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March releases from the Criterion Collection

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newsletter@news.criterion.com

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Tue, Mar 26, 2024 09:09 PM

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All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, Saint Omer, To Die For, The Runner, All That Money Can Buy THE CRI

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, Saint Omer, To Die For, The Runner, All That Money Can Buy (a.k.a. The Devil and Daniel Webster) THE CRITERION COLLECTION MARCH 26, 2024 Our March Releases [All the Beauty and the Bloodshed]( This epic story of art, activism, and survival by Laura Poitras entwines the mission of PAIN, the advocacy group founded by artist Nan Goldin to raise awareness about the billionaire Sackler family’s role in the opioid crisis, with an intimate journey through Goldin’s life. Special Features: A new interview with Poitras, a conversation featuring Goldin on art and activism, and more [All That Money Can Buy (a.k.a. The Devil and Daniel Webster)]( In director William Dieterle’s stylish take on Stephen Vincent Benét’s classic short story, a hardworking farmer finds himself bargaining with the devil himself and enlists the aid of the legendary orator and politician Daniel Webster. Special Features: Audio commentary by film historian Bruce Eder and Bernard Herrmann biographer Steven C. Smith, new restoration demonstration, and more [The Runner]( Childhood takes on mythic dimensions in this defining work of postrevolutionary Iranian cinema inspired by director Amir Naderi’s own boyhood, about a young orphan fending for himself on the streets of a port city, determined to rise above his circumstances. Special Features: New conversation between Naderi and filmmaker Ramin Bahrani; audio interview with Naderi and actor Madjid Niroumand; Waiting, a 1974 film by Naderi; and more [Saint Omer]( In her first narrative feature, writer-director Alice Diop constructs a morally and emotionally layered courtroom drama unlike any other, about a novelist who travels to Saint-Omer, France, to attend the trial of a young Senegalese woman accused of murdering her infant daughter. Special Features: Interviews with Diop, conversations between Diop and author Hélène Frappat and filmmaker Dee Rees, and more [To Die For]( The all-American obsession with celebrity turns monstrous in director Gus Van Sant’s deliciously subversive (and disturbingly prescient) satire of our television-mediated, true-crime-obsessed age, starring Nicole Kidman in a career breakthrough performance. Special Features: 4K UHD release; audio commentary featuring Van Sant, director of photography Eric Alan Edwards, and editor Curtiss Clayton; deleted scenes; and more For further information on Criterion and our products, please visit our website at [criterion.com.]( To start streaming the Criterion Channel, please visit [criterionchannel.com.]( If you are not already on our mailing list and would like to be added, please [click here]( to register at [criterion.com.]( To unsubscribe, [click here.]( © 2024 The Criterion Collection :: 215 Park Ave S. New York, NY 10003

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