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November 29, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

The Gangster

This obscure Allied Artists noir is a melancholy masterpiece of the last days of a hood on a Coney Island-like amusement pier. Barry Sullivan and Belita are excellent as a scarfaced gangster and his actress girlfriend. With Akim Tamiroff and an impressive list of supporting players. From the Warner Archive Collection.
11/30/10

Fantasia and Fantasia 2000
Blu-ray

Disney's 4-disc Special edition includes both DVD and Blu-ray copies of both animated feature films, made 60 years apart. The HD versions are picture perfect; also included is the short subject Destino. Disney Blu-ray.
11/30/10

and

Hand in Hand

Philip Leacock's little drama about tolerance is perhaps the most honest and natural film on the subject. Two English kids, a Jew and a Catholic, meet in school and learn about their exclusive traditions. From Sony.
11/30/10


Greetings!

I have to say I'm happy about all the emails I've gotten on The Complete Metropolis, from people asking questions about the film and the restoration. I actually have good answers for some of them, and when I don't, a biased personal opinion works almost as well.

Today's Fantasia Blu-ray review may draw some email of a different kind. Disney fans either aggressively tout the digital restorations of these animated classics or clobber the studio for repainting and cleaning them up. I don't see the same video crimes I used to (Peter Pan getting a 'golden' design makeover, etc.) and I still see (or think I see) the character & spirit of the old hand-painted animated images coming through. And Disney isn't "fixing" some of the most obvious animation errors just because they can ... happily, these historical micro-flubs are The Same As It Ever Was. So if you think I've missed any cultural crime going on with Fantasia, please write. I'll read most anything sane that isn't predominantly 4-letter words. And yes, I know about the censored black characters!

I mentioned last time that I was going to be writing my end of year essays soon, which prompted a timely note from correspondent Morris Warren. The new Burn On Demand studio DVD-Rs have abandoned closed-captioning as well as English subs, effectively cutting off the ability of deaf or hearing-impaired people to enjoy a growing proportion of what's new on Home Video. And many of these folk are older people, just the ones who want to see classic older movies. I will speak to that issue and I'm glad to be reminded of it.

Now, on to finals (for those in school) and into the looming Holiday madness ... thanks for reading! -- Glenn Erickson



November 26, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

The Complete Metropolis
Blu-ray

Savant expresses what's good and what's better about Kino International's new Blu-ray of the 1927 wonder movie, Fritz Lang's masterpiece. Too sophisticated for Weimar Germany, it is still brilliant filmmaking, visionary in every aspect. With plenty of arcane observations and interesting links.
11/27/10

Metropolis:
Notes on the 2010 restoration from Thomas Bakels

A Savant Special! Digital Film restorer Thomas Bakels discusses the development of the software tool that enabled the resurrection of the "reamed, thrashed, not-ready-for-the-public" recovered new scenes for Fritz Langs restored masterpiece. A Savant Article.
11/27/10

The Cyclops

Bert I. Gordon's maladroit monster movie gets a glowing review. Why? It's a perfect late-'50s no-budget monster romp that delivers the goods - a genuinely scary title character. See! -- Gloria Talbott and Lon Chaney Jr. go eye-to-eye with a really big guy. From the Warner Archive Collection.
11/27/10

and

Who is Harry Nilsson...
(And Why Is Everybody Talkin' About Him)?

A lively, music-filled documentary about the most talented rock singer and composer you may never have heard of -- and his wild times in the 1970s. From Lorber Films.
11/27/10


Greetings!

I'd said I'd be working through Turkey day and I'm back with the goods, including an article from an overseas acquaintance. The Complete Metropolis is another title that makes me want to do a maximum effort.

This is also the time, of course, that I realize that the Holiday season is almost here, with its added responsibilites as well as all the Savant year-end goodies like a Best-of-Year list and a new essay for the Savant Wish List. I'd better get cracking post haste.

A quick link: correspondent Bob Furmanek sends along this animated plea on Why You Shouldn't Become an Archivist. Don't forward it to aspiring archivists without thinking first -- it's pretty devastating.

That's all she wrote for this Saturday. By this time next week I should have some kind of button up on this page to solicit names for the Savant facebook page .... I too am joining the ranks of the millions ... one of us, gooble gobble!

