The Catalogue: Criterion Collection Essentials — Must-Own Editions for Serious Film Shelves
A definitive run of Criterion must-haves spanning cult classics, modern masters, and essential cinematic canon.
A stacked lineup of essential Criterion releases — part cinema history, part visual flex. From cult comedies and razor-sharp satires to modern masterpieces and defining auteur works, this installment pulls together films that shaped the language of modern filmmaking and still hold up as reference points for taste, craft, and cultural weight.
This is not a “starter pack.” It’s closer to a curated canon — the kind of collection that moves from Scorsese-approved world cinema restorations to Lynchian dream logic, Anderson symmetry, PTA heartbreak, and Kubrick precision. Whether you’re building a serious physical media shelf or upgrading what already sits there, these are the editions that actually justify space.
Think of it as the intersection of prestige, obsession, and replay value. The kind of films you don’t just watch — you return to, quote, study, and inevitably defend in arguments you didn’t plan to have.
This Is Spinal Tap (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$40.15
Now on 4K UHD, one of the funniest comedies ever made—the legendary mock rockumentary from Rob Reiner about an English heavy-metal group, featuring Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer
The blueprint for every mockumentary that followed. Deadpan comedy so precise it never really ages — it just gets funnier as real life catches up. Criterion’s restoration sharpens the improv energy, making every awkward silence hit harder.
A History of Violence (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$32.29
Viggo Mortensen stars in one of David Cronenberg’s most celebrated films, a sly, subtly provocative deconstruction of the American action hero
In David Cronenberg’s subtly provocative film, one of his most celebrated, all is not as it initially seems. In his first of many collaborations with the director, Viggo Mortensen delivers a highly nuanced performance as Tom Stall, a small-town husband and father who is hailed as a hero when he kills the would-be perpetrators of a violent robbery. But how did this ordinary family man dispatch them with such skill? Working with an exceptional cast that also includes Maria Bello, Ed Harris, and William Hurt, Cronenberg slyly deconstructs the mythos of the American action hero, posing elemental questions about identity, human nature, and the violence that we both abhor and can’t look away from.
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$34.09 [-32%]
Lynch at his most emotionally direct and structurally fractured. A prequel that feels like a descent rather than a backstory. Devastating, surreal, and intentionally uncomfortable.
In the town of Twin Peaks, everybody has their secrets—but no one more than Laura Palmer. In this prequel to his groundbreaking 1990s television series, David Lynch resurrects the teenager found wrapped in plastic at the beginning of the show, following her through the last week of her life and teasing out the enigmas that surround her murder. Homecoming queen by day and drug-addicted thrill seeker by night, Laura leads a double life that pulls her deeper and deeper into horror as she pieces together the identity of the assailant who has been terrorizing her for years. Nightmarish in its vision of an innocent torn apart by unfathomable forces, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me is nevertheless one of Lynch’s most humane films, aching with compassion for its tortured heroine—a character as enthralling in life as she was in death.
Raging Bull (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$32.29 [-35%]
Scorsese’s most punishing character study. Black-and-white cinematography turns every fight into choreography and every silence into guilt. A film about ego collapsing under its own weight.
With this stunningly visceral portrait of self-destructive machismo, Martin Scorsese created one of the truly great and visionary works of modern cinema. Robert De Niro pours his blood, sweat, and brute physicality into the Oscar-winning role of Jake La Motta, the rising middleweight boxer from the Bronx whose furious ambition propels him to success within the ring but whose unbridled paranoia and jealousy tatter his relationships with everyone in his orbit, including his brother and manager (Joe Pesci) and gorgeous, streetwise wife (Cathy Moriarty). Thelma Schoonmaker’s Oscar-winning editing, Michael Chapman’s extraordinarily tactile black-and-white cinematography, and Frank Warner’s ingenious sound design combine to make Raging Bull a uniquely powerful exploration of violence on multiple levels—physical, emotional, psychic, and spiritual.
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$39.24 [-21% ]
A sensory overload disguised as a narrative. Gilliam turns excess into structure and paranoia into style. Criterion’s edition preserves the chaos without smoothing it out.
