• Shaft - Criterion Collection (Blu-ray)

    Shaft - Criterion Collection (Blu-ray)

    Regular price $90.00
    Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

    While the Black Power movement was reshaping America, trailblazing director Gordon Parks made this groundbreaking blockbuster, which helped launch the blaxploitation era and introduced a new kind of badder-than-bad action hero in John Shaft (Richard Roundtree, in a career-defining role), a streetwise New York City private eye who is as tough with criminals as he is tender with his lovers.

    After Shaft is recruited to rescue the kidnapped daughter of a Harlem mob boss from Italian gangsters, he finds himself in the middle of a rapidly escalating uptown vs. downtown turf war. A vivid time capsule of gritty seventies Manhattan that has inspired sequels and multimedia reboots galore, the original Shaft is studded with indelible elements—from Roundtree’s sleek leather fashions to the iconic funk and soul score by Isaac Hayes.

    Region B Blu-ray: Australian compatible

    Special Features

    • New 4K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
    • Alternate uncompressed stereo soundtrack remastered with creative input from Isaac Hayes III
    • One 4K UHD disc of the film presented in Dolby Vision HDR and two Blu-rays with the film and special features
    • Shaft’s Big Score!, the 1972 follow-up to Shaft by director Gordon Parks
    • New documentary featuring curator Rhea L. Combs, film scholar Racquel J. Gates, filmmaker Nelson George, and music scholar Shana L. Redmond
    • Soul in Cinema: Filming “Shaft” on Location (1971)
    • Archival interviews with Parks, musician Isaac Hayes, and actor Richard Roundtree
    • New program on Hayes’s score featuring Redmond
    • New interview with costume designer Joseph G. Aulisi
    • New program on the Black detective featuring scholar Kinohi Nishikawa and novelist Walter Mosley
    • A Complicated Man: The “Shaft” Legacy (2019)
    • Trailers
    • English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
    • PLUS: An essay by film scholar Amy Abugo Ongiri