Turner Classic Movies pays tribute to those we lost in the film community during 2024. As usual with these tributes, they are beautifully produced and very moving to watch. Chances are you didn't realize that some of these beloved individuals had passed on. Through motion pictures, however, their work will live forever. We'll make the same observation that we make every year: why can't the Motion Picture Academy follow TCM's lead when it comes to the annual tribute? The Oscars version of this tribute is always very nicely produced but every year movie fans object to those who were needlessly omitted in favor of showing the artists who are playing the music that accompanies the video and also to make time for the more inane comedic aspects of the broadcast. If egos weren't at play, the Academy would simply strike a deal with TCM to run their tribute, as it's much closer to being definitive. The Academy's broadcast now even omits well-known people who had been nominated for Oscars, a practice that outrages movie fans and insults the families of those who were snubbed. (Lee Pfeiffer)
THE CLAUSTROPHOBIC THRILLER FROM DIRECTOR DAVID FINCHER FINALLY DEBUTS ON 4K ULTRA HD™
AVAILABLE AS A LIMITED EDITION STEELBOOK FEBRUARY 18TH
Cinema Retro has received the following press release from Sony:
SYNOPSIS
Trapped in their New York brownstone's panic room, a hidden chamber built
as a sanctuary in the event of break-ins, newly divorced Meg Altman (Jodie
Foster) and her daughter, Sarah (Kristen Stewart), play a deadly game of
cat-and-mouse with three intruders—Burnham (Forest Whitaker), Raoul (Dwight
Yoakam) and Junior (Jared Leto)—during a brutal home invasion. But the room
itself is the focal point because what the intruders really want is inside
it.
DISC DETAILS & BONUS MATERIALS
4K ULTRA HD DISC
Feature presented in 4K resolution with
Dolby Vision, supervised by Director David Fincher
English Dolby Atmos + English 5.1
FEATURE + SPECIAL FEATURE BLU-RAY™ DISCS
Feature presented in high definition,
sourced from the 4K master
English 5.1
Special Features:
Commentary by David Fincher
Commentary by Jodie Foster, Forest
Whitaker and Dwight Yoakam
Commentary by writer David Koepp and
special guest
PRE-PRODUCTION
6 featurettes on the prep phase, from
pre-visualization through testing
Interactive previsualization — Compare
the pre-visualization, storyboards, dailies and final film in a
multi-angle, multi-audio feature with optional commentary
PRODUCTION
Shooting Panic Room – An
hour-long documentary on the principal photography phase
Makeup effects featurette with Alec
Gillis and Tom Woodruff Jr.
Sequence breakdowns – An interactive look
at the creation of four separate scenes in the film
POST-PRODUCTION
21 documentaries and featurettes on the
visual effects
On Sound Design with Ren Klyce
Digital Intermediate and other
featurettes dealing with the post-production phase
A multi-angle look at the scoring session
conducted by Howard Shore
Special Features Produced by David Prior
CAST AND CREW
Directed by: David Fincher
Produced by: Ceán Chaffin, Gavin Polone, Judy Hofflund, David Koepp
Written by: David Koepp
Cast: Jodie Foster, Forest Whitaker, Dwight Yoakam, Jared Leto,
Kristen Stewart
SPECS
Run Time: Approx. 112 minutes
Rating: R: for violence and language
4K UHD Feature Picture: 2160p Ultra High Definition, 2.39:1
4K UHD Feature Audio: English Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1
Compatible) | English 5.1 DTS-HD MA
Check out the Superman teaser trailer for this upcoming DCU film from director James Gunn. Superman stars David Corenswet in the dual role as Superman/Clark Kent, Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane, and Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor. The film also stars Skyler Gisondo as Jimmy Olsen, Edi Gathegi, Anthony Carrigan, Nathan Fillion, Isabela Merced, Sara Sampaio, Maria Gabriela de Faria, Wendell Pierce, Alan Tudyk, Pruitt Taylor Vince, Neva Howell, Beck Bennett as Steve Lombard, Mikaela Hoover as Cat Grant, and Christopher McDonald as Ron Troupe.
Superman is executive produced by Nikolas Korda, Chantal Nong Vo and Lars Winther. Behind the camera, Gunn is joined by frequent collaborators, including director of photography Henry Braham, production designer Beth Mickle, costume designer Judianna Makovsky and composer John Murphy, along with editors Craig Alpert (“Deadpool 2,” “Blue Beetle”), Jason Ballantine (the “IT” films, “The Flash”) and William Hoy (“The Batman”).
Superman, written and directed by James Gunn, opens in US theaters on July 11, 2025, and internationally beginning July 9, 2025, distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures.
#Superman#DC#IGN
1974... Producer/director Bob Clark’s (Deathdream, Murder by Decree, A Christmas
Story) frightening and entertaining suspense-thriller Black Christmas is released and is lovingly devoured by a
horror-hungry audience. Expertly written by A. Roy Moore (The Last Chase), who was inspired by the urban legend “The
Babysitter and the Man Upstairs” as well as a real life murder case, this
excellent, Canadian-made horror film details a group of sorority sisters who
are terrorized and slaughtered during the holiday season by a mysterious
psychopath who, unbeknownst to everyone, is hiding in the sorority house attic.
More than just a marvelous piece of horror
cinema, the Gialli-influenced film went on to become quite influential in its
own right. Predating John Carpenter’s immortal and amazing Halloween by four years, the smart and stylish Black Christmas (aka Silent
Night, Evil Night and Stranger in the
House), which has already had two inferior 21st century remakes,
contains many elements that would not only find their way into the Carpenter
classic, but into the slasher sub-genre as well. Elements such as a mad killer
murdering on a beloved holiday; attractive teen victims; the POV shot as a
stand-in for the killer; nail-biting suspense; a female protagonist who fights
back, and the killer still being alive in the final scene can all be traced
back to Clark’s masterwork. The enjoyable film is also partly responsible for
the glut of Christmas-themed slashers which, each year, only seem to be growing
in number.
Featuring a top-notch cast—Margot Kidder
(1972’s Sisters, Superman: The Movie),
Olivia Hussey (1968’s Romeo and Juliet,
Psycho IV: The Beginning), Keir Dullea (2001:
A Space Odyssey, David and Lisa),
Andrea Martin (SCTV, My Big Fat Greek
Wedding), Art Hindle (The Brood,
1978’s Invasion of the Body Snatchers)
and the legendary John Saxon (Enter the
Dragon, 1984’s A Nightmare on Elm
Street) as well as incredibly talented character actors Doug McGrath, Les
Carlson, Marian Waldman, James Edmond and a very creepy score by composer Carl
Zittrer—Black Christmas is not only a
must-see, humorous and quite terrifying film, but, as already stated, an
important and, in my opinion, still underrated piece of horror history.
I was extremely fortunate to be able to speak
with gifted actress Lynne Griffin who not only plays the sweet and low-key
first victim, Clare Harrison, but whose now iconic image—a dead Clare sitting
in a rocking chair in the sorority house attic with a clear plastic bag over
her head—was used to promote the film. A veteran of stage, screen and
television, the Toronto native appeared in several other memorable films after Black Christmas including the comedy
classic Strange Brew (1983) and the
underrated slasher film Curtains
(1983). Although she was extremely busy, the lovely, gracious and insanely
funny Lynne took time out of her hectic schedule to chat with me about her fond
memories of Black Christmas.
Ernie Magnotta:How
did you get involved in the film?
Lynne Griffin: It was just a general audition. I
think the reason I got the part was because I told them I was a good swimmer
and that I could hold my breath for a long time.
EM: Because they needed
you to wear the plastic bag over your head?
