Arrow Video April 2026 Releases Include The Eye, The Killer, and More
Arrow Video have unveiled their April 2026 line-up, and it is the kind of month that makes collectors glance nervously at their bank accounts. The slate jumps across continents and genres, covering Hong Kong action royalty, cult science fiction, Japanese crime cinema, and biting Hollywood satire. For a horror-focused crowd though, one title rises above the rest.
Yes, John Woo’s The Killer is essential cinema. Yes, Soldier is a bruised and battered sci-fi cult favourite finally getting proper respect. But the release horror fans should be circling in permanent marker is the Pang Brothers’ supernatural landmark The Eye.
Here is the full breakdown.
The Eye 4K UHD Limited Edition Is the Horror Highlight

Before Asian ghost cinema became remake material for Hollywood, the Pang Brothers delivered one of the most elegant and emotionally devastating supernatural films of the early 2000s with The Eye.
The story follows blind violinist Wong Kar Mun, who regains her sight after a cornea transplant. The wonder of seeing the world quickly turns to terror when she begins noticing figures no one else can see. Spirits, shadows, and visions tied to impending death start invading her reality. What begins as sensory overload becomes something far more disturbing.
The Eye does not rely on constant jump scares. Instead, it builds dread through atmosphere, stillness, and grief. The supernatural horror is powerful, but the emotional core is deeply human. Angelica Lee delivers a performance that balances vulnerability with quiet, mounting fear.
The film helped usher in a wave of early 21st-century Asian horror built on mood rather than gore, and its influence is still visible in ghost cinema today.
Arrow’s edition features a brand new 4K restoration with Dolby Vision, lossless Cantonese audio, new interviews with producer Peter Ho-Sun Chan, a video essay exploring feminine ghost traditions, archival featurettes, a collector’s booklet, and newly commissioned artwork. This is shaping up to be a definitive release of a modern horror classic. Preorder HERE
The Killer Gets a Major 4K Treatment

John Woo’s 1989 masterpiece The Killer remains one of the most influential action films ever made. Chow Yun-Fat stars as Ah Jong, a professional assassin wracked with guilt after blinding a nightclub singer during a job. He takes on one final hit to fund her surgery, setting off a spiral of betrayal, loyalty, and an unlikely bond with a determined cop.
The film helped define heroic bloodshed cinema and influenced directors across the globe. It is emotional, operatic, and loaded with Woo’s signature balletic shootouts.
Arrow’s release includes a Dolby Vision 4K presentation, multiple commentaries including a new one with Woo, deleted scenes, a feature-length documentary on Woo’s career, interviews with collaborators, the extended Taiwan cut, posters, artwork, and a collector’s book. It is a huge restoration job for a landmark film. Grab your copy HERE.
Soldier Gets the Cult Reappraisal It Deserves

Paul W.S. Anderson’s Soldier, written by David Webb Peoples, has grown into a cult favourite over time. Kurt Russell plays a genetically engineered warrior deemed obsolete and abandoned on a waste planet. Among stranded colonists, he slowly reconnects with humanity until a new breed of soldiers arrives to wipe out survivors.
It is stripped-down, muscular science fiction with impressive production design and an unexpectedly emotional core.
Arrow’s new 4K restoration, approved by Anderson, includes Dolby Vision, archival commentary, new interviews, visual effects breakdowns, and a collector’s booklet. This is prime reassessment territory.
Innerspace, Japanese Crime, and Hollywood Satire Round Out the Slate

Joe Dante’s Innerspace receives a new 4K restoration packed with audio mixes, a new making-of documentary, archival commentaries, and behind-the-scenes ILM material. It remains one of the most inventive and charming sci-fi comedies of the 1980s. Order HERE.
The Wandering Ginza Butterfly collection brings two stylish 1970s Japanese crime films led by Meiko Kaji, loaded with yakuza drama and revenge themes. Arrow’s set includes commentaries, interviews, and new critical writing.
John Schlesinger’s The Day of the Locust also joins the line-up, presented with a 2K remaster, commentaries, essays, and archival extras. It is not horror, but its feverish portrait of Hollywood decay is deeply unsettling.

Final Thoughts on Arrow Video April 2026
April 2026 is one of Arrow’s most eclectic months in recent memory, but horror fans should focus firmly on The Eye. It is a haunting, emotionally layered ghost story that helped shape modern Asian horror, and this edition gives it premium treatment.
Elsewhere, The Killer stands tall as essential action cinema, and Soldier looks ready for a long-overdue critical reappraisal.
This is not a casual month. This is a rearrange-the-shelves month.