Hey, I did get to see the three-feature version of Olivier Assayas new miniseries Carlos over the last couple of nights (it's over five hours long!). It's very good, and food for thought for anyone thinking that 70s- style radical terrorism has any merit.

Thanks for reading! Glenn Erickson



November 22, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

Madam Satan

Cecil B. DeMille concocts an outrageous erotic epic (read: nutzoid fantasy) about a domestic tiff among some rich folk that climaxes in a wild party in a zeppelin. A giant storm hits and the movie becomes an extravagant proto-disaster film. Crazy Pre-Code tomfoolery complete with teasingly risqué dialogue: "Who wants to go to Hell with Madam Satan?!" The rumors are incorrect, this was not remade as The Song of Bernadette. From the Warner Archive Collection.
11/23/10

Who?

This cerebral, thoughtful Sci-fi stars Joseph Bova as a scientist rebuilt as a metallic cyborg, 14 years before RoboCop. Rival spymasters Elliott Gould and Trevor Howard must deal with a serious security issue -- is the man inside really the missing scientist, or an enemy agent? Too modest to be an action thriller, this works very well as a psychological story about personal identity and the needs of the government. From Scorpion Releasing.
11/23/10

Mutiny on the Bounty (1935)
Blu-ray

Turner and Warner Home Video have restored the Oscar-winning Charles Laughton / Clark Gable historical adventure, thanks to a recently rediscovered lost original negative! The movie is better than ever in a beautiful new Blu-ray transfer. Fancy book packaging, too.
11/23/10

and

Victory At Sea

The history-making TV docu series returns to DVD in a bargain priced 2-disc set ... yes, that's almost thirteen hours of video on just two discs. Read the verdict and .... well, you decide whether or not it's a deal! Mill Creek Entertainment.
11/23/10


Greetings! As we slide into Thanksgiving Week, readers will have plenty to do ... But DVD Savant will proceed normally. but I won't hold you up with too much to read here on the column.

A frequent contributor pointed me to this clever magic trick, The Skull. It's the kind of trick that only works on camera.

And Dick Dinman has a couple of new Web Radio Shows, this time on the subject of The Bridge on the River Kwai. Actor Geoffrey Horne discusses his role and Alec Guinness and William Holden in The (Blu) Bridge on the River Kwai (part One). Then Dick hears from Sony VP Grover Crisp about the new restoration, which adds 'visual real estate' to David Lean's Oscar-Winning production in The (Blu) Bridge on the River Kwai (part Two).

Finally, I'm trying out a new DVD Savant facebook page and am hoping to see some of my readership log on there ... I don't fully understand the basics of the new existence as a facebook minion, so if anybody sees anything stupid, or rude that I'm doing out of ignorance, please let me know. Thank you! Glenn Erickson



November 19, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

The Twilight Zone Season 2
Blu-ray

HD transfers in startling clarity present Rod Serling's imaginative fantasy TV show at its very best. The four disc Blu-ray box overflows with commentaries, interviews and a bonus TV show. From Image Entertainment and CBS Blu-ray.
11/20/10

The Hypnotic Eye

One of the crazier horror pix of the post- William Castle gimmick days, this shocker alternates gruesome scenes of self-mutilation with supposedly real attempts to hypnotize the audience. "Look if you DARE!" With Jacques Begerac and Allison Hayes. Remastered by the Warner Archive Collection.
11/20/10

Monte Walsh

William Fraker's first film as director is the best of the "elegiac" westerns, a mild, thoughtful tale about sweet tempered cowpokes Lee Marvin & Jack Palance faced with the finish of a way of life. With Jeanne Moreau. Paramount-CBS Video.
11/20/10

and

Chaplin at Keystone

An authoritative boxed set contains all but one of Chaplin's first films for Mack Sennett's Keystone Studio, restored to excellent quality. The Little Tramp is invented before our eyes. Nicely appointed with interesting extras. Flicker Alley.
11/20/10


Greetings!

An eventful week, review-wise ... the screener pipeline seems to have unclogged a bit and some strongly desired titles are coming in. I have also received a batch of brand-new Warner Archive Collection titles and will be sneaking some up to the front of the queue. All I had to do was mention The Hypnotic Eye and interesting reader mail started coming in!