It is 1971, and journalist Raoul Duke barrels toward Las Vegas—accompanied by a trunkful of contraband and his slightly unhinged Samoan attorney, Dr. Gonzo—to cover a motorcycle race. What should be a cut-and-dried journalistic assignment quickly descends into a feverish psychedelic odyssey. Director Terry Gilliam and an all-star cast, headlined by Johnny Depp and Benicio Del Toro, show no mercy in bringing Hunter S. Thompson’s excoriating dissection of the American way of life to the screen, creating a film both hilarious and savage.
Dr. Strangelove (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]
$27.99 [-30%]
Kubrick’s coldest joke. Nuclear anxiety reframed as comedy with surgical precision. Every line still lands with uncomfortable relevance.
Stanley Kubrick s painfully funny take on Cold War anxiety is without a doubt one of the fiercest satires of human folly ever to come out of Hollywood. The matchless shape shifter Peter Sellers (The Pink Panther) plays three wildly different roles: Air Force Captain Lionel Mandrake, timidly trying to stop a nuclear attack on the USSR ordered by an unbalanced general (The Killing s Sterling Hayden); the ineffectual and perpetually dumbfounded President Merkin Muffley, who must deliver the very bad news to the Soviet premier; and the titular Strangelove himself, a wheelchair bound presidential adviser with a Nazi past. Finding improbable hilarity in nearly every unimaginable scenario, Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb is a genuinely subversive masterpiece that officially announced Kubrick as an unparalleled stylist and pitch black ironist.
Network (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$39.24 [-21%]
A prophecy disguised as satire. Media collapse, corporate appetite, and performance-as-reality decades before it became normal. Still unsettlingly accurate.
This media satire, directed by Sidney Lumet from a brilliantly incisive script by Paddy Chayefsky, is an X-ray of the corrupted soul of a corporate-dominated America, startlingly prescient in its anticipation of today’s outrage-driven news cycle. At a struggling television network, ambitious executive Diana Christensen (Faye Dunaway) finds herself with a hit on her hands when disgruntled newscaster Howard Beale (Peter Finch) goes off script, transforming himself into a mad-as-hell prophet railing against the ills of modern society. But can she control the populist revolution they have unleashed on the airwaves? Garnering four Oscars, including for Dunaway, Finch, and Chayefsky, this no-holds-barred New Hollywood classic remains as fearlessly funny as it is unnervingly relevant.
Sentimental Value (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$34.99
A contemporary entry built around memory and emotional inheritance. Quiet, deliberate, and focused on how personal history shapes present identity.
Joachim Trier, one of contemporary cinema’s great humanists, excavates layers of history and memory—both national and personal—for this rich, ineffably moving story of one family’s attempts to come to terms with generations of trauma and healing. After the death of their mother, two sisters must contend with the return home to Norway of their estranged father, celebrated filmmaker Gustav Borg (Stellan Skarsgård). In the case of Nora (Renate Reinsve), an actor, he hopes to reconnect by casting her in his new film—a project that both inflicts fresh wounds and reopens old ones. With a virtuoso ensemble cast that also includes Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas (in a breakout performance) and Elle Fanning, Trier’s film delicately balances each moment of humor and hurt, conducting a stunning emotional exploration of how the past echoes in the present and art can transform pain into catharsis.
It Was Just an Accident (The Criterion Collection)
$39.24 [-21%]
A tension-led narrative that builds through implication rather than exposition. The kind of film that turns a simple premise into moral unease.
In this Palme d’Or winner from the Iranian auteur Jafar Panahi, a chance encounter sets in motion an urgent moral thriller. When a stranded driver (Ebrahim Azizi) walks into his shop, mechanic Vahid (Vahid Mobasseri) believes he has come face-to-face with Eghbal, a notoriously brutal guard who tortured him during his political imprisonment. Gathering a band of fellow former inmates and other allies, Vahid sets out to take justice into his own hands—but does he have the right man? Shot in secret after Panahi’s longtime ban from filmmaking in his home country, It Was Just an Accident is a tour de force of sustained tension and mordant humor, provocatively shifting perspectives to examine vital questions of trauma and revenge.
The Royal Tenenbaums (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]
$32.28 [-19%]
Anderson’s most emotionally direct ensemble. Precision framing meets fractured family dynamics. Every character feels frozen in time, but still searching.
