Kevin Smith’s Dogma is one of the most gleefully irreverent studio films of the 1990s, a sharp, funny, and unexpectedly thoughtful religious satire that folds Catholic mythology, pop philosophy, and filthy dialogue into one of the strangest cult films of its era. With Matt Damon and Ben Affleck as fallen angels trying to exploit a loophole in church doctrine, the film balances apocalypse-level stakes with Smith’s slacker wit, comic-book energy, and a cast stacked with memorable turns from Linda Fiorentino, Alan Rickman, Chris Rock, Jason Lee, Salma Hayek, and George Carlin. For collectors, this 4K UHD release is a big one because Dogma spent years in home video limbo, which makes a proper UHD edition feel like a real event rather than just another catalogue reissue.
Two renegade angels discover a loophole that could let them return to Heaven, but in doing so they risk wiping out all existence. Standing in their way is Bethany, a disillusioned woman unexpectedly tasked with saving the universe, helped by two unlikely prophets, a forgotten apostle, a heavenly muse, and the Metatron himself.
Umbrella’s official product page describes the release as available in Slipcase and Standard editions, with the 4K + Blu-ray edition carrying the same core film release. Retail and review coverage also identify this as the film’s first 4K UHD release from Umbrella Entertainment in Australia, built from a new 4K restoration of the original camera negativewith HDR10 and Dolby Vision.
For Rue Morgue Records’ 4K UHD section, this is exactly the sort of title that deserves attention. It is a bona fide cult classic, it has years of scarcity and mystique behind it, and now it lands in a premium modern format with serious collector appeal. Beyond the controversy and comedy, Dogma endures because it is actually about belief, guilt, institutional hypocrisy, and the human need to make peace with the divine. That gives it far more staying power than a one-joke satire, and it is why the film still has such a loyal following.
On the packaging side, the official Umbrella Entertainment product page is the primary source for the front-cover and release art. It is the best source to use for your listing because it is the label’s own page for the title. If you want added reference points, DiabolikDVD also displays the slipcover artwork, and Umbrella’s Collector’s Edition page shows additional premium packaging elements tied to the wider Dogma 4K campaign, including the rigid case, clear plastic slip, art cards, and poster for that higher-tier edition.