Correspondent Gordon Thomas has some intriguing articles up at Bright Lights, including a new piece on Criterion's Josef von Sternberg silent movie set.

For filmmusic aficionados, Steve Vertlieb has a new essay on Alfred Hitchcock and Bernard Herrmann up at Music Files Ltd.. The article concentrates on the falling-out that occurred on the movie Torn Curtain.

Criterion dropped a big announcement bomb a couple of days ago, big at least in Savant's opinion -- in February they're releasing DVD and Blu-ray discs of Luchino Visconti's Senso, a movie I've tried and failed to find in a decent transfer for ... a very long time. It's a romance during a war between Austria and Italy, with the noble lady Alida Valli falling for a cad of an enemy officer, played by Farley Granger. The prints of this 1954 color show always looked terrible but the film was excellent! Also coming from Criterion are Blu-rays of Amarcord, The Double Life of Veronique and Sweet Smell of Success. Thanks for reading! Glenn Erickson.



November 15, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

The World at War
Blu-ray

Thames Television's monumental 26-hour docu miniseries looks and sounds terrific on HD; newly reformatted in a way that Savant thinks works well. With new subtitles and an interesting new menu scheme. Blu-ray, from A&E.
11/16/10

The Bridge on the River Kwai
Blu-ray

The new restoration comes to Blu-ray in terrific shape: far more detail, much better color. And the restorers have even opened up the Aspect Ratio a tad -- it's wider than ever before. Stars Willam Holden, Alec Guinness, Jack Hawkins and a big bridge. Sony.
11/16/10

Stolen Holiday

French fashion designer Kay Francis abets financier Claude Rains in a "women's film" that is also a thinly disguised retelling of the notorious Stavisky Affair. Glamorous, odd, and perhaps a bit disturbing; directed by Michael Curtiz. Warner Archive Collection.
11/16/10

and

House
Blu-ray

One of the most creative, eclectic and just plain weird horror films ever -- seven Japanese girls romp in a haunted house and meet bizarre fates. Indescribable. Blu-ray and DVD, from Criterion.
11/16/10


Greetings!

As sometimes happens with the most important releases of the season, I'm still awaiting a couple of screeners of titles due in today. If either show up I'll get on them right away. Meanwhile, there's plenty of interest to review. All four of the pictures above get top recommendations from me.

I've also just seen the Warner Archive Collection discs of The Cyclops (which I first saw on fuzzy, bad TV reception) and The Hypnotic Eye, which I saw the trailer for when new, and was so scared that I didn't want to see the movie. They're wonderfully crazy examples of monster and horror exploitation, and I expect to have a lot of good-natured fun with my reviews.

Correspondent and friend Stuart Galbraith IV thought enough of a Japanese film called Female Prisoner Scorpion: Jailhouse to recommend it to me, so I've asked for it sight unseen. Can't wait to find out what that one's like, as I tend to avoid the more extreme Japanese exploitation movies.

And wait ... Criterion's just announced their February titles, which include Blu-rays of Amarcord, The Double Life of Veronique, Sweet Smell of Success and a hot title few have seen in a decent version, Luchino Visconti's Senso with Alida Valli and Farley Granger!

Thanks for reading! Glenn Erickson



November 12, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

You're a Big Boy Now

Francis Ford Coppola raids every new stylistic trend of the 1960s for his farce about the girl-crazy library worker Bernard Chanticleer (Peter Kastner). With an amazing cast of pros and talented newcomers: Elizabeth Hartman, Karen Black, Geraldine Page, Rip Torn, Julie Harris, Michael Dunn, Tony Bill and Dolph Sweet. Music by John Sebastian and The Lovin' Spoonful. From the Warner Archive Collection.
11/13/10

Sondheim!
The Birthday Concert

Blu-ray

The stage of Avery Fisher Hall fills with more than twenty Broadway stars plus the New York Philharmonic for a gala tribute to Broadway's most prolific songwriter-lyricist-playwright of the last half century. In Blu-ray from Image.
11/13/10

and

Tropic of Cancer
(1970)

Joseph Strick's X-rated adaptation of the Henry Miller novel features a good performance by Rip Torn and an early appearance by Ellen Burstyn. Filmed in Paris. Olive Films.
11/13/10



Greetings!

