‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Season 1 Arriving on Disc June 16

Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment will release A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms: The Complete First Season on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD Disc June 16. The announcement comes the day after the season one finale aired on HBO.

An adaptation of George R. R. Martin’s “Tales of Dunk and Egg” novellas, beginning with 1998’s The Hedge Knight, the series returns viewers to the world of Westeros a century before the events of “Game of Thrones,” depicting the adventures of Ser Duncan the Tall and his young squire, Egg.

The series stars Peter Claffey as Ser Duncan “Dunk” the Tall, Dexter Sol Ansell as Egg, Daniel Ings as Ser Lyonel Baratheon, Bertie Carvel as Baelor Targaryen, Danny Webb as Ser Arlan of Pennytree, Sam Spruell as Maekar Targaryen, Shaun Thomas as Raymun Fossoway, Finn Bennett as Aerion Targaryen, Edward Ashley as Ser Steffon Fossoway, Tanzyn Crawford as Tanselle, Henry Ashton as Daeron Targaryen, Youssef Kerkour as Steely Pate, Tom Vaughan-Lawlor as Plummer, and Daniel Monks as Ser Manfred Dondarrion.

The season one disc release includes all six episodes, plus two exclusive featurettes: “Building ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’” and an extended version of “Welcome to ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms.’” The discs also include “A Knight in the Making” web documentary videos for each episode.

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One Battle After Another

DIGITAL REVIEW:

Warner;
Comedy;
Box Office $71.6 million;
Streaming on HBO Max;
$6.99 VOD, $19.99 Sellthrough, $24.98 DVD, $29.98 Blu-ray, $34.98 UHD;
Rated ‘R’ for pervasive language, violence, sexual content, and drug use.
Stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Benicio del Toro, Regina Hall, Teyana Taylor, Chase Infiniti, Tony Goldwyn, John Hoogenakker, Kevin Tighe, Jim Downey.

In One Battle After Another, Paul Thomas Anderson has crafted a film that feels like a jagged transmission from an immediate future. Anderson, the Studio City, Calif.-born visionary director best known for modern classics like Boogie Nights, Magnolia and There Will Be Blood, has always been a master of immersive worlds, but here he pushes that immersion to its limit. For me, it took a solid 30 minutes or more of deep focus to figure out what was going on, but once the film finds its rhythm, it never lets you up for air. Battle doesn’t offer a traditional “way in”; instead, you are dropped directly into a scene as if the story had been running long before you arrived. It is a frenzied, exhilarating experience as your mind frantically dissects the options and tries to guess what is about to happen next, and that breathless “ride” sensation continues for the full three-hour duration.

The story opens with a prologue set 16 years earlier, tracing the origin of the “French 75,” a radical leftist group led by the fierce “Perfidia Beverly Hills,” a character played by Teyana Taylor. After a raid on a detention center and a botched bank heist, the movement scatters. One member, “Ghetto” Pat Calhoun (Leonardo DiCaprio), vanishes into the shadows of present-day Northern California, reinventing himself as Bob Ferguson: a man trying to raise a daughter while the world he once tried to blow up slowly closes in on him.

This epic was brought to life by Warner Bros. executives Michael De Luca and Pamela Abdy, who handed Anderson an estimated (and staggering) $150 million budget. It remains a rare, almost defiant vote of confidence for a three-hour, ‘R’-rated odyssey that lacks a traditional hook. While the film rights weren’t won in a typical Hollywood bidding war, the project was born from Anderson’s decades-long obsession with the “unfilmable” novelist at the heart of the story.

