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Criterion? who/what are/is they/it? and what's the point?

Negative Zero

First Post
in my Must Have DVDs therad, barsoomcore commented that i should pick up "Everything released by Criterion." after browsing thier website for a bit, i still have no more idea who or what "Criterion" is other than they seem to be a company who make DVDs of movies that for the most part, i really don't know.

can anyone shed more light on the subject?
 

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They are supposed to be the company that produces DVDs that are "worth" watching so to speak. I've bought over ten of 'em so far. Not all of them are obscure. Take Silence of the Lambs or any of the numerous samuria films by Kurosowa (Seven Samurai, Hidden Fortress, etc...)
 

Criterion also has a deserved reputation for doing comprehensive and definitive releases for films on DVD. I could be wrong, but I think they pretty much created the "Special Edition" concept when it comes to video releases. Adding director's comentaries, cut footage, interviews, background, concept sketches, etc... I know they were doing that sort of thing back in the laser disk days. Long before DVDs were even in research. Many of their releases even some of their LDs, are still considered the best versions of films sold on video.
 
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I'll add to Rackhir's post a quote from Criterion's site:

Our Mission: The Criterion Collection, a continuing series of important classic and contemporary films, is dedicated to gathering the greatest films from around the world and publishing them in editions that offer the highest technical quality and award-winning, original supplements. Criterion began with a mission to pull the treasures of world cinema out of the film vaults and put them in the hands of collectors. All of the films published under the Criterion banner represent cinema at its finest. In our seventeen years, we've seen a lot of things change, but one thing has remained constant: our commitment to publishing the defining moments of cinema in the world's best digital editions.

The foundation of the collection is the work of such masters of cinema as Renoir, Godard, Kurosawa, Cocteau, Fellini, Bergman, Tarkovsky, Hitchcock, Fuller, Lean, Kubrick, Lang, Sturges, Dreyer, Eisenstein, Ozu, Sirk, Buñuel, Powell and Pressburger. Each film is presented uncut, in its original aspect ratio, as its maker intended it to be seen. For every disc, we track down the best available film elements in the world, use state-of-the-art telecine equipment and a select few colorists capable of meeting our rigorous standards, and take time during the film-to-video digital transfer to create the most pristine possible image and sound. Whenever possible, we work with directors and cinematographers to assure that the look of our releases does justice to their intentions. Our supplements enable viewers to appreciate Criterion films in context, through audio commentaries by filmmakers and scholars, restored director's cuts, deleted scenes, documentaries, shooting scripts, early shorts, and storyboards. To date, more than 35 filmmakers have made our Director Approved library of laserdiscs and DVDs the most significant archive of contemporary filmmaking available to the home viewer.

There you have it! Recently a friend of mine, when told that my wife was getting sick of the expensive DVD purchases, asked, "Do we need to have a Criterion intervention?"

Considering that Criterion editions of Videodrome and Slacker are due on Aug. 31, I'd have to say yes. Please. Help me.
 
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Ya, but they still aren't as good as the Special Edition Showgirls!! I mean, it comes with shot glasses!! :D

The few Criterion things I've seen I've really liked. They do a nice job, but are a bit pricey.
 

You're never sorry you bought a Criterion DVD.

You know, there are so many movies getting made, so many releases of any given movie, that it's hard to know what to get and which version. It's nice to have a couple of names that you can trust to do a little filtering for you. I wouldn't say "Only buy Criterion DVDs" because then you're limiting yourself to whatever they like. But it's handy to not have to wade through a zillion rows of crappy movies at Future Shop ALL the time.
 

barsoomcore said:
I wouldn't say "Only buy Criterion DVDs" because then you're limiting yourself to whatever they like.

And for a gamer, there are tons of movies that Criterion just, well, wouldn't touch. :)

That being said, if you only bought Criterion DVDs, yeah, you'd miss a lot of great gamer flicks, but you've have a lot of really good presentations of a lot of really good films. My favorite is the 3-disc Brazil set.

And actually, it's not just films. Amazon lists 4 titles under music videos. The Complete Monterey Pop Festival, Gimme Shelter, The Beastie Boys' Video Anthology, and The Harder They Come.
 

The only one I own is The Seven Samurai, which is incredible and I'm glad I own it, even though the extras on a lot of the movies are pretty damn slim -- but what else can you expect from a 40+ year-old film, it's not like they could gather the cast for a documentary since most of them are dead.

I've rented a lot of them from Netflix, they are really worth the time if you enjoy Film as an artform and not just purely mindless entertainment.
 

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