I've been alerted to Synapse's upcoming Blu-ray of Hammer's Vampire Circus. It's one that I've never seen, and my strongest memory is of James Ursini posting stills from it up when we both worked at UCLA's Theater Arts Reading Room in 1974 or so. Horror expert Ursini loved the picture, so I'm looking forward to catching up with it.


Blogger-author Bill Ectric has added a big DVD Savant endorsement over at his Bill Ectric's Place, linking to my old but well-received two-part article on Invaders from Mars. Bill's topics include ruminations on Sci Fi literature, rock musicians, and his new book, Tamper.


Also, Joe Dante forwards a fascinating article about an incredibly obscure version of Beau Geste believed lost for almost 70 years. Talk about an odd college project gone crazy ...


New York readers will want to know about the Milestone Films: 20 for 20 weekend screenings at the IFC theaters that start this weekend and will continue through March. Dennis Doros and Amy Heller's distribution company will showcase one of their releases each week, starting with Luchino Visconti's Rocco and His Brothers and continuing through titles like Orson Welles' The Trial and Mikhail Kalatazov's I Am Cuba.

Thanks for reading! -- Glenn Erickson



November 08, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

The Magician
Blu-ray

Ingmar Bergman's oddball tale of an "inspired charlatan" and his medicine show is a personal examination of the theatrical profession. With ribald comedy, corrupt townies and a creepy autopsy in the attic. Stars Max von Sydow, Bibi Andersson, Ingrid Thulin, Gunnar Björnstrand. In DVD and Blu-ray from Criterion.
11/09/10

Kill Them All and Come Back Alone

U.K. correspondent Lee Broughton weighs in on one of the most memorable Spaghetti western titles ever (the most extreme being Heads You Die, Tails I Kill You!) Quentin Tarantino favorite Enzo G. Castellari pulls off Dirty Dozen as a Civil War action picture, raiding a Union fort of a fortune in gold. From Wild East.
11/09/10

Operation Daybreak

Daring assassins gun down Reichsprotektor Reinhard Heydrich, and are mercilessly hunted by the Gestapo! This 1975 English production stars Timothy Bottoms and Anthony Edwards, and was filmed on the actual historical locations in Prague. With Anton Diffring as Heydrich. Warner Archive Collection.
11/09/10

and

Hangmen Also Die!

Daring assassins gun down Reichsprotektor Reinhard Heydrich, and are mercilessly hunted by the Gestapo! Savant reviews an 00P German PAL disc of Fritz Lang's classic, that contains intact a previously missing scene. With Brian Donlevy, Anna Lee & Walter Brennan. from e-m-s.
11/09/10


Greetings!

It just worked out that I had two separate movies about the same historical event on my review list, so I've brought them out together. 1943's Hangmen Also Die! is a propaganda thriller invented by Fritz Lang in Hollywood, as the events being depicted were only a few months old and no facts had been yet made public -- despite the publicity campaign (see the poster). 1975's Operation Daybreak has the benefit of years of research and the ability to shoot on the actual Czechoslovakian locations ... and tells a completely different story. The upshot is that the Hollywood screenwriters assigned to the first film were eager to make heroes of the anti-fascist resistance, not knowing that in real life the assassination mission was executed by spies parachuted into Prague from London.

What's new? Last night's TCM premiere of The Complete Metropolis looked great, and they showed Metropolis Refound an excellent 50-minute documentary made from the point of view of the underfunded Argentinian archivists that recovered the additional 25 minutes of footage. Very classy -- the Buenos Aires archive director Paula Felix-Didier describes the overly-ornate original Argentinian subtitles as "Tango Subtitles".

Dick Dinman has three more Web Radio shows for us today. Pretty Maids, Ocean's 11 and Angie Dickinson sees Ms. Dickinson recounting to host Dick Dinman some of the erotic capers involved in making Roger Vadim's crazy sex romp-murder mystery. Sublimely Sinister Mitchum Madness (part 1) discusses Robert Mitchum and his Night of the Hunter with Peter Graves and Michael Anderson, Jr.. Sublimely Sinister Mitchum Madness (part 2) continues the Mitchum anecdotes with interviews with Anne Jeffreys, Karen Sharpe Kramer, Jane Russell, producer Stanley Rubin and William Wellman Jr.