The film’s eerie foresight is rooted in its source material, Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, which was a massive literary event and a New York Times best-seller upon its release. This is not Anderson’s first time at bat with the author, following 2014’s Inherent Vice, a film that struggled to find an audience. The timing of this latest adaptation is optimal. By updating Pynchon’s Reagan-era warnings for the mid-2020s, Anderson has effectively bridged two eras of national anxiety, proving that the author’s themes are relevant and terrifyingly durable. Pynchon is still alive at 87 as of January 2026, and his notoriously reclusive presence was recently felt with the release of his latest novel, Shadow Ticket, on Oct. 7, 2025. This unconventional mystery, set in the 1930s Great Depression, was his first new book in 12 years and arrived to critical acclaim just as One Battle After Another was becoming a cultural flashpoint. There is a haunting subtext here; by choosing to look back at the economic collapse of the 1930s now, Pynchon may be signaling that history is about to repeat itself, suggesting that the “impossible timing” of this film isn’t a fluke, but a head-on collision with a future he is already beginning to map out in his newer work.

To document a warning of this magnitude, Anderson required a canvas as wide as the history it mirrors, so to capture that sprawling landscape, Anderson used vintage cameras. VistaVision was a high-definition widescreen process created in the 1950s that ran 35mm film horizontally through the camera rather than vertically. This creates a much larger negative area, resulting in a picture with incredible depth, sharp detail, and a “bigness” that digital cameras often struggle to replicate. By using this technology, Anderson gives the modern chaos an organic, timeless grit, making the film feel like a rediscovered classic from a future that hasn’t happened yet. This attention to detail extends to the character names, which deserve recognition as both comical flourishes and sharp narrative shorthand. Names like Perfidia Beverly Hills, Steven J. Lockjaw, and Sergio St. Carlos aren’t just absurd; they are clear signals for what kind of person you’re dealing with. They highlight the cartoonish intensity of American archetypes — the underground icon turned revolutionary, the rigid military zealot, the zen-like karate master — anchoring the film in a hyper-reality where the humor is as pointed as the political critique.

The film’s profound accuracy likely stems from the unique collaboration between Anderson and Pynchon. It is widely believed that the two share a direct line of communication. Buzz suggests the author didn’t just give his blessing but actively participated, possibly even consulting on the script to help translate his 1980s paranoia into the 2026 landscape. This likely participation explains why the dialogue feels so authentically Pynchonian while remaining so sharp in its engagement with current events.

Battle delivers an essence of our “sensory whiteout” present-day political landscape, presenting a “fascist police state” that critics on both sides have claimed as a mirror to their own anxieties. Anderson remains remarkably neutral, mocking the left’s obsession with purity tests — as seen when a revolutionary on a payphone scolds Bob for not “studying the text” while his life is in danger — just as sharply as he skewers the hypocritical “racial purity” of the right-wing elite. However, viewers should be warned: This is a relentlessly violent film. The brutality on screen is often as raw as the narrative, and for many, the core message may be better served by returning to the source book, where Pynchon’s prose allows for a more contemplative digestion of these heavy themes. Simultaneously, some softened edges ground this thriller in the intimate, messy bond between a father and his daughter, where Anderson creates something explosive and deeply human.

DiCaprio delivers a stellar lead performance, with supreme comedic range, as Bob, a perpetually stoned, bathrobe-clad “degenerate” who navigates his paranoid existence with a roach clip or beer constantly in hand. He looks more like a suburban casualty than a former revolutionary, yet beneath the suds and clouds of smoke, DiCaprio keeps Bob sharp, portraying a father whose bumbling exterior masks a desperate, protective instinct. While DiCaprio provides the comedy pulse, Sean Penn is its terrifying, indelible engine. As Colonel Steven J. Lockjaw, Penn marvelously plays a sandblasted officer whose psychosexual obsession with the woman he’s hunting — Perfidia — drives the plot into dark territory. He seeks to join the “Christmas Adventurers Club,” a fictional white supremacist secret society of billionaires that feels uncomfortably close to real-world headlines. Penn brings a relentless, almost supernatural energy to the character; no matter the wreckage or the odds, Lockjaw simply never dies.