LG: Right. Which is pretty funny when you think
about it. That’s how you get a part? (Laughs) Also, I mean, look at that face.
If there was ever one that was going to play the eternal virgin it was me. But
yeah, just a general audition. I don’t even remember if I met Bob Clark at the
audition or not, but it was a wonderfully fun shoot. And Bob Clark is Uncle Bob.
He just made every day really fun to be there; especially all my days in the
attic.
EM:A lot
of people don’t realize that, besides the horror and suspense, he was also
responsible for some of the lighter moments in the movie as well as for keeping
the ambiguous ending which Warner Bros. wanted him to change. And he made the
college student characters more realistic which only helped with the suspense
and scares. I’m such a fan of his and it’s a real shame what happened to him.
LG: Oh, so tragic. Oh, my God. And I know there
was going to be more greatness to come from Bob. Cut short unfortunately.
EM:Now, you
played someone very different from your usually funny, bubbly personality and
you did it quite convincingly. Was that difficult or were you able to just slip
right into it?
LG: Back then, I was actually very serious. I
was studying Shakespeare and was doing very dramatic work, so, when I played
Clare, I was in my element.
EM:Do you
remember how long you worked on the film?
LG: It was actually quite substantial because we
were doing all the initial party scenes and the phone call scenes and I
remember that we spent a lot of time shooting the attic stuff. I was probably
on it three, maybe four weeks.
EM:That’s
longer than I thought.
LG: Yeah, because things weren’t shot in
sequence. And I kind of remember it really being like a family/sorority sort of
feeling because we were there a lot and we were really getting to know one
another. There was always a nice feeling on set. And that always comes from the
top. That was Bob.
EM:I thought
it would have taken less time for you because I just assumed that they shot all
the attic scenes at once.
LG: They did. I kind of remember being around it
a lot, though. I don’t really know why that would be. It’s funny with some
films. There was one I shot in Vancouver where I was on hold for like three
weeks. I was sitting in a hotel room waiting for them to shoot some other stuff
with me and they just kept throwing per diem at me. So, when that happens it
feels like you’ve worked longer, but the actual filming that I was involved
with didn’t take all that time. The attic scenes definitely didn’t take three weeks
to film.
EM: I know that,
throughout the film, several different people played Billy, the demented and
horrifying, unseen killer, but do you remember who played him for both your
murder scene and your scenes in the attic?
LG: Camera operator Bert Dunk (an unsung hero of
the film who was also responsible for designing the equipment needed to film
all of the killer’s POV shots) strangled me in the closet with the plastic bag,
but Bob Clark rocked the rocking chair. Bob also did some of Billy’s voices,
but that was mostly done by actor Nick Mancuso.
EM: Such a great actor.
And I don’t think I’ve ever heard a more frightening or more insane-sounding
phone voice in all of horror cinema.
LG: Absolutely not.
EM:Did
you stick around the set even after your scenes were shot?
LG: Yeah, I think we all kind of hung out. And I
remained friends with Art Hindle. We’ve worked together a lot since then. We
once worked on an animated series where we played old lovers which was really
funny. Art always likes to remind me that, in Black Christmas, he was my first screen kiss. (Laughs) So, the
fact that we’re still sort of hanging out is very cool. And he’s one of the
funniest people on the planet.
EM:Nice.
He starred in a David Cronenberg film called “The Brood” which is a favorite of
mine. I love that film and he was great in it. I also always loved Margot
Kidder. Was she fun to work with?
LG: I adored Margot Kidder and I was enamored
with her all the way through just because of the way she works. She was doing a
lot of improv which was phenomenal, sensational and funny all the time. She
wasn’t standoffish at all. She was lovely. So was Andrea Martin and Keir
Dullea. Like I said, it was a very congenial and happy set. There wasn’t really
any negativity which was wonderful. I was trying to think if there was anything
juicy I could tell you, but no. They didn’t like tie the plastic bag around my
head so that I couldn’t breathe or anything like that. (Laughs) Yeah,
they were very sweet. When you shoot horror films, I think the general
atmosphere is to keep it very light and fun even though you’re doing something
that is really quite grotesque.
EM:It’s
not real, so it becomes funny.
LG: Right. You know you’re playing pretend and
it’s a bucket of fake blood or whatever. And that part of it I really like. If
it were taken really seriously I probably wouldn’t like doing it.
EM:I
agree. Tell me about working with Olivia Hussey.
LG: A lot of people think that Olivia is sort of
like aloof or standoffish, but I didn’t find her that way at all. Of course, it
was fascinating to pick her brain about working with Zeffirelli because she’d
done Romeo and Juliet for him and,
like I mentioned before, I had been working on a lot of Shakespeare too at that
time. She was really lovely. And we’re Facebook friends to this day.
EM:Oh,
that’s terrific. Now, unfortunately, we lost the great John Saxon. I know you
didn’t have any scenes together, but did you get to meet him?
LG: Oh, yes. And you know, for the longest time,
John Saxon came out and did the conventions and the panels with us. Art Hindle,
myself and John were always on the panels for Black Christmas. John was fabulous. I remember doing one Comic-Con
with him. I think it was a Comic-Con. Anyway, the line for people to see him
was like around the building and he was so lovely with every single person.
And, at that time, he was showing me the ropes about how I should behave at one
of these conventions which was really cool. He was a lovely man.
EM: How about Claude,
the cat? I heard he was difficult to get along with and pretty full of himself. (Laughs)
LG: (Laughs) Claude was not a happy cat. He did
not work well with others. I was sitting in the rocking chair and Claude didn’t
like being tossed onto my lap by Bob Clark. So he scratched me. Claude, not
Bob.
EM:Thanks
for clearing that up. (Laughs)
LG: (Laughs) Oh, and they sprayed catnip all
over my face so that Claude would lick my face while I was sitting in the
rocking chair.
Cinema Retro has received the following press release pertaining to this UK Region B release:
Director
John Sturges reunites with The Magnificent Seven stars Steve McQueen, James
Coburn and Charles Bronson in this timeless adaptation of Paul Brickhill’s
World War II memoir of an audacious prisoner breakout.
Stalag Luft
III: an impenetrable camp built to hold the most persistent escapees. Under the
ruthless vigilance of the Nazi guards, a multinational group of prisoners must
work together to enact their daring plan: to break out of the camp, forcing the
Germans to divert precious military resources towards apprehending them. But
getting beyond the camp’s barbed wire fences and gun-towers is only the
beginning. Once out, the escapees must make the perilous journey to the border,
all the while evading the relentless pursuit of their former captors.
Beautifully
shot by Oscar®-winning cinematographer Daniel L. Fapp (West Side Story) and featuring
a rousing, infectiously hummable score by Elmer Bernstein (The Ten
Commandments), The Great Escape remains one of the most beloved Hollywood
historical action movies – a testament to human ingenuity, camaraderie under
pressure and indomitability of the spirit.
