Dustin Hoffman movies available on 4K Blu-ray, ranked by transfer quality.
dir. Alan J. Pakula
S-Tier Warner Bros. 4K. The 70s paranoia thriller alongside Three Days of the Condor and The Parallax View. It wasn't on the leaked WB release list so it caught people off guard.
Warner Bros. · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Robert Benton
S-Tier Sony 4K. Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep's divorce drama. Sony's release has a nice set of extras including commentary and deleted scenes. No real collector buzz around this title, but the transfer is well-done with a huge subtitle language list.
Sony Pictures · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Luc Besson
The 4K existed before this, buried inside the Luc Besson 9-film box set from Sony last November. Both the 148-minute US cut and the 158-minute international version, Dolby Vision, Atmos. Now Gaumont is giving it a proper standalone release in June with a steelbook illustrated by Flore Maquin and a wild Fnac-exclusive 6-disc edition that includes a vinyl soundtrack and a 232-page making-of book. The big question for importers is subtitles. The film was shot in English, but French releases have a history of forced French subs or swapped opening sequences. English subs are listed on the French Amazon page, which is encouraging. Sony holds the US rights and StudioCanal has the UK, so a Region A standalone may or may not follow. Collectors who grabbed the Besson box already have the disc, but anyone waiting for a single release finally has a date.
Sony Pictures · 4K Ultra HD
dir. Mark Osborne, John Stevenson
A-Tier Universal 4K. DreamWorks animation at this resolution shows the hand-painted texture work more clearly. People have been waiting for 2 and 3 to follow, and KFP2 eventually dropped with little fanfare. Shows up on GRUV regularly.
Universal Pictures · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Jennifer Yuh Nelson
A-Tier Universal 4K. Kung Fu Panda 2 snuck out on 4K with barely any marketing. People missed it entirely. The DreamWorks 4K transfers have been inconsistent compared to what Pixar gets, and expectations are tempered accordingly.
dir. Mike Mitchell
Universal A-Tier 4K. Turbine included this in their 3D Series Wave 6 alongside F9 and Despicable Me 4. DreamWorks animation benefits from HDR for the fur and background detail.
Universal Pictures · 4K Ultra HD
dir. John Schlesinger
A-Tier Kino Lorber 4K. The Dustin Hoffman/Laurence Olivier thriller with the dentist scene. Kino's transfer scores a 4.5 overall. Not a lot of dedicated 4K collector discussion, though it comes up in thriller recommendation threads.
Kino Lorber · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Barry Levinson
A-Tier MVD Entertainment 4K. Hoffman and Cruise on a road trip, with the $49.95 USD price having people wait for a sale. Viavision also has a limited edition of 2000 copies.
MVD Entertainment · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Mike Nichols
S-Tier Sony 4K. Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn's final film together. Part of the Columbia Classics program.
StudioCanal · 4K Ultra HD
dir. Sydney Pollack
Sony A-Tier 4K as part of the Columbia Classics Volume 5 box set. People have been asking when Tootsie gets a standalone release for years, and Sony still hasn't confirmed one.
dir. Bob Fosse
Criterion 4K. Dustin Hoffman as Lenny Bruce in Bob Fosse's black-and-white biography. Long overdue for this kind of treatment.
Criterion Collection · 4K + Blu-ray Special Edition
dir. Jay Roach
Universal 4K at Barnes and Noble preorder. The Fockers sequel nobody loves but everyone owns on DVD because it was on the shelf at Costco in 2005.
dir. Wolfgang Petersen
Shout Factory 4K on March 31, 2026. No tier rating yet. A mid-90s viral outbreak thriller that nobody was demanding, but Shout's catalog work has been consistent.
Shout! Factory · 4K + Blu-ray
Warner 4K preorder up at Gruv. Sleepers never got the disc treatment it deserved, and Warner finally committing to it is a positive sign.
Warner Bros. · Limited Edition Steelbook