Blu-ray: Les Demoiselles de Rochefort

★★★★★ LES DEMOISELLES DE ROCHEFORT This iconic French film musical has never looked or sounded better

Pure joy: this iconic French film musical has never looked or sounded better

Where to start with Les Demoiselles de Rochefort? Begin with director Jacques Demy’s technical brilliance: the opening minutes are eye-popping, and even feature a transporter bridge. Teesiders, take note. La La Land's beginning is nifty, but Demy got there first. Then watch the camera swoop up from the main square after the “Arrivée des camionneurs”, straight through an open window and into the ballet studio run by the Garnier sisters.

DVD/Blu-ray: A Kid for Two Farthings

Whimsical East End fairy tale, redeemed by handsome visuals

Seeing post-war London in vibrant colour is a delicious surprise, and the opening seconds of A Kid for Two Farthings follow a pigeon flying east from Trafalgar Square, eventually settling on a pub sign in Petticoat Lane. The location footage in Carol Reed’s first colour film, from 1955, is eye-popping, his cast mixing seamlessly with everyday market folk.

Blu-ray: People on Sunday

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: PEOPLE ON SUNDAY Groundbreaking 1929 Berlin film by Hollywood's future talent

Groundbreaking 1929 Berlin film by Hollywood's future talent

Weimar Germany produced some extraordinary cinema, with Pabst, Murnau, Fritz Lang and others creating a language that transformed the medium and is still a core reference today. People on Sunday (Menschen am Sonntag), a silent film made in 1929, entirely on location – itself unusual at the time – features a team that would make tracks once established in Hollywood.

Blu-ray: The Best of British Transport Films

Improbably enjoyable celebration of UK transport infrastructure

The British Transport Commission was created in 1948 by the Atlee government, an ambitious attempt to organise rail, road and water transport under a single unwieldy umbrella (for a time it was the world’s largest employer, with a staff of over 900,000). British Transport Films was set up a year later, the biggest industrial film unit in the UK.

DVD/Blu-ray: Maurice

★★★★★ DVD/BLU-RAY: MAURICE EM Forster adaptation hits home with new maturity

Merchant Ivory's celebrated EM Forster adaptation hits home with new maturity

“Publishable, but worth it?” EM Forster’s hesitations about the value of Maurice, his novel of Edwardian homosexuality – written in 1913-14, it was published only posthumously, in 1971 – were certainly redeemed by James Ivory’s 1987 film of the book.

Stanley Kubrick: The Exhibition, Design Museum review - immersive detail

★★★★★ STANLEY KUBRICK: THE EXHIBITION, DESIGN MUSEUM Immersive detail

Concentrated archive show reveals the prodigious ferment of a film imagination

Who would have known that the word “Kubrickian” only entered the Oxford English Dictionary last year? You’d have thought that one of the great film directors of the 20th century would have earned his own epithet long ago.

10 Questions for Musician Soumik Datta

10 QUESTIONS FOR SOUMIK DATTA The British-Indian sarod player on jazz, colonialism and film

The British-Indian sarod player talks jazz, colonialism, film and more

“I think we need to get rid of labels, certainly World Music,” insists Soumik Datta, who is both composer and musician, and has lived in the UK since the age of 11. “It is possible to be a musician in the Indian tradition, as well as an electronic musician, as well as a contemporary musician...