3-DISC
LIMITED EDITION CONTENTS
• Limited
edition packaging with reversible sleeve featuring original and newly
commissioned artwork by Sam Hadley
• Collector’s booklet featuring new writing by Barry Forshaw, Neil Mitchell,
Wickham Clayton and Mark Cunliffe
• Fold-out double-sided poster featuring original and newly commissioned
artwork by Sam Hadley
DISC 1
(4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAY) – THE GREAT ESCAPE
• 4K (2160p)
UHD Blu-ray™ presentation in Dolby Vision (HDR10 compatible)
• Newly restored original lossless mono soundtrack
• Optional lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack
• Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
• Audio commentary by filmmaker/historian Steve Mitchell and Steven Jay Rubin,
author of Combat Films: American Realism
• Audio commentary featuring director John Sturges and members of the cast and
crew, moderated by Steven Jay Rubin
• Theatrical trailer
DISC 2
(BLU-RAY) – BONUS FEATURES
• The Real
Great Escape – author and historian Guy Walters separates fact from fiction in
this brand new interview
• The Great Escapism – brand new appreciation of the film by Jose Arroyo,
Associate Professor in Film and Television Studies at the University of Warwick
• The Great Composer – brand new interview with composer/author Neil Brand,
discussing Elmer Bernstein and his iconic score
• Freedom Forged – critic and educator Rich Johnson explores the film’s place
within the war movie canon in this brand new visual essay
• Michael Sragow on The Great Escape – 2020 interview exploring the career of
John Sturges and the making of the film
• Heroes Underground – 2001 four-part documentary exploring the making of the
film and the events which inspired it, featuring interviews with former POWs
• The Real Virgil Hilts – 2001 featurette interviewing former POW David M.
Jones, widely seen as the inspiration for Steve McQueen’s character
• The Untold Story – 2001 documentary exploring the planning and execution of the
real-life escape
• The Untold Story: Additional Interviews
• Return to The Great Escape – 1993 featurette exploring the making of the film
• Image gallery
DISC 3
(4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAY) – THE GREAT ESCAPE II: THE UNTOLD STORY [LIMITED EDITION
EXCLUSIVE]
• 4K (2160p)
UHD Blu-ray™ presentation in SDR
• Original lossless 2.0 stereo soundtrack
• Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
• Original Trailer
Details:
Barcode: 5027035027210
Cat number: FCD2551
Format: UHD
UK Release date: 2/12/2024
RRP: £34.99
Genre: War / Drama
Region coding: N/A
Runtime: 172 / 187
Discs: 3
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 / 1.78:1
Audio: 1.0 / 2.0 / 5.1
Colour: Colour
Director: John Sturges
Cast: Steve McQueen, James Garner, Richard Attenborough, James Donald, Charles
Bronson
Language: English
Subtitles: English SDH
Rating: 12
Please note: this is a "Region B" release that requires the appropriate player or a region-free player in order to view the discs. This release is not available in North America at this time.
Paramount Scares Volume 2 4K UHD is a
new box set from Paramount that contains four thrillers, coming on the heels of
last year’s release of Volume One. One of the titles is brilliant, one of them is
damn good, one of them is so-so, and one of them is…well, meh…
Breakdown (1997)
Kurt Russell and the late great character
actor J.T. Walsh have shared the screen multiples times together, specifically
in Robert Towne’s Tequila Sunrise (1989), Ron Howard’s Backdraft
(1991), and Stuart Baird’s Executive Decision (1994). In Jonathan
Mostow’s Breakdown, they have formed their final and most gripping
pairing to date.
Breakdown is a real surprise and a masterpiece of tension. To
disclose the plot would destroy what I found to be an utterly nail-biting
motion picture experience, which is something I do not think I have ever truly
experienced. There are some spoilers ahead, so non-viewers please tread
lightly. There is such an overwhelming sense of menace and peril in Breakdown
that it almost becomes a cruel experiment in fear. For a first-time directing
job by Mr. Mostow, who previously scripted the Michael Douglas/David Fincher
film The Game (1997), Breakdown is awe-inspiring. The opening
credits sequence alone is imaginative and appropriate to the story, utilizing
animation to simultaneously represent a mesh of cartographic interstates and
what could also be construed as cerebral arteries. The film’s title is a double
meaning. Kurt Russell and Kathleen Quinlan are Jeff and Amy Taylor, a
forty-something married couple moving from New England to San Diego, California
in a brand-new Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo SUV. On their way driving through the
empty plains of the Midwest, Jeff is momentarily distracted reaching for his
thermos and just misses crashing into a mud caked Ford F150 pick-up driven by a
large man who shouts obscenities. An unfortunate encounter ensues later when
the man castigates Jeff while refueling. Speeding away, the new Jeep suffers an
electrical difficulty and Jeff and Amy find themselves stranded in a place
befitting of an Alfred Hitchcock thriller. The Ford truck speeds by, cheerfully
acknowledging the couple’s plight with a long horn blow leading to a brief and
tense stand-off which is alleviated by the arrival of Red Barr, a truck driver
(the late great J.T. Walsh) who offers to give Amy a ride to Belle’s Diner some
miles down the road to call road service (his CB blew a fuse earlier and is
non-functioning). When she accepts, Jeff waits…and waits…and discovers an
unplugged wire in the Jeep’s undercarriage.
Normally, I would call out Amy’s foolishness
for accepting such a ride as a woman her age should know the dangers of
hitch-hiking, however New Englanders routinely give rides to one another, and
this plot point helps explain her action. Jeff makes his way to the diner and
all the patrons and owner (a terrific turn by character actor Jack McGee) do
not recall seeing her, except for a mildly slow co-worker in the parking lot.
This puts into motion a high level of suspense as Jeff’s cell phone fails to
get decent service while he rushes to find his wife. It turns out that Jeff and
Amy have been pegged for financial embezzlement by Red, Earl (M.C. Gainey as
the Ford driver), Billy (Jack Noseworthy, the “slow” diner worker), and Al (the
late Rich Brinkley), a husky accomplice. Rex Linn of TV’s Better Call Saul
is also on hand as a police officer who offers Jeff some recourse.
Breakdown, which opened on Friday, May 2, 1997, might appear to be
an action film, but it is more of a thriller with some action sequences. It has
been a longtime indeed since this level of suspense has seen the light of day
on the silver screen. It is so good, in fact, that it feels like a Seventies
film made in the Nineties. It is amazing that it was not the blockbuster that
it deserved to be. Poor marketing perhaps?
Shooting in the 2.35:1 Panavision ratio, Mr.
Mostow has created a plausible scenario replete with four of the most
frightening villains seen of late. They certainly give Bill McKinney and
Herbert "Cowboy" Coward, the mountain men in Deliverance
(1972), a run for their money. J. T. Walsh, who unfortunately passed away not
too long after this film was released (his death is a real loss to the film
world), appears in one of the best performances of his sterling and memorable
career: a purely evil man who doubles as an everyday Joe who loves his wife and
son (Moira Harris and Vincent Berry, respectively) but commits terrible acts
for money. You get the feeling that these monsters have been doing what they do
for a long time, although there were moments wherein I thought a double-cross
would transpire among them. They all appear to be loyal to one another, making
me wonder how these guys ended up together in the first place. The supporting
cast all do a phenomenal job as well.
Breakdown’s plot is by no means original. This type of story
depicting a person who goes missing has been told over many decades: Robert
Fuest's And Soon the Darkness (1970), Philip Leacock's television film Dying
Room Only (1973), and, in particular, George Sluizer’s icy 1988
Dutch/French character study Spoorloos, known in the States as The
Vanishing. Breakdown succeeds for the same reason that Steven
Spielberg's Duel (1971) does (though Duel is more cinematic): it
takes two ordinary human beings and thrusts them into a horrendous situation
they would never have any reason to suspect they would ever be a part of. That
is not to say that the film does not have a few convenient plot devices, but
even when it does, they can be forgiven.
Kurt Russell is perfectly cast. I loved him
as Snake Plissken in John Carpenter’s Escape From New York (1981) and as
MacReady in John Carpenter’s The Thing (1982). He is an amazing and
criminally underrated actor. The look of terror and fear on his face is
complete and real. Some reviews have criticized the film’s ending, but for me
it is a much needed and deserving money shot and a relief; it makes me wonder
the future of the people sitting in the final frame.
Supplements:
A feature-length audio commentary with the
director and Kurt Russell. If you have ever heard any of the previous
commentaries that Mr. Russell has been involved with, specifically with
director John Carpenter on Escape from New York (1981) and The Thing
(1982), you know that he is one of the most entertaining people to listen to.