Royal Tenenbaum (Unforgiven’s Gene Hackman) and his wife, Etheline (Prizzi’s Honor’s Anjelica Huston) had three children—Chas, Margot, and Richie—and then they separated. Chas (Meet the Parents’ Ben Stiller) started buying real estate in his early teens and seemed to have an almost preternatural understanding of international finance. Margot (Shakespeare in Love’s Gwyneth Paltrow) was a playwright and received a Braverman Grant of $50,000 in the ninth grade. Richie (Rushmore’s Luke Wilson) was a junior champion tennis player and won the U.S. Nationals three years in a row. Virtually all memory of the brilliance of the young Tenenbaums was subsequently erased by two decades of betrayal, failure, and disaster. The Royal Tenenbaums is a hilarious, touching, and brilliantly stylized study of melancholy and redemption from Wes Anderson (The Darjeeling Limited).
POPULAR ON THE CINEMA GROUP
Punch-Drunk Love (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
Make it stand out
PTA channels anxiety into romance. A controlled explosion of color, sound, and awkward emotional release. One of the most unusual love stories in modern film.
Chaos lurks in every corner of this giddily off-kilter foray into romantic comedy by Paul Thomas Anderson. Struggling to cope with his erratic temper, novelty-toilet-plunger salesman Barry Egan (Adam Sandler, demonstrating remarkable versatility in his first dramatic role) spends his days collecting frequent-flier-mile coupons and dodging the insults of his seven sisters. The promise of a new life emerges when Barry inadvertently attracts the affection of a mysterious woman named Lena (Emily Watson), but their budding relationship is threatened when he falls prey to the swindling operator of a phone sex line and her deranged boss (played with maniacal brio by Philip Seymour Hoffman). Fueled by the careening momentum of a baroque-futurist score by Jon Brion, the Cannes-award-winning Punch-Drunk Love channels the spirit of classic Hollywood and the whimsy of Jacques Tati into an idiosyncratic ode to the delirium of new romance.
$39.24 [ -21%]
Del Toro’s romantic fantasy filtered through outsider longing. A fairy tale built on empathy and visual control.
Cinema’s great modern mythmaker Guillermo del Toro uses the hallmarks of classic horror and fantasy to tell a strange and sublime fable about outsiderhood, connection, and love’s transcendence. An ineffably touching Sally Hawkins plays Elisa, a mute janitor at a top-secret government laboratory who finds herself drawn to the facility’s newest research subject: a humanoid amphibian—for whom she is soon risking everything, amid the stifling conformity of 1960s America. A triumph of visual imagination that combines elements of sci-fi, noir, and the golden-age musical, this swooning cinematic dreamscape—winner of four Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director—is a monster movie with a human heart.
Malcolm X (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$40.15 [-20%]
A monumental biographical structure powered by performance and scale. Spike Lee’s most ambitious historical framing.
One of the most electrifying heroes of the twentieth century receives an appropriately sweeping screen biopic, rich in both historical insight and propulsive cinematic style, courtesy of visionary director Spike Lee. Built around an extraordinary performance from Denzel Washington, Malcolm X draws on the iconic civil rights leader’s autobiography to trace his journey of empowerment, from a childhood riven by white-supremacist violence to a life of petty crime to his conversion to Islam and rebirth as a fearless fighter for Black liberation, whose courage and eloquence inspired oppressed communities the world over. An epic of impeccable craft that was made with Lee’s closest creative collaborators and is buoyed by commanding performances from Delroy Lindo, Angela Bassett, Al Freeman Jr., and others, this is a passionate monument to a man whose life continues to serve as a model of principled resistance.
La Haine (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]
Mathieu Kassovitz (The Crimson Rivers) took the film world by storm with La haine (Hate), a gritty, unsettling, and visually explosive look at racial and cultural volatility in modern-day France, specifically the low-income banlieues on Paris's outskirts. Aimlessly passing their days in the concrete environs of their dead-end suburbia, Vinz (Irreversible's Vincent Cassel), Hubert (The Constant Gardener's Hubert Koundé), and Saïd (Three Kings Saïd Taghmaoui) white, black, and Arab give human faces to France's immigrant and otherwise marginalized populations, their resentment at their situation simmering until it reaches a boiling point. A work of tough beauty, La haine is a landmark of contemporary French cinema and a gripping reflection of its country's ongoing identity crisis.
