This March, Criterion Channel highlights Buster Keaton, Isabelle Huppert, and Oscar winner (yes!) Michelle Yeoh

Plus, Marlene Dietrich takes a dangerous trip across China and things get racy with a classic collection of pre-Code Paramount titles

Film Features Buster Keaton
This March, Criterion Channel highlights Buster Keaton, Isabelle Huppert, and Oscar winner (yes!) Michelle Yeoh
Michelle Yeoh, Buster Keaton, Isabelle Huppert Photo: Mike Coppola

Just in time to celebrate Michelle Yeoh’s Best Actress Oscar win for Everything Everywhere All At Once, Criterion Channel premieres a collection of her earlier work in Hong Kong action films. It’s a full slate of Yeoh favorites that shows how much the Malaysian-born actor kicks ass. And that’s just the beginning of the Criterion Channel’s stellar offerings in March. The streamer has also packed this month with a selection of self-directed features and shorts from the inimitable silent film star Buster Keaton. Plus, there are even more classics from cinema’s early years with a slate of pre-Code Paramount films, including picks from directors Ernst Lubitsch and Josef von Sternberg. Finally, in celebration of Isabelle Huppert’s 70th birthday this month, Criterion Channel has put together a retrospective of her career, with acclaimed favorites such as The Piano Teacher. And as if you need any more enticement to binge some of this great content, many of this month’s picks are quick watches that come in at under 90 minutes—perfect for double features.

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A Kid Tells Thomas the Story of the Odyssey (Amateur, 1994)

Isabelle Huppert plays a nympho ex-nun who dreams of writing eroticism in Hal Hartley’s off-kilter, at times excruciatingly deadpan crime drama, . Martin Donovan plays a man with amnesia who pieces his life back together after stumbling upon Huppert (playing a character named Isabelle). That life is one of exploitation, violence, and pornography and Isabelle finds herself quickly swept up in it. Isabelle’s insane haircut, a Parker Posey appearance, plus a soundtrack featuring My Bloody Valentine, Pavement, PJ Harvey, Liz Phair, and Yo La Tengo makes this one of the most ’90s movies ever.

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