He also has a phenomenal laugh and chuckles through most of the film, even
making fun of Jeffrey! Hilarious. They speak about Dino DeLaurentiis; having
gotten cinematographer Doug Milsom who worked on four films with Stanley
Kubrick; Mr. Russell imitating Dennis Weaver in Duel (“You can’t catch
me on the grade!”); the director discussing how he wrote a role for Morgan
Freeman as a character whose wife was kidnapped and teams up with Jeffrey, the
idea later wisely written out of the script; Roger Ebert criticized the bank
scene, but the commentary states that they were rushed to get it done on the
location but I think it works just fine. Overall, a truly fun and entertaining
listen and easily the best extra.
Filmmaker Focus - Jonathan Mostow
(10:45) – This piece is a spotlight on the director that highlights much of
what was said during the commentary.
Victory is Hers: Kathleen Quinlan on
Breakdown (4:22) – I was so happy to see Kathleen Quinlan included
in this edition and she discusses some of her experiences making the film.
A Brilliant Partnership: Martha De Laurentiis
on Breakdown (8:18) – This is a piece dedicated to one of
the producers of the film. Mrs. De Laurentiis worked with her late husband,
Dino, on the film and this is a look at their partnership.
This collection contains both a Blu-ray and a
4K UHD disc of this film and they both look stunning on both formats, light
years ahead of the VHS, laserdisc, and DVD transfers of just over 25 years ago.
By popular demand, Cinema Retro presents a special edition issue devoted to director John Sturges' 1960 Western classic, "The Magnificent Seven" starring Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, Eli Wallach, Charles Bronson, Robert Vaughn, James Coburn, Horst Bucholz and Brad Dexter.
Adapted from Brian Hannan's book "The Making of the Magnificent" with an abundance of new material.
Packed with rare production photos and scene stills.
The comparisons between "The Magnificent Seven" and the film that inspired it, Kurosawa's "Seven Samurai".
Foreword by Sir Christopher Frayling
An abundance of rare international movie posters and marketing materials.
Coverage of the film's big screen sequels.
NOTE: IF YOU LIVE IN SOUTHERN IRELAND, PLEASE USE THE "REST OF THE WORLD" ORDER OPTION.
An interesting audio excerpt of Woody Allen discussing Robert Altman's "The Long Goodbye" with famed movie critic Pauline Kael. The interview took place in 1974, a year after Altman's film was released. Allen praises Altman as a director and expresses admiration for aspects of the movie, but says he finds it humorless, even though the film was well-regarded for its humorous aspects.
The 1983 British espionage film "The Jigsaw Man" should have been cause for rejoicing. It reunited Michael Caine and Laurence Olivier for the first time since their dual Oscar nominations for "Sleuth" a decade before. In the director's chair was Terence Young, who knew a thing or two about making good spy movies, having directed three early James Bond classics: "Dr. No", "From Russia with Love" and "Thunderball". The supporting cast featured an eclectic group of Bond movie veterans in roles ranging from substantial to blink-and-you'll-miss-'em: Anthony Dawson, Vladek Sheybal, Peter Burton, Michael Mediwin, Charles Gray and Richard Bradford among them. If that wasn't enough, the second unit director was Peter Hunt- yes, that Peter Hunt, the legendary Bond editor who went on to become a successful director beginning with the 1969 007 classic "On Her Majesty's Secret Service". (We assume that Hunt took a temporary "demotion" to second unit director just to enjoy the opportunity of reuniting with his mentor, Terence Young.) By now, dear reader, you will undoubtedly- and correctly- assumed that I'm about to insert a "however" into this review. The "however" pertains to the fact that virtually all of these talents are wasted in a dismal mess of a movie that was deemed so bad it became the first major British film to bypass cinemas and "premiere" on home video (VHS in those days, to be precise.)
What went wrong with "The Jigsaw Man"? The question we should ask is, "What didn't go wrong". Keep in mind the film was made during the Cold War. We are introduced to a character named Sergei Kuminsky in the film's opening scene, which is set in Moscow. As played by Richard Aylen, Kuminsky is a rough-around-the-edges sixty-something boor who happens to be British by birth, and who was once a prominent agent for MI6. However, he defected to the Soviets in spectacular fashion and bringing a treasure trove of top secret information with him. The character was clearly inspired by the real-life agent Kim Philby, whose defection to Russia resulted in the most notorious spy scandal the West had ever experienced. 'Lest there be any doubt about our cinematic defector being based on Philby, we learn that his British birth name is actually Philip Kimberley (get it?). Soon after we are introduced to Kimberley, he undergoes a dramatic transformation via extensive plastic surgery at the insistence of the KGB. He goes into the operating room looking like a typical out-of-shape older man and-presto!-he emerges looking exactly like Michael Caine! (It is never explained how a few hours of plastic surgery not only changes the man's facial appearance dramatically but also de-ages him and results in him losing quite a bit of weight in the process.) It's all in the line of duty because Kimberley's Russian masters intend to reinsert him back to England where he says he can retrieve some valuable intelligence documents that he stashed there years ago. However, once he arrives in London, Kimberley invokes a triple-cross by contacting his former bosses at MI6 and offering to retrieve the secret documents in return for safe passage to Switzerland and a deposit of five million Swiss francs into a bank account.
After convincing MI6 chief Admiral Sir Gerald Scaith (Laurence Olivier) that he is indeed his former employee, Kimberley goes about reuniting with his daughter Penelope (Susan George), who is understandably dubious that this unrecognizable man is actually her father. Once convinced, the two go about resuming a loving father and daughter relationship as though dad had just come back from overstaying on a long vacation. (She also seems nonplussed by the fact that dad now looks like Michael Caine!) There is a subplot involving Penelope and her lover, Jamie Fraser (Robert Powell), who may not be the man she thinks he is. There's no point in going on explaining all the confusing plot points in Jo Eisinger's screenplay, which was based on a novel by Dorothea Bennett. Suffice it to say that Kimberley's deceit is discovered by the Soviets and he and Penelope are constantly dodging assassination attempts. Meanwhile, the wily and sarcastic Scaith is determined to keep Kimberley alive until he can retrieve the hidden documents and hand them back to MI6. The film is packed with dopey action scenes and surrealistic situations. It all ends in wild yet boring car chase through a game preserve (!)
"The Jigsaw Man" is a mess from beginning to end. Much of the calamity was based on financial woes that beset the production. The producer announced he had literally run out of money, thus causing Caine and Olivier to leave the film until $4 million could be raised in order to complete the shoot. Yes, the film was one of those cobbled together messes that was financed in scattershot fashion by people who simply wanted to be involved in a movie production.Terence Young's direction is anything but inspired, but, rather perfunctory. Like everyone else associated with the film, he seemed to have one eye on his watch while filming. There are some nice moments between Caine and Olivier, who both rise above the material, but beyond that, the film is a lost cause.
The title "The Jigsaw Man" is designed to evoke a puzzle. In that respect, I can agree, as I've never been among those who are enthralled with the hobby of assembling puzzles. Let's face it: you spend a great deal of time assembling the pieces, then upon completion, dismantle the entire thing with nothing to show for the time spent. In that respect, the analogy to watching the film is appropriate.
Bad movie lovers can view the film on Amazon Prime.