I stumbled on this YouTube musical excerpt over the weekend and can't get it out of my head. It's Silvana Mangano from 1950, singing El negro zumbon from the Italian film Anna. The youthful Mangano has her rumba moves down quite well. The song was composed by an Italian, Armando Trovajoli. Don't listen unless you have several hours' free time, for the melody to settle down in your brain. For 1950, this is ultra-cool.

Thanks for reading! Glenn Erickson.



November 05, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

Spirits of the Dead
Blu-ray

U.K.'s Arrow Films comes to the rescue by including a superior English/Italian language track for Federico Fellini's superb horror phantasmagoria Toby Dammit. It's combined with two other Edgar Allan Poe short story adaptations by Roger Vadim and Louis Malle. The disc extras include a fat booklet with essays by Peter Bondanella and Tim Lucas. Stars Terence Stamp (speaking in his own voice), Alain Delon, Brigitte Bardot, Jane Fonda. Blu-ray.
11/06/10

The Power

George Pal and Byron Haskin's sci-fi thriller concerns a telepathic superman who murders an entire think tank of scientists to protect his anonymity. Bizzare visuals illustrate this abstract war of evolved brainpower. Stars George Hamilton, Suzanne Pleshette Arthur O'Connell, Michael Rennie and many others. Warner Archive Collection.
11/06/10

and

10 Rillington Place

A cold-blooded account of an appallingly sordid crime spree in depressed postwar London. Miserable killer Richard Attenborough avoids detection only because his victims are so pathetically trusting. With John Hurt and Judy Geeson. This one's almost painful to watch even though most of the violence is kept off screen -- the facts of this true story are grim enough on their own. Sony Screen Classics By Request.
11/06/10


Greetings!

Gary Teetzel sends us to a link for a 1936 British Pathé newsreel gag interview with England's guignol horror star Tod Slaughter. The little skit is a takeoff on Slaughter's biggest success The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, complete with razor and barber chair!

I'll be asking Sony for more of their Screen Classics by Request titles to review, but can't say if they will be coming. I've also been made aware of the impending launch of Fox/MGM's own Movies on Demand program, a second try for MGM. Both new programs are modeled closely after the innovative Warner Archive Classics model pioneered about 18 months ago. If I get a hold of any Fox/MGM discs to review, I'll consider myself lucky -- a key component of the drift away from mass marketed DVDs is the abandonment of standard publicity procedures: if you want to review these wares, the studios want to know they'll get exposure. DVD Savant has proved itself with what they call "deep library" product. I know it and some of you know it; now to see if Fox/MGM agrees.

Actually, since news this Tuesday is scarce and Warners has been so generous with my reviewing needs, I'm taking time out here to plug their fancy Christmas boxed sets. No studio is showing anythink like the level of Warners' commitment to home vide. Warners is all but alone in marketing Blu-rays of older library titles. Their holiday offerings are positioned at all age and interest levels. In addition to the Blu-ray special editions this year that I've already reviewed -- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, The Exorcist, Dr. Zhivago, The Lord of the Rings Trilogy -- they've released Gift Box Ultimate Blu-ray Editions of two Harry Potter adventures (Prisoner of Azkaban and The Goblet of Fire) and an equally extravagant Gift Box 25th Collector's Edition Blu-ray of The Goonies.

The marketers have packed these gift box editions with all manner of goodies -- colorful books and magazine reprints, sample film frames, collector's cards of various kinds ... The Goonies even has its own old-fashioned board game. I don't see any other studio doing anything like this -- my grown children don't necessarily like what I try to show them, but I know they like the Harry Potter movies, and would place these right next to all those Lord of the Rings discs they hold so dear.

