam Taylor, 1924

The Freshman, Sam Taylor and Fred Newmeyer, 1925

For Heaven’s Sake, Sam Taylor, 1926

The Kid Brother, Ted Wilde, 1927

Speedy, Ted Wilde, 1928

Welcome Danger, Clyde Bruckman, 1929

Feet First, Clyde Bruckman, 1930

Movie Crazy, Clyde Bruckman, 1932

The Cat’s Paw, Sam Taylor, 1934

The Milky Way, Leo McCarey, 1936

Harold Lloyd’s Funny Side of Life, Harry Kerwin, 1963

SHORTS

Bashful, Alfred J. Goulding, 1917

The Big Idea, Gilbert Pratt and Hal Mohr, 1917

By the Sad Sea Waves, Alfred J. Goulding, 1917

Lonesome Luke, Messenger, Hal Roach, 1917

Over the Fence, J. Farrell MacDonald and Harold Lloyd, 1917

A Gasoline Wedding, Alfred J. Goulding, 1918

Look Pleasant, Please, Alfred J. Goulding, 1918

Take a Chance, Alfred J. Goulding, 1918

That’s Him, Gilbert Pratt, 1918

Ask Father, Hal Roach, 1919

Billy Blazes, Esq., Hal Roach, 1919

Bumping into Broadway, Hal Roach, 1919

Captain Kidd’s Kids, Hal Roach, 1919

Just Neighbors, Harold Lloyd and Frank Terry, 1919

The Marathon, Alfred J. Goulding, 1919

Next Aisle Over, Hal Roach, 1919

A Sammy in Siberia, Hal Roach, 1919

Spring Fever, Hal Roach, 1919

Young Mr. Jazz, Hal Roach, 1919

An Eastern Westerner, Hal Roach, 1920

Get Out and Get Under, Hal Roach, 1920

Haunted Spooks, Hal Roach and Alfred J. Goulding, 1920

High and Dizzy, Hal Roach, 1920

His Royal Slyness, Hal Roach, 1920

Number, Please?, Hal Roach and Fred Newmeyer, 1920

Never Weaken, Fred Newmeyer, 1921

Eric Rohmer’s Tales of the Four Seasons 

The seasons may change, but the folly of the human heart is constant in this ineffably lovely quartet by one of cinema’s most perceptive chroniclers of the pangs and perils of romance, Eric Rohmer. By turns comic and melancholic, breezy and richly philosophical, these bittersweet tales of love, longing, and the inevitable misunderstandings that shape human relationships probe the most complex of emotions with the utmost grace. Never before available on streaming or home video, this cycle of newly restored wonders marks a major rediscovery.

A Tale of Springtime, 1990

A Tale of Winter, 1992

A Tale of Summer, 1996

A Tale of Autumn, 1998

Short films by Fanta Régina Nacro

The first woman from Burkina Faso to direct a narrative film, Fanta Régina Nacro addresses complex social issues with a gently subversive, lightly comic touch. Tackling everything from AIDS and sexual health to gender roles and relations to the evolving place of tradition within the modern world, her engaging, playfully eye-opening films both reflect and critique the realities of a patriarchal society in which bold women gradually push change forward.

A Certain Morning, 1992

Puk nini, 1995

Konate’s Gift, 1997

Bintou, 2001

Exclusive Streaming Premieres

ear for eye

With this riveting adaptation of her acclaimed play, debbie tucker green pushes the boundaries of stage and screen alike. Dynamic, absorbing, and visually inventive, ear for eye traces racial injustice across time and continents, detailing stories of struggle and triumph, oppression and uprising. This powerful, astonishingly realized film explores questions of demonstration vs. direct action, violence vs. nonviolence, the personal vs. the structural, boasting a brilliant soundtrack from artists including Run the Jewels, FKA twigs, and Kano.

Criterion Collection Editions

Lost Highway: Criterion Collection Edition #1152

A mesmerizing meditation on the mysterious nature of identity, David Lynch’s postmodern noir is one of the filmmaker’s most potent cinematic dreamscapes.

SUPPLEMENTAL FEATURES: The feature-length documentary Pretty as a Picture: The Art of David Lynch (1997); interviews with Lynch and actors Patricia Arquette, Bill Pullman, and Robert Loggia; new director-supervised picture and sound restoration; and more.

Inland Empire: Criterion Collection Edition #1175

The role of a lifetime, a Hollywood mystery, a woman in trouble . . . David Lynch weaves a vast meditation on the enigmas of time, identity, and cinema itself.