The Towering Inferno, which premiered on
December 16, 1974, wasn’t the first disaster film, nor was it the last, but it
was the biggest and the best. It took the financial resources of two Hollywood
studios to get it made, and it was the crowning achievement of its
fifty-eight-year-old producer, Irwin Allen, who could not have known at the
time that his career had hit its zenith and that everything he did afterwards
would be downhill. Allen’s story and the history of his greatest film cannot be
told separately.Like the fictional 138-story skyscraper that
was built with a fatal defect, so, too, was Irwin Allen. He was a tireless
self-promoter who garnered so much success early in his career that the
self-promoting was justified. In an industry that ran on smoke and mirrors, he
was flesh and blood (and fire). He had confidence born of actual achievement,
not presumed expertise. Although he and modesty were strangers, he was often
quick to acknowledge the work of those around him. As a producer he provided
everything his cast and crew needed, and he was near-maniacal about safety on
his hazardous productions. He was vain but charming about it, and at heart was
a sentimentalist about the movie business that he so dearly loved. If he had
flaws, they were the flaws of passion.
I
never actually met Irwin Allen even though I worked for him. A young marketing
genius named David Forbes hired me along with five others to be a special
advance publicity team to handle regional publicity. The closest I came to
Allen was the lobby of the Showcase Cinema in Hartford, Connecticut where there
was a studio sneak of his about-to-be-released film. On this particular November
night, my job was to fly myself and a precious print of the film from Boston to
Hartford, where it was to be shown to a test audience. Everybody from the
studio was to be there including Allen, composer John Williams, father-son editors
Karl and Harold F. Kress, and a cadre of nervous executives from both Fox and
Warner Bros. (the film was a Fox-WB co-production). The
only one who wasn’t there was me. The print and I were socked in by fog on the
runway at Boston’s Logan Airport. There was no way to get off the plane and no
cell phones to alert Hartford. Eventually we were liberated and boarded a bus
supplied by the airline (in those days the airlines took care of passengers)
and driven to the Hartford Airport where the movie and I grabbed a cab to the
theatre and handed the print with moments to spare to a very impatient
projectionist.There
was just enough time to mingle in the lobby, and that’s where I spotted Irwin
Allen. You couldn’t miss him. What you also couldn’t miss was his very obvious toupee,
and that’s all I could think of. In those days I could be arrogant because I
still had hair; I’m the hirsute fellow in the back (see photo).
(Photo courtesy of Nat Segaloff.)
The Towering Inferno at
fifty is a relic as well as a milestone, and that’s why I decided to write a
book about it: More Fire! The Building of The Towering Inferno, A 50th
Anniversary Explosion. The title More Fire! comes from the most
frequent directorial command shouted by Irwin Allen while helming the action
sequences in the disaster film while John Guillermin directed the actors and
Paul Stader guided the remarkable stunt work. Somehow the three men got along
and merged their separate footage into one single film.
Who
was Irwin Allen? Beats me. He was born June 12, 1916, in New York named Irwin
Grinovit. Wikipedia says he was born Irwin O. Cohen, but that’s suspect, and
died on November 2, 1991. As most people know, he was the creative force behind
the classic TV series Lost in Space, Time Tunnel, Voyage to the Bottom of
the Sea and movies such as The Poseidon Adventure, The Lost World,
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, and, regrettably, The Swarm and When
Time Ran Out.The Towering Inferno was his crowning achievement. He
married late in life – to Sheila Matthews, an actress of a certain age – and
remained childless. His archives (some of which Julien’s Auctions sold in
summer 2024) are bereft of anything of a personal nature. Throughout his
career, he recycled the same thin press release biography that he first used in
the 1950s while he was doing The Animal World with Ray Harryhausen’s and
Willis O’Brien’s dinosaurs and the documentary The Sea Around Us, which
won him an Oscar®. But what were his parents’ names? Whom did he date?
What were his hobbies? Did he have military service (he would have been
twenty-five as World War Two began)? Nada. In
fact, the man seems to have had absolutely no private life; all he did was work.
I was able to make some headway with the help of Jeff Bond and Marc Cushman who
had written books about Allen’s shows and paid his estate for access to his
files (something I refused to do). The results appear in More Fire! which
is as much about Irwin Allen as it is about Poseidon and Inferno,
his two most famous and successful motion pictures. It’s also about the history
of fire in films, special fire effects, and tips on how to survive fires. In
the end, Allen’s life was in his work. He was obsessive about going over every
script, usually without co-writing credit, and held to tight television
budgets. While his TV series hold nostalgic fascination for the Baby Boom
generation, I focused on his disaster movies.
“Disaster
movie” is a phrase you won’t hear from the people who make, well, disaster
movies. They prefer the phrase “group jeopardy films.” It probably has
something to do with worrying that Variety would use the word disaster
in a nasty headline if one of them failed. The heyday of the genre was the
1970s and Irwin Allen pretty much dominated the field. The films routinely
involved a core of people, preferably movie stars, who faced a cataclysmic
event that could kill any of them, and often did. The group placed in jeopardy
in The Towering Inferno included Paul Newman, Steve McQueen, Faye
Dunaway, William Holden, Fred Astaire, Jennifer Jones, Robert Vaughn, Richard
Chamberlain, Susan Flannery, Susan Blakely, and O.J. Simpson. Yes, that
O.J. Simpson. When a fire breaks out on the world’s tallest skyscraper on the
night of its dedication, firefighters must attempt to rescue all the VIPs who
are trapped in the building’s rooftop ballroom.
The
film was scripted by Stirling Silliphant (who had co-written The Poseidon
Adventure) based on two books: The Glass Inferno by Thomas N.
Scortia and Frank M. Robinson and The Tower by Richard Martin Stern. By
coincidence, Warner Bros. had bought one and Fox the other and so, rather than
go broke competing with each other, the two studios decided to join forces and
let Irwin Allen sort it out. How he wrested control away from Warner Bros. and
literally willed his film into existence is the story that drives my book. It
was gratifying for me to close the circle after half a century that had begun
with my first real Hollywood job and now involves being able to finally write
about it. The book is both a personal journey and an archival mission, and I hope
it brings back the thrills and the secrets behind a memorable film. If you’ll
excuse the obvious pun, I hope it, um, sparks fond memories for anyone who
reads it.
Click here to order "More Fire! The Building of 'The Towering Inferno'" from Amazon
“THE MOST
LIFE-AFFIRMING, SOUL-ENRICHING MOVIE OF THE YEAR.”Jake Hamilton, FOX-TV
SYNOPSIS
Reuniting the director, writer and stars of Forrest Gump,
HERE is an original film about multiple families and a special place they
inhabit. The story travels through generations, capturing the most relatable of
human experiences. Robert Zemeckis (Forrest Gump, Cast Away, Who Framed Roger
Rabbit, Contact, Back to the Future) directs from a screenplay by Eric Roth (Forrest
Gump, Killers of the Flower Moon, Dune: Part One, A Star is Born) and him. Told
much in the style of the acclaimed graphic novel by Richard McGuire on which it
is based, TOM HANKS and ROBIN WRIGHT star in a tale of love, loss, laughter and
life all of which happen right Here.
SPECIAL FEATURES: BLU-RAY, DVD AND DIGITAL EXTRAS.
oHow We Got Here (The
Making of HERE)
oDeleted Scenes
Blu-ray™
& DVD include a Digital code for movie and bonus materials as listed above,
redeemable via Movies Anywhere for a limited time. Movies Anywhere is open to
U.S. residents age 13+. Visit MoviesAnywhere.com for
terms and conditions.
CAST AND CREW
Directed by:Robert Zemeckis
Produced by:Robert Zemeckis, Derek Hogue, Jack Rapke, Bill
Block
Based on the Graphic Novel by: Richard McGuire
Screenplay by: Eric Roth & Robert Zemeckis
Executive Producers: Jeremy Johns, Andrew Golov, Thom Zadra
Cast (In Order of
Appearance): Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Paul Bettany, Kelly
Reilly
SPECS
Run Time: Approx.104 minutes
Rating: PG-13 Thematic
material, some suggestive material, brief strong language and smoking.