Next time out, I'll have reviews of two separate movies about the assassination of "The Hangman" Reinhard Heydrich in occupied Czechoslovakia of World War II -- try to hold out until then. Thanks for reading! --- Glenn Erickson



November 01, 2010

Savant's new reviews today are

Betrayed
(When Strangers Marry)

Director William Castle has an early critical hit in this suspense thriller, an inexpensive Monogram programmer that takes more than a few cues from Alfred Hitchcock and Val Lewton. Good actors Kim Hunter, Robert Mitchum and Dean Jagger make the drama work; Castle does his best to distinguish himself. From Warner Archive Collection.
11/02/10

The 27th Day

This well-remembered allegorical Sci Fi saga is actually one of the more vicious anti-Commie propaganda films of the 1950s. Gene Barry and Valerie French are among five humans chosen by a morally superior alien to receive capsules capable of killing every human on earth. The film's solution to the problem of the Cold War is ... extreme. From Sony Screen Classics by Request.
11/02/10

and

Summer and Smoke

Geraldine Page, Laurence Harvey, Una Merkel, Rita Moreno and Pamela Tiffin shine in this little known but strongly affecting adaptation of Tennessee Williams' play. Childhood sweethearts don't see eye to eye, as she's a spinster in the making and he's a rogue who doesn't believe in spiritual values. Less bombastic but equally poetic as Williams' more celebrated works, this is a highly recommended surprise. From Olive Films.
11/02/10


Greetings!

Brian Saur contacted me a while ago and asked for a list of favorite little-known or underappreciated Horror films. I complied and he put it up on this October 31 entry for his blog Rupert Pupkin Speaks.

A surprise for the next Savant post will be a review of an English Arrow Films Blu-ray, fully compatible with our players, of 1968's Spirits of the Dead, the three-part collection of Poe adaptations directed by Roger Vadim, Louis Malle and Federico Fellini. Picture quality and soundtrack limitations for this "international" production have dogged earlier DVD versions, as so well reported by Tim Lucas in Video Watchdog. This time out, I think this Arrow Films Company has the language problem solved ... Terence Stamp can now be heard speaking in his own English voice, to Italians speaking Italian or English, as the story demands.

Joe Dante found this online repository of video clips from hundreds of musicals, BlueGobo. In some cases they have a clip with performers from the original production, subsequent productions and a sample from the movie version.

A Blu-ray for Metropolis should be here soon enough; I've have had half a year to think about how the long cut hs changed our perception of the movie. DVD soldiers on, in one way or another. The fates have seen not to favor Savant with some of the other fancy Blu-ray releases of late October and November, but I can hardly complain since I've barely been able to keep up with the lesser-known but worthy discs that have sought me out. The DVD-Rs from the Burn-On-Demand companies are often more fun to write about. That's where much of the action is for classic film fans these days, and the whole purpose of DVD Savant is to wave a flag for something good you might otherwise miss.

I have a bit of "I think it's more than a rumor" news to take a risk with ... MGM has a couple of Blu-rays coming out starting in January that have a base price of under $20. The first I noticed is Rob Roy on January 11. I'm hoping they continue that pricing policy, as it might pull down the price point for Blu-rays overall, something that collectors have understandably criticized.

Finally, I got hold of Alain Silver and Jim Ursini's new Fourth Edition of The Vampire Film. The first edition back in 1975 was their first of many book collaborations. I pulled out my old copy, a smallish hardbound item with a selection of B&W photographs. Somewhere along the line, for one of the later editions, I did a proofreading pass over new material. For this new edition the authors have expanded the text to cover the explosion of vampire films of the last fifteen years. The text has also been updated overall, resulting in a better flow from one chapter-essay to the next.

That reminds me, I think I first read Silver and Ursini's chapter on Mario Bava's films in the old magazine Photon; I believe it was the first published critical essay on Bava in the English language! The authors approach Vampire cinema from a literary and academic viewpoint but soon branch out into an appreciation of the horror subgenre in all its forms. The new edition also qualifies as a visual encylopedia of the genre, as it is illustrated wall to wall with nicely chosen film stills and poster images, 800 of them in color. And yes, the content covered stretches all the way to Twilight and Let the Right One In; the new sub-title is From Nosferatu to Twilight. The book is a solid chronicle of Vampire films for the serious reader.

Thanks for reading! Glenn Erickson


Don't forget to write Savant at [email protected].

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