SUPPLEMENTAL FEATURES: A conversation between actors Laura Dern and Kyle MacLachlan; seventy-five minutes of extra scenes; LYNCH (one) and LYNCH2, two documentaries by blackANDwhite, the makers of David Lynch: The Art Life; new director-supervised picture and sound restoration; and more.

Faya dayi: Criterion Collection Edition #1141

Jessica Beshir’s trancelike documentary is a ravishing sensory experience that hovers between consciousness and dreaming.

SUPPLEMENTAL FEATURES: Three short films by Beshir and a selected-scene commentary featuring Beshir and poet Ladan Osman.

Dressed to Kill: Criterion Collection Edition #770

Brian De Palma ascended to the highest ranks of American suspense filmmaking with this virtuoso, explicit erotic thriller.

SUPPLEMENTAL FEATURES: A conversation between De Palma and Noah Baumbach, a documentary on the making of the film, interviews with cast and crew members, and more.

The Comfort of Strangers: Criterion Collection Edition #1041

An unsettling, sado­masochistic seduction plays out under the carefully controlled direction of Paul Schrader in this elegant thriller.

SUPPLEMENTAL FEATURES: Interviews with Schrader, cinematographer Dante Spinotti, actors Christopher Walken and Natasha Richardson, novelist Ian McEwan, and editor Bill Pankow.

Criterion Originals

Spotlight on Kwaidan

In the latest installment of our Spotlight series, critic and author Grady Hendrix explores Masaki Kobayashi’s rapturous anthology of ghost stories, a meticulously crafted, existentially frightening tribute to Japanese folklore.

Short Films

Prismatic Ground Presents

One of the most creative and galvanizing venues for film exhibition to emerge during the pandemic, Prismatic Ground is a festival centered on the intersection between experimental and documentary film. This selection of shorts from its first two editions, in April 2021 and May 2022, offer an eclectic cross section of aesthetically and politically radical work. Highlighting filmmakers whose approach to image-making eschews traditional narrative in favor of abstraction and sensation—and whose techniques span animation, archival collage, 16 mm photography, and digital technology—Prismatic Ground shows how avant-garde techniques can be deployed to confront violent histories of colonialism, genocide, and capitalism, introducing audiences to a cinema of radical potential. The additions from year two confront topics as varied as addiction, ritual, family, and loss with rigorous attention to form and breathtaking emotional power.

2022 Shorts

Home When You Return, Carl Elsasser, 2021

Madness Remixed, Rhea Storr, 2021

Squish!, Tulapop Saenjaroen, 2021

Strangers, Rajee Samarasinghe, 2022

Declarations of Love, Tiff Rekem, 2022

Heron 1954–2002, Alexis McCrimmon, 2022

Maman Brigitte, Ayanna Dozier, 2022

Oliver Sees Indigo, Ryan Clancy, 2022

Three Songs Without Z., Karthik Pandian and Andros Zins-Browne, 2022

We Knew How Beautiful They Were, These Islands, Younes Ben Slimane, 2022

2021 Shorts

Loose Corner, Anita Thacher, 1986

Reckless Eyeballing, Christopher Harris, 2004

Maat, Fox Maxy, 2020

A New England Document, Che Applewhaite, 2020

Letter From Your Far-Off Country, Suneil Sanzgiri, 2020

A Demonstration, Sahsa Litvintseva and Beny Wager, 2020

my favorite software is being here, Alison Nguyen, 2021

Two Sons and a River of Blood, Amber Bemak and Angelo Madsen Minax, 2021

Melting Snow, Janah Elise Cox, 2021

Bodies in Dissent, Ufuoma Essi, 2021

Short Films by David Lynch

Delve deeper into the labyrinthine psyche of surrealist nightmare-weaver David Lynch with these unsettling, hallucinatory shorts that reflect the origins and evolution of his singular style. Spanning the early experimental and painterly works that laid the foundation for his cult sensation Eraserhead through his darkly absurdist web animation series DumbLand, these films are replete with the sinister, uncanny imagery that could have emerged only from an artist so deeply in tune with his subconscious.

Six Men Getting Sick, 1967

The Alphabet, 1968

The Grandmother, 1970

The Amputee (Version 1), 1974

The Amputee (Version 2), 1974

Premonitions Following an Evil Deed, 1995

DumbLand (Episodes 1–8), 2002

Filipiñana

The self-contained cosmos of a country-club golf course serves as a microcosm of Filipino society in this sharply observed miniature. New “tee-girl” Isabel still has to learn the rules—but she is already looking for loopholes to subvert the system.

So We Live

In this claustrophobic study of life during wartime, a family in a conflict-ravaged country spends what seems to be a normal evening together. Their conversations shift between casual matters of daily life and survival, a contrast that highlights the fragility of existence and our time together.

