Written by Jon Williams
If you use our monthly DVD/Blu-ray Buyer’s Guide, you know that each month we feature a selection of movies offered by the Criterion Collection. In the upcoming December catalog, there will be a full page dedicated to them. But have you ever wondered exactly what the Criterion Collection is?
The simple
answer, of course, is that it’s a video distribution company. The “About Us”
page on Criterion’s website describes
their collection as “a continuing series of important classic and contemporary
films,” as well as “the greatest films from around the world…in editions that
offer the highest technical quality and award-winning, original supplements.”
What Criterion does is restore (if necessary) and remaster films for a crisp
and clear presentation on DVD and high-definition Blu-ray, and then complement
that film with such materials as audio commentary, deleted scenes, ‘making-of’
documentaries, and more. This wealth of esoterica allows the viewer to see the
film in the context in which it was made, and has led to Criterion versions
being referred to as “film school in a box.” In addition, Criterion was also
the innovator of the “letterbox” format, using black bars at the top and bottom
of the screen to present movies in a widescreen format, preserving their
original aspect ratio (generally 2.35:1) when televisions were designed for a
4:3 display.
The
Criterion Collection began in 1984, when VHS was still fighting with Betamax to
become to dominant home video system of the day. Not content with the quality
offered by either of these formats, though, Criterion in the beginning
transferred films onto laserdisc. Although that format never became widespread,
it remained Criterion’s sole format until 1998, when it made the switch to the
burgeoning DVD format. Ten years later, in 2008, Criterion added Blu-ray to its
repertoire, allowing for even better presentation than had previously been
available. Currently, Criterion still distributes its films in both DVD and
Blu-ray formats.
In the
laserdisc days, Criterion would release mainstream movies, but their focus has
narrowed mainly down to art, world, and classic films and documentaries.
Although it no longer distributes them, the first two films issued by the
Criterion Collection were Citizen
Kane and the 1933 version of King
Kong (and in both cases, the editions currently available are obviously
inspired by the Criterion versions, boasting HD transfers and a full range of
special features). It was with Invasion
of the Body Snatchers (also no longer available from Criterion) that
they introduced letterboxing.
Recent
Criterion releases include such films as The
Great Beauty (2014 Academy Award winner for Best Foreign Film), Babette’s
Feast, Eraserhead,
and the Beatles classic A
Hard Day’s Night, while upcoming releases are scheduled for L’Avventura,
Time
Bandits (an update of their 1999 release), and Tootsie.
This, however, is a mere sampling of a vast collection that includes more than
800 titles. For the full list of DVDs and Blu-rays available from Midwest Tape,
SmartBrowse ‘Criterion Collection’ on our website.
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