The Criterion Collection has announced their December offerings, and they're getting a little weird right before Christmas.
December 6th sees Luis Buñuel's The Exterminating Angel. The Mexican thriller also served as a biting satire of the country's elite, out-of-touch super-rich. Long considered one of the greatest films to ever come out of Mexico and just one of the best films period, it's making its high-def debut, and also features a documentary on the director.
That date also sees performance artist Laurie Anderson's odd but sentimental Heart of a Dog finally making its way to home video. Combining documentary footage, fictionalized re-enactments and animation, all in tribute to her beloved pup. The disc also includes Anderson's companion concert.
A week later, yet another Federico Fellini joins the collection. His autobiographical 1972 dramedy Roma is a lot of loosely connected vignettes about Fellini's youth in the Italian capital. Criterion occasionally latches onto a director, and several of Fellini's previous films have made it here, including 8½, Satyricon and La Dolce Vita. The personal tribute joins them on December 13th.
Finally, John Huston's iconic film noir The Asphalt Jungle gets a major upgrade. Featuring Sterling Hayden and Marilyn Monroe in her breakthrough role. An extremely dark film, especially for 1950, it's about a jewel heist gone wrong in an anonymous midwestern town. The recently remastered film also includes a doc about Hayden.