Blu-ray™: 1080p High Definition / 1.78:1 • Audio: English 5.1 DTS-HD MA, English
Audio Description Track 5.1 Dolby Digital. Subtitles: English, English SDH,
Spanish • Mastered in High Definition • Color • Some of The Information Listed
May Not Apply To Special Features.
DVD: Feature:1.78:1 Anamorphic Widescreen • Audio: English 5.1 Dolby Digital,
English Audio Description Tracks Stereo • Subtitles: English, English SDH,
Spanish • Approx.104 Mins. •Color
Some of the
information in the above listing may not apply to Special Features
20 Films Directed by Frank Capra from
the Columbia Pictures Library
In a Limited Edition Gift Set
All 20 Films Presented on Blu-ray
Disc™,With Nine of Those Films Also on 4K
Ultra HD™
CULVER CITY, Calif. – Celebrate 100 years of Columbia Pictures and the work of
iconic and award-winning filmmaker Frank Capra as Sony Pictures Home
Entertainment proudly assembles 20 of his films, exclusively within the FRANK
CAPRA AT COLUMBIA COLLECTION, available November 19. Each film is
presented in high definition from original and existing elements, with nine
films also presented in full 4K resolution!
From romantic pursuits to explosive action,
from spectacular thrills to insightful social commentary, the FRANK
CAPRA AT COLUMBIA collection features a wide variety of films that
still feel fresh and timely today: the perfect collection of films for any mood
or occasion! Then for fans of classic cinema, the scope of pre-code rarities to
Best Picture-winning classics makes this set a must-own!
The 20 films in the FRANK CAPRA AT COLUMBIA
COLLECTION represent Capra’s earlier work at the studio through to the
more well-known award-winning blockbusters, with many films making their
long-awaited disc debut! The discs are included within a coffee table-worthy
sleek outer box that opens to showcase the films inside. The set also includes
several new commentaries from film historians, hours of archival special
features, and the full feature-length 2024 documentary, FRANK CAPRA: MR AMERICA!
In
addition to the physical gift set, several Frank Capra classics will also be
debuting at digital retailers this holiday season, including SO
THIS IS LOVE, THE WAY OF THE STRONG, THAT CERTAIN THING, THE MIRACLE WOMAN and
LADY
FOR A DAY. These must-see films will be available for digital purchase
or rental, alongside such favorites as IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT, MR. DEEDS GOES TO
TOWN, LOST HORIZON, YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU and MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON.FRANK
CAPRA: MR AMERICA is also available now for digital rental or purchase.
SO THIS IS LOVE (1928)
?Synopsis: Dress
designer Jerry McGuire, (William Collier Jr.) is secretly in love with Hilda
Jensen (Shirly Mason) who works at the delicatessen. But Hilda is in love with
the self-admiring pugilist Spike Mullins (Johnnie Walker). Can Jerry summon up
the courage to woo Hilda? And more importantly stand up to Spike? With all-new
music score by Michael D. Mortilla.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Stereo Audio; Includes All-New Commentary with Film Historians Stan Taffel and
Bryan Cooper
?SO THIS IS LOVE has a run
time of approximately 55 minutes and is not rated.
THE
WAY OF THE STRONG (1928)
?Synopsis:Handsome
Williams (Mitchell Lewis), a brutal bootlegger, falls for blind violinist, Nora
(Alice Day). Handsome’s rivals recognize that she is his vulnerability--and
target the innocent Nora as retribution. With all-new music score by Michael D.
Mortilla
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Stereo Audio; Includes All-New Commentary with Film Historians Stan Taffel and
Bryan Cooper
?THE WAY OF THE STRONG has a run
time of approximately 58 minutes and is not rated.
THAT
CERTAIN THING (1928)
?Synopsis:Viola
Dana plays Molly, a poor girl who falls in love with A.B. Charles, Jr.(Ralph Graves), son of a millionaire
restaurateur. When the son meets and impulsively marries Molly, his father cuts
him off without a dime, but with Molly’s ingenuity and “that certain thing,”
her prospects are better than ever. With all-new music score by Donald Sosin.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Stereo Audio
?THAT CERTAIN THING has a run
time of approximately 64 minutes and is not rated.
SUBMARINE
(1928)
?Synopsis:Columbia’s
first film to be released with a synchronized score is a
taut drama about a deep-sea diver's efforts (Jack Holt) to rescue the crew of a
submarine lodged 400 feet underwater, with Ralph Graves, his best friend and
rival, on board. Newly reconstructed score by Rodney Sauer, from original source
materials, performed by the Mont Alto Orchestra.
?Presented in 4K SDR on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High Definition on
Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio
?SUBMARINE has a run
time of approximately 103 minutes and is not rated.
THE
YOUNGER GENERATION (1929)
?Synopsis:In this
moving drama, Jean Hersholt is a Jewish pushcart vendor whose ambitious son’s
success allows him to move the family to a fancy uptown address where new
tensions push father and son apart. Columbia Pictures first “talkie” contained
limited dialog. Includes restored audio, including newly reconstructed score by
Rodney Sauer, performed by the Mont Alto Orchestra.
?Presented in 4K SDR on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High Definition on
Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio
?THE YOUNGER GENERATION has a run
time of approximately 83 minutes and is not rated.
FLIGHT
(1929)
?Synopsis:The
second of three technological spectacles featuring Jack Holt and Ralph Graves
as rivals in love despite a friendship forged as Marine Corps fliers in
training and action.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Mono Audio; Includes the Theatrical Trailer
?FLIGHT has a run time of
approximately 120 minutes and is not rated.
LADIES
OF LEISURE (1930)
?Synopsis:Kay
(Barbara Stanwyck) is a wild party girl out to snare herself a rich suitor.
Jerry (Ralph Graves) is a young man from an affluent family striving to become
an artist. What starts out as a relationship of mutual convenience soon
blossoms into love in this charming film.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Mono Audio; Includes an Audio Commentary with Film Historian Jeremy Arnold
?LADIES OF LEISURE has a run
time of approximately 98 minutes and is not rated.
RAIN
OR SHINE (1930)
?Synopsis:Mary
(Joan Peers) inherits her late father's financially floundering circus. With
the help of her charismatic manager, Smiley Johnson (Joe Cook), they try to
salvage the big top.Presented with an
alternate version released without sync dialog, created for international
audiences.
?Both Domestic and International Versions of the Film Presented in
High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio; Includes the
“Frank Capra Finds a Place in the Sun with Michel Gondry” Featurette
?RAIN OR SHINE has a run
time of approximately 88 minutes and is not rated.
DIRIGIBLE
(1931)
?Synopsis:
Adventure duo Jack Holt and Ralph Graves pair again as great rivals, but better
friends challenging the elements and attempting to conquer the air and the
South Pole.
?Presented in 4K SDR on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High Definition on
Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio
?DIRIGIBLE has a run
time of approximately 100 minutes and is not rated.
THE
MIRACLE WOMAN (1931)
?Synopsis:Barbara
Stanwyck shines as the daughter of an undervalued minister, who, grieving after
her father's death, joins a fraudulent church as a preacher. David Manners, a
blind ex-pilot, hears Stanwyck preaching and goes to her.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Mono Audio; Includes the “Ron Howard on The Miracle Woman” Featurette
?THE MIRACLE WOMAN has a run
time of approximately 90 minutes and is not rated.
PLATINUM
BLONDE (1931)
?Synopsis: A
wise-cracking newspaper reporter’s entanglement with a wealthy socialite (the
glittering Jean Harlow) stirs the class prejudices of both her publicity-shy
family and his ink-stained pals (including Loretta Young) in this fast-paced
classic Capra comedy.
