🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman (Limited Edition w/Slipcase + Booklet, Region B)
HomeStore

Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman (Limited Edition w/Slipcase + Booklet, Region B)

Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman (Limited Edition w/Slipcase + Booklet, Region B)

Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman (Blu-ray)
Director: Frederick Wiseman

With a groundbreaking career spanning seven decades, Frederick Wiseman is one of the great American storytellers. His documentaries, shot vĂ©ritĂ©-style, are meticulously edited narratives chronicling life’s complexities through rich portraits of social and cultural institutions. Wiseman’s themes are expansive: democracy, power, inequality and community, to name a few; but his focus is compellingly specific and humane. Whether revealing shortcomings in social support or celebrating culinary excellence, he has a unique eye – and ear – for detail.

Representing their first release in the UK, this 3-disc / 5-film collection features a selection of Wiseman’s work made between 1967 and 1975, including Titicut Follies, High School and Juvenile Court.

The Films:

  • Titicut Follies (1967, 84 mins)
  • High School (1968, 75 mins )
  • Hospital (1970, 84 mins)
  • Juvenile Court (1973, 144 mins)
  • Welfare (1975, 167 mins)

Extras:

  • Newly restored in 4K by Zipporah Films and presented in High Definition
  • Corridors of Power, Windows to the Soul (2025, 11 mins): in this newly commissioned video essay, filmmaker Ian Mantgani explores the films of Frederick Wiseman with a focus on his distinctive filmmaking style and observational storytelling
  • Frederick Wiseman: A Discussion (2025, 22 mins): filmmaker Andrea Luka Zimmerman and curator Matthew Barrington discuss Frederick Wiseman’s aesthetics and approach to filmmaking. Recorded at BFI Southbank, London
  • 56-page perfect-bound book featuring essays by David Jenkins, Eric Marsh, Stephen Mamber, Philip Concannon and hosts of the long-running Wiseman Podcast Shawn Glinis and Arlin Golden. Also includes a 1974 essay from Sight and Sound by Thomas Atkins
  • Newly created English descriptive subtitles on all five films
$14.00

Original: $39.99

-65%
Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman (Limited Edition w/Slipcase + Booklet, Region B)—

$39.99

$14.00

Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman (Limited Edition w/Slipcase + Booklet, Region B)

Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman (Blu-ray)
Director: Frederick Wiseman

With a groundbreaking career spanning seven decades, Frederick Wiseman is one of the great American storytellers. His documentaries, shot vĂ©ritĂ©-style, are meticulously edited narratives chronicling life’s complexities through rich portraits of social and cultural institutions. Wiseman’s themes are expansive: democracy, power, inequality and community, to name a few; but his focus is compellingly specific and humane. Whether revealing shortcomings in social support or celebrating culinary excellence, he has a unique eye – and ear – for detail.

Representing their first release in the UK, this 3-disc / 5-film collection features a selection of Wiseman’s work made between 1967 and 1975, including Titicut Follies, High School and Juvenile Court.

The Films:

  • Titicut Follies (1967, 84 mins)
  • High School (1968, 75 mins )
  • Hospital (1970, 84 mins)
  • Juvenile Court (1973, 144 mins)
  • Welfare (1975, 167 mins)

Extras:

  • Newly restored in 4K by Zipporah Films and presented in High Definition
  • Corridors of Power, Windows to the Soul (2025, 11 mins): in this newly commissioned video essay, filmmaker Ian Mantgani explores the films of Frederick Wiseman with a focus on his distinctive filmmaking style and observational storytelling
  • Frederick Wiseman: A Discussion (2025, 22 mins): filmmaker Andrea Luka Zimmerman and curator Matthew Barrington discuss Frederick Wiseman’s aesthetics and approach to filmmaking. Recorded at BFI Southbank, London
  • 56-page perfect-bound book featuring essays by David Jenkins, Eric Marsh, Stephen Mamber, Philip Concannon and hosts of the long-running Wiseman Podcast Shawn Glinis and Arlin Golden. Also includes a 1974 essay from Sight and Sound by Thomas Atkins
  • Newly created English descriptive subtitles on all five films

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Cinema Expanded: The Films of Frederick Wiseman (Blu-ray)
Director: Frederick Wiseman

With a groundbreaking career spanning seven decades, Frederick Wiseman is one of the great American storytellers. His documentaries, shot vĂ©ritĂ©-style, are meticulously edited narratives chronicling life’s complexities through rich portraits of social and cultural institutions. Wiseman’s themes are expansive: democracy, power, inequality and community, to name a few; but his focus is compellingly specific and humane. Whether revealing shortcomings in social support or celebrating culinary excellence, he has a unique eye – and ear – for detail.

Representing their first release in the UK, this 3-disc / 5-film collection features a selection of Wiseman’s work made between 1967 and 1975, including Titicut Follies, High School and Juvenile Court.

The Films:

  • Titicut Follies (1967, 84 mins)
  • High School (1968, 75 mins )
  • Hospital (1970, 84 mins)
  • Juvenile Court (1973, 144 mins)
  • Welfare (1975, 167 mins)

Extras:

  • Newly restored in 4K by Zipporah Films and presented in High Definition
  • Corridors of Power, Windows to the Soul (2025, 11 mins): in this newly commissioned video essay, filmmaker Ian Mantgani explores the films of Frederick Wiseman with a focus on his distinctive filmmaking style and observational storytelling
  • Frederick Wiseman: A Discussion (2025, 22 mins): filmmaker Andrea Luka Zimmerman and curator Matthew Barrington discuss Frederick Wiseman’s aesthetics and approach to filmmaking. Recorded at BFI Southbank, London
  • 56-page perfect-bound book featuring essays by David Jenkins, Eric Marsh, Stephen Mamber, Philip Concannon and hosts of the long-running Wiseman Podcast Shawn Glinis and Arlin Golden. Also includes a 1974 essay from Sight and Sound by Thomas Atkins
  • Newly created English descriptive subtitles on all five films