Hi, Mom!: Limited Edition – Radiance Films (4k UHD/Blu-ray Combo)
Theatrical Release Date: USA, 1970
Director: Brian De Palma
Writers: Charles Hirsch, Brian De Palma
Cast: Charles Durning, Robert De Niro, Allen Garfield, Lara Parker, Jennifer Salt, Paul Bartel, Gerrit Graham
Release Date: May 18th, 2026 (UK), May 19th, 2026 (USA)
Approximate Running Time: 86 Minutes 48 Seconds
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Widescreen / 2160 Progressive / HEVC / H.265 / Dolby Vision HDR10
Rating: 15 (UK), R (USA)
Sound: LPCM Mono English
Subtitles: English SDH
Region Coding: Region Free (4K UHD), A,B (Blu-ray)
Retail Price: £24.99 (UK), $49.95 (USA)
"Aspiring adult filmmaker Jon Rubin (Robert De Niro, Taxi Driver) returns from a tour of Vietnam and, armed with his film camera, attempts to find meaning and inspiration in the counterculture of New York in 1970. Rubin graduates from surreptitiously filming his neighbors to joining a militant Black experimental theater group before flirting with full-scale domestic terrorism, in this hilariously madcap satire that has still retained its outrageous power to shock, fifty years after initially stunning American audiences." - synopsis provided by the distributor
Video: 5/5 (4K UHD), 4.5/5 (Blu-ray)
Here’s the information provided about the transfers, "Hi, Mom! was scanned in 4K resolution at Illuminate Hollywood in Studio City, California. The film has been meticulously restored and color graded in 4K HDR (Dolby Vision) at FilmFinity, London, working from a new 4K 16-bit scans of the original 35mm camera negative. FilmFinity's Digital Restoration Specialists used advanced image-processing tools to remove mant thousands of instances of dirt, erase scratches and gently correct age-related imperfections frame by frame. Paired with the new HDR grade, this restoration reveals striking clarity and depth while staying true to the film's original photographic character. No grain management, edge enhancement or artificial sharpening tools were used at any stage, preserving the authentic texture of the cinematography.
Dionysus in 69 is presented from the only available digital source, provided by Richard Schechner."
Hi, Mom! comes on a 66 GB dual layer 4K UHD.
Disc Size: 61.1 GB
Feature: 60.8 GB
This new transfer is a marked improvement over Arrow Video’s 2018 Blu-ray release. The source looks excellent and the encode is solid. Flesh tones and colors look healthy; contrast, black levels, image clarity, and compression are solid, and the image always retains an organic look. That said, grain looks thicker in some scenes than others.
Hi, Mom! comes on a 50 GB dual layer Blu-ray.
Disc Size: 35.6 GB
Feature: 23 GB
This Blu-ray uses the same master that is used for the 4K UHD disc.
Audio: 4.25/5
This release comes with one audio option, a LPCM mono mix in English with removable English SDH. The audio is in excellent shape; dialogue always comes through clearly, and everything sounds balanced and robust when it should.
Extras:
Extras for the 4K UHD disc include an audio commentary with writer Travis Woods.
Extras for the Blu-ray include a theatrical trailer (1 minute 56 seconds, LPCM mono English, no subtitles), an archival interview with producer Charles Hirsch titled Charles Hirsch on Hi, Mom! (9 minutes 41 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English, no subtitles), an interview with film critic Ellen E Jones (12 minutes 23 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English, no subtitles), Son of Greetings: a collection of behind-the-scenes footage from the making of Hi, Mom! by filmmaker Peter Davis, featuring candid images of the cast and crew (76 minutes 29 seconds, Dolby Digital mono English, no subtitles), an audio commentary with Travis Woods, and Dionysus in 69—an experimental theater production of Euripides' 'The Bacchae,' filmed by Brian de Palma (85 minutes 27 seconds, 1080 progressive, Dolby Digital mono English, no subtitles).
Dionysus in 69: The structure of Dionysus in 69 is loosely based around Euripides' play, which deals with the myth of Dionysus and his revenge on the city responsible for his mortal mother’s death. The cast's improvisation largely causes the chaos and disjointedness of this version of Dionysus. Dionysus in '69 represents Brian De Palma's initial use of split screen, which he employs to its fullest potential. One camera captures the performance, while the other records the audience's reactions to what they are witnessing. The cast immerses themselves in their characters, contributing to the primal intensity of their performances.
Other extras include reversible cover art, a removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and markings and a 24-page booklet (limited to 3000 copies) with cast & crew information, an essay titled The Medium is the Message: The Interplay of Ideas in Brian De Palma’s Hi, Mom! written by Matt Zoller Seitz, A Note on Dionysus in 69, and information about the transfers.
Summary:
Vietnam veteran Jon Rubin has developed a peeping tom fetish since returning to New York. He watches his neighbors with his recently acquired camera. Joe Banner is a producer of pornographic films. Jon convinces him to finance a film about the sex lives of his neighbors. A falling out with Joe Banner leads Jon to an unlikely collaboration with one of his neighbors, Gerrit Wood, an avant-garde artist and an extremist Black Power organization. Has Jon found what he’s been looking for, or has he gone off the deep end?
By the late 1960s, the studio in Hollywood was on its last legs, and several ambitious filmmakers decided it was time to push the envelope. During this period of his career, Brian De Palma's cinema was heavily influenced by new French directors like Jean-Luc Godard and the films of Alfred Hitchcock. There are several similarities in Hi, Mom! that trace back to the cinema of Alfred Hitchcock. Jon Rubin likes L. B. Jefferies in Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window. Both characters like to explore their voyeuristic side through the lens of a camera as they watch their neighbor's every move.
Hi, Mom! Like most of De Palma’s earliest films, it is overflowing with biting dark humor and a distrust of authority. No scene in Brian De Palma’s filmography epitomizes subversive humor and distrust of authority more than the Be Black, Baby! sequences. Be Black, Baby! is a series of black-and-white scenes centered around a theater troupe that exposes a white audience to the experience of being Black. Additionally, the narrative focuses on Jon Rubin’s obsession with filming the sexual habits of his neighbors.
Where Greetings relied heavily on improvisation, Hi, Mom! features a more defined narrative structure. Visually, Hi, Mom! showcases greater experimentation with camera techniques compared to its predecessor. Robert De Niro returns in the role of Jon Rubin, and this time around he delivers a more fleshed-out performance. Eric Kaz delivers another solid score that is in line with his score for Greetings. Ultimately, Hi, Mom! effectively captures the essence of the late 1960s and serves as a platform for showcasing the talents of Brian De Palma and Robert De Niro before they achieved widespread recognition.
Hi, Mom! gets a definitive release from Radiance Films. Highly recommended.
Note about the 4K screenshots: It is not possible to make Dolby Vision or HDR10 screenshots that faithfully match the experience of watching a film in motion on a TV. Instead of not having any screenshots, all of the 4K screenshots are m2ts taken with a MPC-HC player and lossless PNGs.
Dionysus in 69 Blu-ray Screenshots.





























