?Presented in 4K with Dolby Vision on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High
Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio
?PLATINUM BLONDE has a run
time of approximately 88 minutes and is not rated.
AMERICAN
MADNESS (1932)
?Synopsis:Walter
Huston stars as an idealistic bank president dealing with the aftermath of a
robbery. While rallying local businessmen to deposit funds to keep the bank
afloat, he learns the truth about the loyalties of the people around him.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Mono Audio; Includes an All-New Commentary with Film Historian Steven C. Smith
Featuring Victoria Riskin, Plus Commentary with Frank Capra Jr. & Author
Cathrine Kellison and the “Frank Capra Jr. Remembers...‘American Madness’”
Featurette
?AMERICAN MADNESS has a run
time of approximately 76 minutes and is not rated.
THE
BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN (1932)
?Synopsis:Barbara
Stanwyck plays an American missionary who reluctantly falls for the General who
kidnaps her amid the Chinese Civil War.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Mono Audio; Includes an All-New Commentary with Film Historian Kimberly
Truhler, Plus the “Defining Capra's Early Style with Martin Scorsese and Ron
Howard” Featurette
?THE BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN has a run
time of approximately 87 minutes and is not rated.
FORBIDDEN
(1932)
?Synopsis:In this
pre-code romantic drama, Barbara Stanwyck stars as a staid librarian swept away
by a charming married man (Adolph Menjou). When their affair produces a
daughter, Menjou proposes an unconventional, heart-breaking solution.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Mono Audio; Includes a Commentary with Author Jeanine Basinger
?FORBIDDEN has a run
time of approximately 85 minutes and is not rated.
LADY
FOR A DAY (1933)
?Synopsis:A
gangster and his gal help his good luck charm, Apple Annie, a depression-era
apple seller, convince her daughter’s future in-laws she’s a proper match.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Mono Audio
?LADY FOR A DAY has a run
time of approximately 95 minutes and is not rated.
IT
HAPPENED ONE NIGHT (1934)
?Synopsis: Winner
of all 5 major 1934 Oscars®, including Best Picture! When a brash reporter
(Clark Gable) meets a runaway heiress (Claudette Colbert), can love be far
behind?
?Presented in 4K with Dolby Vision on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High
Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio; Includes an All-New
Commentary with Film Historian Julie Kirgo, Plus Commentary by Frank Capra Jr.,
2 Featurettes, Original Live Radio Broadcast and a Theatrical Trailer
?IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT has a run
time of approximately 105 minutes and is not rated.
MR.
DEEDS GOES TO TOWN (1936)
?Synopsis:Gary
Cooper plays Longfellow Deeds, whose simple rural life is upended when he
inherits his uncle's fortune. Jean Arthur is the cynical reporter tasked with
exposing him for laughs (and circulation) but ends up overwhelmed by his
honesty and decency.
?Presented in 4K with Dolby Vision on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High
Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio; Includes an All-New
Commentary with Victorian Riskin and Steven C. Smith, Plus Commentary by Frank
Capra Jr., Featurette, and a Theatrical Re-Release Trailer
?MR. DEEDS GOES TO TOWN has a run
time of approximately 116 minutes and is not rated.
LOST
HORIZON (1937)
?Synopsis:Ronald
Colman and Jane Wyatt star in this unique journey to the enchanted paradise of
Shangri-La, where time stands still.
?Presented in 4K with Dolby Vision on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High
Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio; Includes Commentary
with Charles Champlin and Bob Gitt, Alternate Ending, 4 Featurettes, 5
Theatrical Teasers & Trailers
?LOST HORIZON has a run
time of approximately 133 minutes and is not rated.
YOU
CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU (1938)
?Synopsis:A man
from a family of rich snobs becomes engaged to a woman from a good-natured but
decidedly eccentric family. Winner of the Academy Award® for Best Picture!
?Presented in 4K with Dolby Vision on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High
Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio; Includes Commentary
with Frank Capra Jr. & Author Cathrine Kellison, Featurette and Theatrical
Trailer
?YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU has a run
time of approximately 126 minutes and is not rated.
MR.
SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON (1939)
?Synopsis:James
Stewart takes on the powers-that-be in our nation's capital in Frank Capra's
timeless classic. Nominated for eleven 1939 Oscars®, including Best Picture.
?Presented in 4K with Dolby Vision on 4K Ultra HD disc and in High
Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA Mono Audio; Includes an All-New
Commentary with Film Historian Julie Kirgo, Plus Commentary with Frank Capra
Jr., 5 Featurettes, “Frank Capra’s American Dream” Documentary and Theatrical
Trailers
?MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON has a run
time of approximately 129 minutes and is not rated.
FRANK
CAPRA: MR AMERICA (2024)
?Synopsis:FRANK
CAPRA: MR AMERICA tells the story of Frank Capra, a young immigrant who rose
through the ranks of early Hollywood to become one of the Great American
storytellers and one of the most successful and influential film directors of
his generation. His iconic films, including IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT, MR.
SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON, and IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE, offered an inspiring
vision of America where ideals win out, integrity triumphs, and ordinary people
have their day. The documentary uses never-before-seen footage and audio tapes
from Capra’s life to examine his career and relationship with America, offering
a portrait of a complicated man whose tales of hope in difficult times still
speak to audiences today. Written and Directed by Matthew Wells.
?Presented in High Definition on Blu-ray Disc; English DTS-HD MA
Audio; Includes a Theatrical Trailer
?FRANK CAPRA: MR AMERICA has a run
time of approximately 92 minutes and is rated PG-13 for brief strong language,
smoking and thematic elements.
Academy Award®
and Oscar® are the registered trademarks and service marks of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Here is the original 1972 production featurette for "The Poseidon Adventure", which was released to U.S. theaters on this date. Back in the day, American T.V. viewers had to encounter these featurettes by chance, as they were never scheduled to air at a specific time. They were often used as filler material if a baseball game had a rain delay or if a live broadcast ended a bit earlier than originally planned. In any case, movie lovers very much appreciated getting an advanced look at a forthcoming major film.
Issue #61 of Cinema Retro- the first issue of Season 21- is now shipping to subscribers in the UK. It is scheduled to ship to subscribers in the rest of the world in the month of January. Thanks to everyone who has supported Cinema Retro by subscribing or renewing. If you have not done so yet, you can order the new season below and receive issues #'s61, 62 and 63 throughout 2025.
Please note: we still have customers who want to subscribe to Season 19. However, we are unable to offer Season 19 any longer because issue #55 is now sold out worldwide and only a small number of issue #56 are available through our U.K office, as it has sold out in the U.S.
Born
in Harlem, New York and raised by his parents in Queens, Paul Maslansky would
initially pursue a career in law, attending NYU Law School for a year before
changing his mind. He transferred to Washington and Lee University in Virginia
where he also became a jazz musician playing trumpet in the Southern Collegians
band. He did a tour of duty in the U.S. Army and served as a volunteer in the
Israeli Six-Day War. Maslansky then moved overseas where he produced a
documentary about Fullbright scholars that was screened at the 1960 Cannes Film
Festival and picked up by Screen Gems.
With
the switch to the film industry, Maslansky produced and co-wrote the low-
budget Italian horror film Castle of the Living Dead (1964) which
starred Christopher Lee and featured the first credited screen role of Donald
Sutherland who played multiple roles of a Napoleonic soldier, an old man and an
elderly witch. The film was sold to Sam Z. Arkoff at American International
Pictures. Maslansky would use his middle initial M (for Marc) for his first two
screen credits before dropping it altogether.