Opposite this darkness is Taylor, who makes a superstar turn as Perfidia. A former choreographer for Beyoncé, Taylor brings a “badass” energy to the screen that suggests she could easily anchor a major superhero franchise, yet she grounds the character in the grit of a woman who has sacrificed everything for a cause. Or did she? Anderson leaves us with a lingering, uncomfortable doubt: After her proximity to Penn’s Lockjaw, the film makes us wonder if her fire for the resistance was extinguished or merely traded for a different kind of survival. Another discovery of the film, however, is Chase Infiniti as Bob’s daughter, Willa. In her film debut, Infiniti acts as the story’s moral anchor and heart. The entire movie eventually revolves around her; she is the prize everyone is trying to get, whether to protect or destroy. Her performance is quiet and resolute, holding its own against heavyweights like Benicio Del Toro, who plays Sergio St. Carlos, Willa’s karate sensei. Del Toro is the film’s “soulful counterweight” — cool, collected and slightly tipsy — operating a modern-day underground railroad with a nonchalant grace. He is essentially a “Latino Harriet Tubman,” echoing the heroic 19th-century abolitionist who led others to safety through a secret network of safe houses; here, Del Toro provides that same sanctuary, offering Bob weapons, coverage and wisdom without ever breaking his nonchalant vibe.

Everything culminates in a finale shot in the desert over rolling hills — a one-of-a-kind car chase dubbed the “River of Hills.” Unlike the typical curves or lane-passing of standard action cinema, the undulating landscape here acts as a character in its own right, with cars vanishing and reappearing over steep, vertical peaks. The nail-biting cinematography, paired with a Jonny Greenwood score that ramps up the heart rate like a metronome of suspense, creates hairy tension. The sequence might even turn road topography into a metaphor for the blind dips of our American future.

Ultimately, One Battle After Another will be remembered as the definitive, prescient document of the mid-2020s. It captures the specific vibration of a nation holding its breath, waiting for a storm that is already here. It suggests that while the names of the “battles” change and the actors on the stage rotate, the fundamental struggle to remain human in an inhumane system is eternal. In a filmscape of disposable blockbusters, Anderson has delivered a rare, heavy artifact: a film that is more than a movie; it is an urgent, unflinching statement about the state of America today — a warning and a brilliant work of art all at once.

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The film is now available for streaming on HBO Max, and for digital purchase or rental. It arrives on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD disc Jan. 20 without bonus materials. Some supplements are being prepared for a 4K Steelbook slated for March.

‘All the President’s Men’ Making Its Way to 4K Ultra HD Disc and Digital Feb. 17

Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment will release the 1976 political docudrama  All the President’s Men on 4K Ultra HD for the first time on disc and for digital purchase Feb. 17. The 4K Ultra HD disc edition also includes a reddemable code for a digital copy.

Directed by Alan J. Pakula and written by William Goldman, the film is based on the 1974 non-fiction book by Washington Post reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward that details their investigation in the Watergate scandal that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon.

The film stars Robert Redford as Woodward, Dustin Hoffman as Bernstein, and Jason Robards as Post editor Ben Bradlee. The cast also includes Jack Warden, Martin Balsam, Hal Holbrook and Ned Beatty.

The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and won four Oscars: Best Supporting Actor for Robards, Best Adapted Screenplay for Godman, Best Art Direction and Best Sound.

New bonus materials include the featurettes “All the President’s Men: The Film and its Influence” and “Woodward and Bernstein: A Journalism Masterclass.” Legacy extras include the featurettes “Woodward and Bernstein: Lighting the Fire,” “Telling the Truth About Lies” and “Out of the Shadows: The Man Who Was Deep Throat,” plus a clip of Jason Robards on “Dinah!”

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All the President’s Men

Oscar-Winning Classic ‘Ben-Hur’ Arriving on 4K Ultra HD Disc and Digital Feb. 17

Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment will release the 1959 religious epic Ben-Hur on 4K Ultra HD for the first time on disc and for digital purchase Feb. 17. The 4K Ultra HD disc edition also includes a reddemable code for a digital copy.

