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This Week on the Criterion Channel
Constructing the Life-Sucking Machine in The Princess Bride
Constructing the Life-Sucking Machine in The Princess Bride

Art director Richard Holland shares the nitty-gritty of how he constructed the infernal torture device in Rob Reiner’s classic fairy tale.

M.I.A. and Stephen Loveridge’s Closet Picks
M.I.A. and Stephen Loveridge’s Closet Picks

The star and the director of Matangi/Maya/M.I.A. show love to politically charged films like Missing and Dheepan, and reminisce about the emotional balm they found in our Janus Films collector’s set.

Jennifer Salt Unravels the Twisted Psychology of Sisters
Jennifer Salt Unravels the Twisted Psychology of Sisters

The actor looks back on her experience on the set of Brian De Palma’s first Hitchcockian thriller and her friendship with costar Margot Kidder.

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Truffaut Goes Wide for His “American” Movie
Truffaut Goes Wide for His “American” Movie

Professor Jeff Smith breaks down how François Truffaut’s loving tribute to the crime genre Shoot the Piano Player uses anamorphic widescreen compositions to stylish effect.

This Week on the Criterion Channel
News About FilmStruck
News About FilmStruck

An important update about our streaming service

Steven Yeun’s Top 10

An international star who has delivered acclaimed performances in The Walking Dead, Okja, and Burning, Steven Yeun tells us about the “wise grace” of Tokyo Story, the brutality of RoboCop, and other Criterion favorites.


Seeing Double with Australian Filmmaker Lucy Knox
Seeing Double with Australian Filmmaker Lucy Knox

The complicated bond between a pair of identical twins takes center stage in the stylish short film An Act of Love, now playing on the Criterion Channel on FilmStruck.

This Week on the Criterion Channel
Is Fassbinder’s Working-Class TV Drama Effective as Political Art?
Is Fassbinder’s Working-Class TV Drama Effective as Political Art?

A public-television commission intended to raise class consciousness, Eight Hours Don’t Make a Day inspired heated debates about its political orientation.

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Ping Zhu Harnesses the Wild Energy of Tampopo

Studio Visits

Ping Zhu Harnesses the Wild Energy of Tampopo

With her thick, flowing brushstrokes and eccentric sensibility, illustrator Ping Zhu captured the buoyant flavor of Juzo Itami’s “ramen western.”

John Grant’s Top 10

John Grant is an Iceland-based musician whose most recent album, Love Is Magic, is now available via Partisan Records.


The Commentary That Made Home-Video History
The Commentary That Made Home-Video History

Film historian Ronald Haver breaks down one of classic Hollywood’s most iconic action sequences in this clip from our laserdisc release of King Kong.

This Week on the Criterion Channel
An Art-House Experience at the Foot of the Rockies

Art-House America

An Art-House Experience at the Foot of the Rockies

A vibrant movie theater in the college town of Missoula, Montana, takes the spotlight in the Criterion Channel series Art-House America.

This Week on the Criterion Channel
Hitchcock, Hopper, and the Penultimate Moment
Hitchcock, Hopper, and the Penultimate Moment

In this new video by Daniel Raim, production designer Robert F. Boyle uncovers how two great artists—Alfred Hitchcock and Edward Hopper—mastered the subtle art of suspense.

The Post-9/11 Student Film That Launched Barry Jenkins’s Career
The Post-9/11 Student Film That Launched Barry Jenkins’s Career

The Oscar-winning director got his start with the beautifully atmospheric 2003 short film My Josephine, now streaming on the Criterion Channel on FilmStruck.

Traces of Autobiography in A Raisin in the Sun
Traces of Autobiography in A Raisin in the Sun

Professor Imani Perry details how Lorraine Hansberry’s own experience of housing discrimination made its way into her landmark play.

This Week on the Criterion Channel
In the Words of Tarkovsky
In the Words of Tarkovsky

In this contemplative moment from a documentary about Andrei Tarkovsky, the elusive master explains how he tried to conjure an immersive vision of painter Andrei Rublev’s world.

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Hari Nef’s Top 10

The actress and model, who stars in the recently released feature Assassination Nation, goes deep into her favorite films that illustrate her ideas on “chaotic femininity.”


Mutations of Memory in Hiroshima mon amour
Mutations of Memory in Hiroshima mon amour

Professor David Bordwell breaks down the stunningly innovative thirteen-minute prologue of Alain Resnais’s debut feature in this excerpt from a program on the Criterion Channel.