Tron: Ares
January 6, 2026
The Jan. 6 home entertainment slate includes Tron: Ares on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K, and 20th Century Studios’ Predator: Badlands digitally.
The Walt Disney Co. is releasing the sci-fi action-adventure film Tron: Ares on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD disc Jan. 6. Expanding upon the original Tron and Tron: Legacy films, Tron: Ares stars Jared Leto as a warrior program caught between the rivalry between two tech corporations who seeks the code to remain alive in the real world. the film features state-of-the-art visual effects, action, and a soundtrack by Nine Inch Nails. It earned $73 million at the domestic box office. The 4K edition is a combo pack with the film on both 4K and regular Blu-ray disc, plus a digital copy, available in both standard packaging and as a limited-edition Steelbook featuring custom artwork.
A Tron 3-Movie Collection DVD containing the original 1982 Tron, 2010’s Tron: Legacy and Tron: Ares also is available.
The 20th Century Studios sci-fi actioner Predator: Badlands will be released for premium digital rental and sale Jan. 6 by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment. Director Dan Trachtenberg’s Predator: Badlands deepens Yautja lore by introducing new characters Dek (Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi) and Thia (Elle Fanning). Set in the future on a deadly remote planet, the film follows Dek, a young Predator outcast from his clan, who finds an unlikely ally in Thia and embarks on a treacherous journey in search of the ultimate adversary. The film earned $91 million at the domestic box office.
Due Jan. 6 from Kino Lorber and Virgil Films is the romantic sci-fi drama ReEntry. From director Brendan Choisnet and writer Daniel Nayeri, ReEntry tells the story of Lucas Bello (Sam Trammell), the first human to attempt multidimensional travel. But when Lucas steps through the quantum portal and vanishes, his wife Elinore (Emily Deschanel) is left behind — grappling with grief and uncertainty. One year later, Lucas suddenly reappears, changed and also unaware that any time has passed. For him, it’s been just a moment. For her, it’s been a long nightmare. As the couple confronts the fallout of time lost, they must unravel the mystery behind Lucas’s disappearance — a truth that will forever change their lives, and their love. The film also stars Noma Dumezweni and Maulik Pancholy.
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Arrow Video will release the 1992 actioner Under Siege on 4K Ultra HD disc for the first time Jan. 6. The limited edition featuring a new 4K restoration of the film and newly commissioned extras will also be available on regular Blu-ray Disc. The film from director Andrew Davis stars Steven Seagal as Casey Ryback, a former Navy SEAL now working as a chef aboard the U.S.S. Missouri. On the historic battleship’s final voyage executive officer Commander Krill (Gary Busey) throws a surprise party for the skeleton crew, lining up a caterer and waiters, a blues band led by William Strannix (Tommy Lee Jones), and even a Playmate (Erika Eleniak) to jump out of a giant cake. The party ends abruptly when Strannix, Krill and all the waiters hijack the battleship with a plan to sell off the arsenal of Tomahawk cruise missiles to rogue nations. Escaping into the bowels of the ship, Ryback becomes the only hope of stopping them. The film has been restored from the original camera negative, and the 4K presentation includes HDR10-compatible Dolby Vision, the original lossless stereo audio and a brand new Dolby Atmos mix.
Arriving Jan. 6 on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Disc from the Criterion Collection is 1995’s Dead Man, director Jim Jarmusch’s black-and-white examination of the 19th century American West as an existential wasteland. Accountant William Blake (Johnny Depp) has hardly arrived in the godforsaken outpost of Machine before he’s caught in the middle of a fatal lovers’ quarrel. Wounded and on the lam, Blake falls under the watch of the outcast Nobody (Gary Farmer), who guides his companion on a spiritual journey, teaching him to dispense poetic justice along the way. The film sports a 4K digital restoration, supervised and approved by Jarmusch, with a 2.0 surround DTS-HD master audio soundtrack. The 4K edition is a combo pack with one 4K disc of the film and one regular Blu-ray with the film and bonus materials.
Kino Lorber on Jan. 6 will release on Blu-ray Disc the 2001 sci-fi thriller K-PAX, starring Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges. In the film, a stranger who calls himself Prot (Spacey) seemingly appears out of nowhere following a disturbance at New York’s Grand Central Station. Claiming to come from the distant planet K-PAX, Prot draws the attention of jaded Dr. Powell (Bridges), whose initial skepticism soon turns to fascination and amazement. Even a team of leading scientists are at a loss to explain Prot’s detailed knowledge of the star system he calls home. But with Prot’s return to K-PAX fast approaching, the search for the answers intensifies. Based on the novel by Gene Brewer, K-PAX was directed by Iain Softley (Hackers) and features an early role for Aaron Paul (“Breaking Bad”). The film earned $50.3 million at domestic theaters, with a worldwide gross of just over $65 million, according to Box Office Mojo. K-PAX comes to Blu-ray from a new HD master from a 4K scan of the original 35mm camera negative, on a dual-layer BD50 disc.
Kino Lorber on Jan. 6 will release, on Blu-ray Disc only, the 2004 drama The Door in the Floor, an adaptation of the first third of John Irving’s best-selling novel A Widow for One Year. The Door in the Floor chronicles one pivotal Long Island summer in the lives of famous children’s book author Ted Cole (Jeff Bridges) and his beautiful wife, Marion (Kim Basinger). It is the provocative, tragicomic story of one couple’s emotional journey into a world of daring sensuality and stunning honesty. The cast also includes Jon Foster, Mimi Rogers, Bijou Phillips and a young Elle Fanning.
Kino Lorber on Jan. 6 will release, on Blu-ray Disc and DVD, Köln 75, about jazz great Keith Jarrett’s legendary performance in January 1975 that nearly didn’t happen. Directed by Ido Fluk, Köln 75 shows how the concert was conceived and orchestrated through the efforts of a teenage concert promoter, Vera Brandes. She enthusiastically organized the concert venue (the Cologne Opera House), promoted the event, and even sold the tickets. And after Jarrett threatened to drop out because his Bösendorfer Imperial Grand piano was nowhere to be found, she convinced him to go on with the show. John Magaro plays the intense Jarrett, a counterpoint to Mala Emde’s joyful portrayal of Brandes. Jarrett’s one-hour, entirely improvised masterpiece The Köln Concert became the best-selling solo album in jazz history.
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