Director William Wyler’s three-and-a-half-hour adaptation of Lew Wallace’s 1880 novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ stars Charlton Heston as Judah Ben-Hur, whose opposition to the occupation of Judea by the Roman Empire brings him into conflict with his childhood friend Messala (Stephen Boyd). After Messala fabricates a charge of treason against Ben-Hur, his family is imprisoned his family and he is sentenced to a harsh life of slavery. But when fate brings Ben-Hur into the favor of a Roman nobleman, he returns to Judea as a champion of the chariot races, seeking to avenge his family’s dishonor.

The cast also includes Jack Hawkins, Haya Harareet, Hugh Griffith, Martha Scott, Cathy O’Donnell and Sam Jaffe.

The film won 11 Academy Awards — which remains tied for the most for a single film — including Best Picture, Best Actor for Heston, and Best Director for Wyler.

New bonus materials include the featurettes “Ben-Hur: Anatomy of an Epic” and “The Cinematography of Scale.”

Legacy extras include a commentary with Heston and film historian T. Gene Hatcher; a music only track showcasing Mikos Rózsa’s Oscar-Winning score; screen tests for George Baker and William Russell, Leslie Nielsen and Cesare Danova, and Nielsen and Yale Wexler; Harareet’s screen test and a makeup test; and the featurettes “Charlton Heston & Ben-Hur: A Personal Journey,” “Ben-Hur: The Making of an Epic” and “Ben-Hur: A Journey Through Pictures.”

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Ben-Hur

‘It: Welcome to Derry’ Season 1 Due on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Disc May 5

Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment will release the first season of HBO’s “It: Welcome to Derry” on DVD, Blu-ray Disc and as a limited-edition 4K Ultra HD Steelbook May 5. All eight episodes are now available for digital purchase as well.

Based on Stephen King’s novel It, “Welcome to Derry” is set in the world of the “It” films from director Andy Muschietti. The prequel series takes place in 1962 and traces the origins of the murderous, shape-shifting entity known as Pennywise the Clown (Bill Skarsgård) in the town of Derry, Maine.

The cast also includes Taylour Paige, Jovan Adepo, James Remar, Stephen Rider, Matilda Lawler, Chris Chalk, Peter Outerbridge and Madeleine Stowe.

The horror series was produced by HBO and Warner Bros. Television, and developed for television by Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs, who also serve as executive producers alongside Brad Caleb Kane, David Coatsworth, Bill Skarsgård, Shelley Meals, Roy Lee and Dan Lin. Fuchs, who wrote the teleplay for the first episode, and Kane serve as co-showrunners.

Bonus materials available with It: Welcome to Derry — The Complete First Season include three extended “Inside Derry” behind-the-scene featurettes, and the disc-exclusive featurette “Fear the Other,” which explores the societal and political dynamics of New England in 1962.

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“It: Welcome to Derry — The Complete First Season’ 4K Ultra HD Steelbook

 

‘Boogie Nights’ Arriving on 4K Ultra HD Disc and Digital Dec. 16

New Line’s 1997 classic Boogie Nights will arrive on 4K Ultra HD for the first time digitally and on disc Dec. 16 from Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment.

From writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson, the film stars Mark Wahlberg as a young porn star in the 1970s dealing with his newfound fame and an industry transitioning from film to the age of home video. The cast also includes Julianne Moore, Burt Reynolds, Don Cheadle, John C. Reilly, William H. Macy, Heather Graham, Nicole Ari Parker and Philip Seymour Hoffman, Luis Guzman and Melora Walters.

Boogie Nights earned three Oscar nominations — Best Supporting Actor for Reynolds, Best Supporting Actress for Moore, and Best Original Screenplay for Anderson. At the Golden Globes, Reynolds won Best Supporting Actor, while Moore was nominated for Best Supporting Actress.

The 4K disc release includes also includes a digital copy of the film.

Bonus materials new to the release include two American Cinematheque panels, one with Anderson and another with Anderson and Reilly. Legacy extras include a commentary with Anderson; a commentary with Cheadle, Graham, Guzman, Macy, Moore, Reilly, Wahlberg and Walters; 10 deleted scenes running 29 minutes total; Michael Penn’s “Try” music video; and 35 minutes of “The John C. Reilly Files” consisting of three outtakes and extended sequences.

