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Out Of The Blu: Time to stock up on these essential Criterion Collection films

Every July and November, Barnes and Noble does a public service in exchange for their decimation of the Mom and Pop bookstore and to stave off the abyss known in some circles as “the internet": They mark down the entire Criterion Collection by 50 percent (10 percent extra if you’re a member) and film nerds everywhere rejoice.

Criterion releases are among the most expensive DVDs/Blu-ray discs available for purchase on the market, with your average Blu running about $40, but they’re well worth the cost: The transfers are utterly incredible works of film restoration, and the context-providing extras are considerately selected and fascinating. Today, July Eleventh in the Year of Our Lord Twenty Seventeen, the sale begins, and it’ll last through August 7.

We’ve provided you with a handful of choice cuts (Blu-ray emphasized -- it’s 2017) for your shopping perusal (we wish we could have included more films from before 1960, but what can you do), and also highlighted some of the best ways you can spend during this sale to maximize the value of your dollar.

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Eraserhead and Mulholland Dr.

It’s impossibly fortuitous timing that Twin Peaks is on the air during the sale this year, which means film nerds who want to learn more about David Lynch and his work don’t have to break the bank in order to do so. Eraserhead is the most essential of the two, as it features a ton of Lynch’s early shorts (like Six Men Getting Sick (Six Times) which we’ve embedded below) in addition to his early masterpiece about the horrors of fatherhood, and for that price it can’t be beat. On the other hand, Mulholland Dr. might be the best film he’s ever made; it’s certainly one of the most dense and rewarding to dig through, and fans of the new iteration of Twin Peaks might want to look to this as a good entry point to the rest of his theatrical work. There’s not much in the way of extras aside from some great interviews with Lynch and his cast on that release, but the transfers on both discs are incredible. Keep an eye out when the November sale hits for the hit documentary David Lynch: The Art Life and potentially a Criterion release of the massively underrated Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me.

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