$61.02 [-39%]
A curated restoration collection focused on global cinema preservation. Essential viewing for context beyond mainstream canon.
Established by Martin Scorsese in 2007, The Film Foundation’s World Cinema Project has maintained a fierce commitment to preserving and presenting masterpieces from around the globe, with a growing roster of more than sixty restorations of works by essential filmmakers. This collector’s set gathers four groundbreaking and innovative films, ranging from the epic to the intimate, from Algeria (Chronicle of the Years of Fire), Burkina Faso (Yam daabo), India (Kummatty), and Kazakhstan (The Fall of Otrar). Each title is a significant contribution to the art form and a window onto a cinematic tradition that international audiences previously had limited opportunities to experience.
The Virgin Suicides (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$32.29 [-35%]
Coppola’s debut tone piece — memory, distance, and adolescence filtered through soft-focus melancholy. Still influential in visual storytelling language.
With this debut feature, Sofia Coppola announced her singular vision, exploring the aesthetics of femininity while illuminating the interior lives of young women. An adaptation of Jeffrey Eugenides’s highly acclaimed first novel, The Virgin Suicides conjures the ineffable melancholy of teenage longing and ennui in its story of the suicides of the five Lisbon sisters, stifled by the rules of their overprotective religious parents—as told through the collective memory of a group of men who were boys at the time and still yearn to understand what happened. Evoking its 1970s suburban setting through ethereal cinematography by Ed Lachman and an atmospheric score by Air, and featuring a magnetic performance by Kirsten Dunst, the film secured a place for its director in the landscape of American independent cinema and has become a coming-of-age touchstone.
The Before Trilogy (The Criterion Collection)
$61.26 [-39%]
Three films built almost entirely on conversation and time. Relationship cinema at its most structurally pure.
The cornerstone of director Richard Linklater’s career‑long exploration of cinematic time, this celebrated three-part romance captures a relationship as it begins, begins again, deepens, and strains over the course of almost two decades. Chronicling the love of Celine (Julie Delpy) and Jesse (Ethan Hawke), from their first meeting as idealistic twentysomethings to the disillusionment they face together in middle age, The Before Trilogy also serves as a document of a boundary-pushing and extraordinarily intimate collaboration between director and actors, as Delpy and Hawke imbue their characters with a sense of lived-in experience, and age on-screen along with them. Attuned to the sweeping grandeur of time’s passage as well as the evanescence of individual moments, the Before films chart the progress of romantic destiny as it navigates the vicissitudes of ordinary life.
BEFORE SUNRISE
An exquisitely understated ode to the thrill of romantic possibility, the inaugural installment ofThe Before Trilogyopens with a chance encounter between two solitary young strangers. After they hit it off on a train bound for Vienna, the Paris university student Celine and the scrappy American tourist Jesse impulsively decide to spend a day together before he returns to the U.S. the next morning. As the pair roam the streets of the stately city, Richard Linklater’s tenderly observant gaze captures the uncertainty and intoxication of young love, from the first awkward stirrings of attraction to the hopeful promise that Celine and Jesse make upon their inevitable parting.
BEFORE SUNSET
In the breathtaking follow-up toBefore Sunrise, Celine tracks down Jesse, now an author, at the tail end of his book tour in Paris, with only a few hours left before he is to board a flight back home to the States. Meeting almost a decade after their short-lived romance in Vienna, the pair find their chemistry rekindled by increasingly candid exchanges about professional setbacks, marital disappointments, and the compromises of adulthood. Impelled by an urgent sense of the transience of human connection,Before Sunsetremains Richard Linklater’s most seductive experiment with time’s inexorable passage and the way love can seem to stop it in its tracks.
BEFORE MIDNIGHT
The conclusion ofThe Before Trilogyfinds Celine and Jesse several years into a relationship and in the midst of a sun-dappled Greek retreat with their twin daughters and a group of friends. The couple soon find their vacation upended, however, by long-simmering problems that come to a boil. Marked by the emotional depth, piercing wit, and conversational exuberance that Linklater and his actors honed over two decades of abiding with these characters,Before Midnightgrapples with the complexities of long-term intimacy, and asks what becomes of love when it has no recourse to its past illusions.