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‘One Battle After Another’ Available Digitally Nov. 14, on Disc Jan. 20

Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment will make director Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another available for digital purchase and rental starting Nov. 14. The film will subsequently be released on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD disc Jan. 20.

Written, directed and produced by Anderson, One Battle After Another is inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s 1990 novel Vineland. Leonardo DiCaprio stars as a washed-up former member of a terrorist group who is now a stoner living in a state of paranoia, surviving off the grid with his spirited, self-reliant daughter, Willa (Chase Infiniti).  When the military officer (Sean Penn) hunting his team resurfaces after 16 years and she goes missing, the former radical scrambles to find her, father and daughter both battling the consequences of his past.

The cast also includes Benicio Del Toro, and Regina Hall and Teyana Taylor.

In addition to Anderson, the film was produced by Adam Somner and Sara Murphy, with Will Weiske executive producing. The creative team behind the camera includes several frequent Anderson collaborators, among them director of photography Michael Bauman, production designer Florencia Martin, editor Andy Jurgensen, costume designer Colleen Atwood, casting director Cassandra Kulukundis and composer Jonny Greenwood.

The film earned $69.35 million at the domestic box office, $196.75 million globally.

The initial 4K Blu-ray and DVD releases will contain no bonus materials. A collectible 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Steelbook edition with a bonus disc of extras created by Anderson will be available in the spring of 2026.

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F1: The Movie

4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAY REVIEW:

Warner/Apple;
Drama;
Box Office $189.53 million;
$30.99 DVD, $38.99 Blu-ray, $46.99 UHD, $58.99 UHD BD Steelbook;
Rated ‘PG-13’ for strong language, and action.
Stars Brad Pitt, Damson Idris, Kerry Condon, Tobias Menzies, Kim Bodnia, Sarah Niles, Will Merrick, Callie Cooke, Javier Bardem.

Meet Sonny Hayes, auto racing’s version of a gun for hire.

In the 1990s, young Sonny washed out of Formula One after a horrific crash that nearly killed him. As he drifted through life in the years that followed, he would take on any opportunity to race again just because he missed the adrenaline rush of being behind the wheel.

As played by Brad Pitt, Sonny is essentially Cliff Booth as a racecar driver, echoing his Oscar-winning character from Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.

Coming off a win at the 24 Hours of Daytona, Sonny is recruited by his old buddy Rubén (Javier Bardem) to take over the second car of his flailing F1 team, APXGP. Deeply in debt, Rubén desperately needs one of his cars to win one of the final nine races of the season or his board of directors could force him to sell the team.

As the racing world questions the sanity of putting an older driver behind the wheel of a high-performance speed machine, Sonny quickly puts his veteran instincts to good use, finding loopholes in the rules to move his team up the leaderboard, even as he comes into conflict with the team’s other driver, a cocky rookie named Joshua Pearce (Damson Idris). Though his own career is threatened with an abrupt end if the team is sold, Joshua is hesitant to take the advice of a teammate he considers past his prime.

Sonny also strikes up a flirtatious banter with the team’s technical director (Kerry Condon) as he helps redesign the team’s cars to gain enough maneuverability to achieve a position advantage on tricky corners of the F1 circuit’s tracks.

With their time quickly running out, the group must learn to work as a true team to keep their dreams alive.

While the story is pretty typical for a sports drama, what elevates the film, aside from its generally likable characters and solid performances, is director Joseph Kosinski’s technical mastery of visual storytelling. Kosinski’s cameras plunge the audience into every race, overwhelming any screenplay concerns with a thrilling display of racing action (capturing so much detail they had to put an epilepsy warning on the box over flashing lights).

A main reason the racing sequences are so good is that Kosinski committed to shooting most of them practically, collaborating so closely with the Formula One governing body — FIA — that the production was allowed to field their own racing team to shoot at actual races. In addition to cameos from several actual drivers, including seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton (who also serves as a producer on the film), there’s even a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it appearance by Chris Hemsworth, who starred in Ron Howard’s 2013 F1 docudrama Rush, attending one of the climactic races with his brother Liam.