Saturday Matinees

Good Morning, Miss Dove

Jennifer Jones plays the titular New England schoolmarm in this slice of unabashedly nostalgic Americana at its most endearing.

New Additions to Previous Programs

Now Playing in Ari Aster’s Adventures in Moviegoing: Songs from the Second Floor

Acclaimed director Ari Aster—whose latest film, Beau Is Afraid, comes out April 21—introduces this modern classic, a singular, mordantly funny series of vignettes from Swedish existentialist Roy Andersson.

Encores

Back by Popular Demand

Don’t miss these viewer favorites, returning to the Channel in April!

In a Lonely Place, Nicholas Ray, 1950

Aguirre, the Wrath of God, Werner Herzog, 1972

The Harder They Come, Perry Henzell, 1973

The Wicker Man, Robin Hardy, 1973

Manhunter, Michael Mann, 1986

Complete list of films premiering on the Criterion Channel this month:

Aguirre, the Wrath of God, Werner Herzog, 1972

Ballerina, David Lynch, 2007

Bashful, Alfred J. Goulding, 1917

The Big Idea, Gilbert Pratt and Hal Mohr, 1917

Bintou, Fanta Régina Nacro, 2001

Body Double, Brian De Palma, 1984

Body Heat, Lawrence Kasdan, 1981

Bound, Lana Wachowski and Lilly Wachowski, 1996*

By the Sad Sea Waves, Alfred J. Goulding, 1917

Call Me, Sollace Mitchell, 1988

A Certain Morning, Fanta Régina Nacro, 1992

Color of Night, Richard Rush, 1994

Crimes of Passion, Ken Russell, 1984

Criminal Passion, Donna Deitch, 1994

Declarations of Love, Tiff Rekem, 2022

Dream Lover, Nicholas Kazan, 1993

Dressed to Kill, Brian De Palma, 1980

Dune, David Lynch, 1984*

ear for eye, debbie tucker green, 2021

Faya dayi, Jessica Beshir, 2021

Filipiñana, Rafael Manuel, 2020

Fleshtone, Harry Hurwitz, 1994

A Gasoline Wedding, Alfred J. Goulding, 1918

Get Out and Get Under, Hal Roach, 1920

Good Morning, Miss Dove, Henry Koster, 1955

Grandma’s Boy, Fred Newmeyer, 1922

Harold Lloyd’s Funny Side of Life, Harry Kerwin, 1963

The Harder They Come, Perry Henzell, 1973

Haunted Spooks, Hal Roach and Alfred J. Goulding, 1920

Heron 1954–2002, Alexis McCrimmon, 2022

Home When You Return, Carl Elsasser, 2021

In a Lonely Place, Nicholas Ray, 1950

Inland Empire, 2006

Jade, William Friedkin, 1995*

Konate’s Gift, Fanta Régina Nacro, 1997

The Last Seduction, John Dahl, 1994

Lonesome Luke, Messenger, Hal Roach, 1917

Look Pleasant, Please, Alfred J. Goulding, 1918

Lost Highway, David Lynch, 1997

LYNCH (one), blackANDwhite, 2007

LYNCH2, blackANDwhite, 2007

Madness Remixed, Rhea Storr, 2021

Maman Brigitte, Ayanna Dozier, 2022

Manhunter, Michael Mann, 1986*

Mulholland Dr., David Lynch, 2001

Next Aisle Over, Hal Roach, 1919

Oliver Sees Indigo, Ryan Clancy, 2022

Over the Fence, J. Farrell MacDonald and Harold Lloyd, 1917

Poison Ivy, Katt Shea, 1992

Pretty as a Picture: The Art of David Lynch, Toby Keeler, 1997

Puk nini, Fanta Régina Nacro, 1995

A Sailor-Made Man, Fred Newmeyer, 1921

A Sammy in Siberia, Hal Roach, 1919

Sister, Sister, Bill Condon, 1987

Songs from the Second Floor, Roy Andersson, 2000

So We Live, Rand Abou Fakher, 2021

Spring Fever, Hal Roach, 1919

Squish!, Tulapop Saenjaroen, 2021

Strangers, Rajee Samarasinghe, 2022

A Tale of Autumn, Eric Rohmer, 1998

A Tale of Springtime, Eric Rohmer, 1990

A Tale of Summer, Eric Rohmer, 1996

A Tale of Winter, Eric Rohmer, 1998

That’s Him, Gilbert Pratt, 1918

Three Songs Without Z., Karthik Pandian and Andros Zins-Browne, 2022

We Knew How Beautiful They Were, These Islands, Younes Ben Slimane, 2022

Wicker Man, Robin Hardy, 1973

*Available in the U.S. only

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