The Wes Anderson Archive: Ten Films, Twenty-Five Years (The Criterion Collection) [4K UHD]
$352.99 [-29%]
A complete stylistic evolution. Symmetry, color, and narrative control across decades of filmmaking identity.
This momentous twenty-disc collector’s set—celebrating the first ten features of a true American original—includes new 4K restorations, over twenty-five hours of special features, and ten illustrated books, presented in a deluxe clothbound edition.
Wes Anderson’s first ten features represent twenty-five years of irrepressible creativity, an ongoing ode to outsiders and quixotic dreamers, and a world unto themselves, graced with a mischievous wit and a current of existential melancholy that flows through every captivating frame. This momentous twenty-disc collector’s set includes new 4K masters of the films, over twenty-five hours of special features, and ten illustrated books, presented in a deluxe clothbound edition.
DIRECTOR-APPROVED TWENTY-DISC 4K UHD + BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION COLLECTOR’S SET FEATURES
New 4K digital masters of Bottle Rocket, Rushmore, The Royal Tenenbaums, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, The Darjeeling Limited, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Moonrise Kingdom, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Isle of Dogs, and The French Dispatch of the Liberty, Kansas Evening Sun, supervised and approved by director Wes Anderson, with 5.1 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtracks
Ten 4K UHD discs of the films presented in Dolby Vision HDR and ten Blu-rays with the films and special features
Over twenty-five hours of special features, including audio commentaries, interviews, documentaries, deleted scenes, auditions, short films, home movies, commercials, storyboards, animation tests, archival recordings, still photographs, discussions/analyses, and visual essays
English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
PLUS: Essays by Richard Brody, James L. Brooks, Bilge Ebiri, Moeko Fujii, Kent Jones, Dave Kehr, Geoffrey O’Brien, Martin Scorsese, and Erica Wagner
CC40 (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]
$555.00 [-31%]
A milestone collection reflecting Criterion’s own catalog history. A meta archive of the archive itself.
This monumental forty-film box set celebrates forty years of the Criterion Collection by gathering an electrifying mix of classic and contemporary films, and presenting them with all their special features and essays in a deluxe clothbound, slipcased edition. CC40’s eclectic selection includes the releases most frequently chosen by the hundreds of filmmakers, actors, writers, and other movie-loving luminaries who have visited Criterion over the years, as documented in our popular Closet Picks video series. Neither a historical survey nor a top-forty compilation, this exciting, personal, unpredictable anthology reflects the cinematic joys and inspirations of the creative community that makes the Criterion Collection possible.
49-BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION COLLECTOR’S SET FEATURES
Digital restorations of all forty films
Hundreds of hours of supplemental features
Alternate soundtracks and dubbed tracks
Audio commentaries
Extensive documentaries and making-of programs
Interviews with casts and crews
Outtakes and deleted scenes
Trailers and TV spots
English subtitles and English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
Selection of Criterion Closet Picks videos
And more!
PLUS: Deluxe packaging with a lavishly illustrated 216-page book featuring essays on the films by critics, scholars, and authors
Criterion has always functioned less like a distributor and more like a long-term cultural filter — deciding, quietly but decisively, what deserves to be preserved, restored, and reintroduced as essential viewing. What makes this collection work isn’t just the prestige of the titles, but the range they cover when placed next to each other: controlled chaos, formal precision, emotional fracture, satire that still lands decades later, and auteurs who built entire visual languages from scratch.
Taken together, these films map out more than taste — they map out influence. You can trace entire generations of filmmakers back to moments in this lineup: Scorsese’s kinetic violence, Lynch’s emotional abstraction, Kubrick’s surgical control, PTA’s human volatility, Anderson’s symmetry, and beyond. Even the more experimental or niche entries here don’t sit outside the canon — they reinforce it, expanding what “essential” actually means.
This isn’t a checklist meant to be completed and shelved. It’s a working library. The kind you return to when you want to understand why cinema still holds weight in the first place.
AFFILIATE DISCLOSURE
Some links are affiliate links. The Cinema Group may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