Refining the techniques he previously used on Top Gun: Maverick, Kosinski shot F1 with a multitude of large-format cameras attached to the cars. While such immersion enhances the visceral experience of the film, it also amplifies observations that F1 is just a racing version of Maverick, both films dealing with aging speed junkies imparting their wisdom and influence upon a new generation while unwilling to ride into the sunset.

The obvious relationship between the two films under the same director offers a fascinating parallel with how Tom Cruise reteamed with director Tony Scott after the original Top Gun to make Days of Thunder, which even back in 1990 was likened to a car racing version of the fighter jet actioner.

Though the big difference here is the absence of Cruise in F1, the basic formula shines through, even down to the tacked-on love story. (Some might argue that Condon is a step down on the hotness meter from Nicole Kidman in DOT, but at least she’s more believable as a car designer than Kidman was as a neurosurgeon.)

One can almost imagine that with a few tweaks F1 could have been a sequel to Days of Thunder as well. And it still could be. Amid rumors of a proper Days of Thunder sequel being in development, Kosinski told GQ UK he would be interested in making a Days of Thunder/F1 crossover movie, reuniting Cruise and Pitt for the first time since 1994’s Interview With the Vampire.

While F1’s racing sequences give the film an air of authenticity, the primary issue with the credibility of the plot is the way Sonny continues to get away with his shenanigans, a notion to which the screenplay gives a passing nod.

Sonny’s unorthodox racing strategy is based on the real-life Crashgate incident at the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix, when the Renault team ordered one of its drivers to deliberately crash in order to trigger deployment of the safety car, allowing their other driver to win the race.

Under the actual F1 penalty structure, Sonny wouldn’t have lasted two races before being tossed off the circuit. F1: The Movie is able to get away with hand-waving over the rules because it doesn’t take much time to explain them to a general audience that probably isn’t too familiar with them anyway, preferring instead to fill in key plot points with exposition dumps from an off-camera play-by-play announcer when needed.

The lackadaisical approach to such technical details supposedly caused a bit of a divide on opinions of the film between general audiences who enjoy it quite much, and racing enthusiasts who are less enthralled with the depiction of their favorite sport.

A secondary concern involves the home video editions of the film and their lack of any variable aspect ratio to take advantage of the fact that the film was shot for Imax. Instead of filling up home screens with the larger image to give the racing scenes extra zip, the at-home presentation for F1 is locked into the standard theatrical ratio of 2.39:1 on both the disc and digital versions.

It should also be noted that the digital copy code included with the film’s Blu-ray and 4K disc editions is redeemable only through Apple TV, and doesn’t sync to other retailers via Movies Anywhere as most Warner-distributed titles do.

Bonus material included with the home entertainment presentation consists of nine good featurettes that provide more than 50 minutes of behind-the-scenes insights. These are available on both the 4K and Blu-ray disc versions (offered separately or in a Steelbook combo pack), and digital copies.

Up first is the five-minute “Inside the F1: The Movie Table Read,” in which the cast and filmmakers gather at the United Kingdom’s Silverstone Circuit in June 2023 to pore through the screenplay together. Subsequently, the five-minute “Making It to Silverstone” allows the participants to reflect upon the experience of filming racing scenes at the famed venue.

The level of cooperation between the production and the real-life Formula One organization is covered in the nine-and-a-half minute “APXGP Sets and Locations Around the World” and the five-minute “Lewis Hamilton: Producer,” while the six-minute “APXGP and F1: How it Was Filmed” and the five-and-a-half-minute “APXGP Innovations” detail many of the filming techniques used during the races.

Other featurettes include the six-and-a-half-minute “The Anatomy of a Crash,” which details the visual effects techniques used to film a pivotal crash sequence in the film, and the five-minute “Getting Up to Speed,” which focuses on the training needed to become an F1 driver and the challenges of achieving a similar level of dedication for the film.

Rounding out the package is the five-minute “Sound of Speed,” which delves into the film’s cutting-edge sound design and the contributions of composer Hans Zimmer, whose musical sensibilities have redefined the art of film scoring since the bygone era of traditionalists such as James Horner and John Williams. For the record, this is Zimmer’s third score for a car-racing movie, after the aforementioned Days of Thunder and Rush

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‘Task’ Season 1 Arriving on Blu-ray Disc and DVD April 21, 2026

Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment will release HBO’s Task: The Complete First Season on Blu-ray Disc and DVD April 21, 2026.

The seven-episode limited series ran from Sept. 7 to Oct. 19 on HBO and is available for streaming on HBO Max and to purchase digitally from major online retail platforms.

Taking place in the working-class suburbs of Philadelphia, the series stars Mark Ruffalo as a FBI agent leading a task force to put an end to a string of violent robberies led by an unsuspecting family man (Tom Pelphrey).

The cast also includes Emilia Jones, Jamie McShane, Sam Keeley, Thuso Mbedu, Fabien Frankel, Alison Oliver, Raúl Castillo, Silvia Dionicio, Phoebe Fox and Martha Plimpton.

The series was created and written by Brad Ingelsby, who also serves as showrunner and executive producer. Other executive producers include directors Jeremiah Zagar and Salli Richardson-Whitfield, Mark Ruffalo, David Crockett and Ron Schmidt, plus Mark Roybal and Paul Lee for wiip, and co-executive producers Nicole Jordan-Webber and Jeremy Yaches for Public Record.

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‘F1: The Movie’ Arriving on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Disc Oct. 7

Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment will release F1: The Movie on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD disc Oct. 7.

In the film from director Joseph Kosinski, Brad Pitt stars as a veteran Formula One race car driver who returns to the track after 30 years to save a friend’s racing team.

The cast also includes Damson Idris, Kerry Condon, Tobias Menzies, Kim Bodnia and Javier Bardem.

The film earned $189.4 million at the domestic box office, and $624.3 million globally.

Blu-ray and 4K extras include nine featurettes with more than 50 minutes of behind-the-scenes material:

  • “Inside the F1: The Movie Table Read” — The cast joins director Joseph Kosinski and producer Jerry Bruckheimer at Silverstone for a table read June 19, 2023.
  • “The Anatomy of a Crash” — An in-depth look at the practical effects used to film an intense scene loosely inspired by Formula 1 driver Romain Grosjean’s Bahrain crash in 2020.
  • “Getting Up to Speed” — A look at how Brad Pitt and Damson Idris became racing drivers, as lead driving choreographers Luciano Bacheta and Craig Dolby reveal the hard work and dedication that went into getting the cast behind the wheel and up to speed.​
  • “APXGP Innovations” — How the filmmakers behind F1 worked hard across departments — sound, camera, RF, rigging, stunts and SFX — to find new ways to innovate.​
  • “Making it to Silverstone” — See how the filmmakers set about to film at the Formula 1 British Grand Prix 2023 at Silverstone, which took months, if not years, of planning and rehearsal of the Grid Walk and Formation Lap scenes in order to shoot live without disturbing the integrity of the race.​
  • “Lewis Hamilton: Producer” — Filmmakers discuss the value of having seven-time World Drivers’ Champion Lewis Hamilton as a producer on the film, how he influenced the script, his set visits and more.​
  • “APXGP Sets and Locations Around the World” — Go beyond the track to see how F1 teams McLaren, Williams and Mercedes welcomed cast and crew into their factories and team facilities, and see how the APXGP garage was designed to fit perfectly into the F1 paddock for filming across the globe.
  • “APXGP and F1: How it was Filmed” — See how the cast and crew filmed the climactic Red Flag sequence with only an hour to do so.
  • “Sound of Speed” — Join Hans Zimmer at AIR Studios for the first recording sessions of the F1 musical score, with Jerry Bruckheimer joining the session to witness the magic. Zimmer reflects on his desire for the sound of the cars to influence the music of the orchestra.​

 

The film was released for digital purchase and rental Aug. 22.

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