Finding
quick success in the lucrative low-budget genre, Maslansky continued to produce
various fare including She Beast (1966), Eyewitness (1970) and Death
Line (1972) which starred Donald Pleasence. With Maslansky’s growing
success came bigger budget productions with bigger budget stars – including The
Blue Bird (1976) with Elizabeth Taylor and later in his career The
Russia House (1990) with Sean Connery and Michelle Pfeiffer.
He
often partnered with industry legend Alan Ladd Jr. and a chance favor Maslansky
did for Ladd would result in his biggest success. While serving as an adviser
on the set of Ladd’s production of The Right Stuff (1983), Maslansky
noticed some San Francisco police officers looking rather funny during a parade
scene. An inquiry revealed that these officers were actually police academy
cadets and were only hired due to the San Francisco’s fair employment policy
and the police department was going to fire them shortly afterwards. Sensing
comedy gold, Maslansky quickly wrote up a short story treatment about a group
of misfit police cadets who want to make it through the academy to become real police
officers.
Ladd
agreed to make the film for Warner Brothers and the resulting film, Police
Academy (1984), became a runaway hit earning $82 million dollars off its
$4.5 million dollar budget. The resulting success led to six sequels, as well
as an animated and live-action television series that was also the brainchild
of Maslansky. Always putting in much effort to produce the Police Academy
films, Maslansky frequently made cameo appearances in the series.
(Photo courtesy of Christopher Gullo.)
Maslansky
only directed one film during his career – the Blaxploitation horror film Sugar
Hill (1974) starring Marki Bey, Robert Quarry and Don Pedro Colley. He
provided an interview about his experience directing the film with this writer
for Cinema Retro magazine issue #17.
Paul
Maslansky died at age 91 on December 2nd, 2024, and is survived by his wife
Sally Emr, and children Sacha, Sabina and Samuel.
(Christopher Gullo is the author of numerous film books including biographies of Peter Cushing, Donald Pleasence and Ralph Bates.)
The dividing line between a film being an homage and a rip-off is
sorely tested with "Forsaken", a 2015 Canadian Western by director Jon
Cassar, who is best known for his acclaimed, award-winning work in
television. This was a rare venture into feature film making for him and
the result left me with decidedly mixed emotions. The film marked
another collaboration between Cassar and actor Kiefer Sutherland, who
starred in Cassar's wildly successful TV series "24". It was good to see them collaborate on the generally neglected genre of the Western. We have always extended our respect to anyone who tries, no
matter modestly, to revive the genre. The problem with "Forsaken" is that a lot
of talented people are doing fine work in a film that is so blatantly
inspired by Clint Eastwood's Oscar winning "Unforgiven" that it comes
close to bordering on parody. The initial blame begins with screenwriter
Brad Mirman, who depends far too heavily on elements from Eastwood's
magnificent production. Let's start with the title, which is a
transparent attempt to evoke "Unforgiven". (In fairness, Eastwood
himself was less-than-original in his use of this title. He changed the
film's title from "The William Munny Killings" and replaced it with the
name of an unrelated John Huston Western from 1960, "The Unforgiven".)
Then there is the movie's protagonist, John Henry Clayton (Kiefer
Sutherland), who carries similar baggage to Eastwood's William Munny. He
is haunted by a violent past and a penchant for committing bloodshed.
He has returned to his hometown after a period of years and hopes to
live his life as a pacifist, a lofty goal that the viewer will recognize
as being doomed from the get-go. He soon finds that the town is
populated by cowardly people who are letting a greedy land baron, James
McCurdy (Brian Cox) use a mercenary gang to intimidate or even kill any
homesteader who refuses his offer to buy their land. As in "Unforgiven",
our hero is initially slow to anger and resists his inner demons. In
Clayton's case, he is routinely abused, insulted and beaten by the
mercenaries, who are led by Frank (Aaron Poole), who is so vicious that
he even gets chastised by his employer, McCurdy. I kept waiting for a
character to appear who would emulate Richard Harris's English Bob, the
aristocratic gunslinger from "Unforgiven". Sure enough, along comes
Gentleman Dave Turner (Michael Wincott), who displays the wit and
gallows humor of dear ol' English Bob. Not helping matters is director
Cassar, who aids and abets this pantomime by insisting that Sutherland
pretentiously pose like Eastwood in "Unforgiven", as well as speak like
him (distinctive, barely audible voice) and dress like him (he even
wears a hat that is more than coincidentally similar to Eastwood's from
that film). The "homage" syndrome goes into overdrive in the film's
violent conclusion, which- to the surprise of no one familiar with
"Unforgiven"- also takes place in a saloon, where a heavily-armed
Clayton enters and engages a small army of bad guys in a one-man
massacre. At times, it appears to be a frame-by-frame remake of the
Eastwood film.(In fairness, Cassar does dip a bit outside of the
"Unforgiven" pool long enough to replicate a sequence from the climactic
barroom shootout from "The Shootist".) The epilogue imitates
"Unforgiven" in an unforgivable manner, with scenes at an isolated grave
while a narrative fills us in on the fate of the main characters.
Despite all of these reservations, it may come as a surprise to you
that I liked and admired "Forsaken" very much. The script does introduce
a few original elements. When Clayton returns home many years after
experiencing the horrors of the war, he discovers that his former lover,
Mary-Alice (Demi Moore), had presumed he was dead and ended up marrying
a local man. They now have a small son and although Mary-Ellen
professes to be perfectly happy, it's quite apparent there is still a
spark between she and Clayton. More intriguingly, there is Clayton's
relationship to his father, William (Donald Sutherland), the local
reverend, who welcomes his estranged son back by informing him that his
mother died and that her last hope was to see him but he never came. The
two men settle into a tense domestic situation until John finally
unburdens himself about a terrible secret that has been haunting him and
that has inspired him to renounce violence. He also blames himself for
the accidental death of his brother when they were kids. Ultimately, the
clearing of the air leads both father and son to form a close bond but
it is threatened by McCurdy and his men- and we know it will only be a
matter of time until John takes up arms again. This plot element (the
reluctant gunslinger) has been a staple of the Western genre for many
years. (Think "The Gunfighter", "Shane", "The Shootist") but it still
provides ample dramatic circumstances for a good director to capitalize
on- and Jon Cassar is a good director. He has a real feel for the
Western genre and elicits uniformly excellent performances from his
entire cast, including Demi Moore who is refreshingly cast in a mature,
non-glam role. To credit screenwriter Mirman, he capitalizes on the
first screen teaming of both Sutherlands by providing realistic and
engrossing situations and dialogue. The two actors bring a certain
emotion and pathos to their on-screen relationship that is obviously
enhanced by their real-life status as father and son. The movie is also
gorgeously photographed by Rene Ohashi and features a fine score by
Jonathan Goldsmith. Perhaps because I've seen "Unforgiven" so many times
and have written about it extensively, I may be more sensitive to the
similarities between the films, which I did find admittedly distracting.
More casual viewers will probably not encounter this dilemma and enjoy
"Forsaken" for what it is: a superior entry in the Western genre.
("Forsaken" is currently streaming on Amazon Prime.)
By
the mid-2000s, the Coen Brothers had established themselves as a
writing/directing team of considerable originality, edginess, and intelligence.
Their cinematic sensibilities covered a range of genres with varying degrees of
tonality. They had done crime thrillers (Blood Simple, Miller’s
Crossing), wacky comedies (Raising Arizona, The Big Lebowski),
noir-ish melodramas (Barton Fink, The Man Who Wasn’t There),
and something that might be called a musical (O Brother, Where Art Thou?).
Adapting
Cormac McCarthy’s neo-noir novel No Country for Old Men seemed
like a no-brainer for the siblings. They had been pitched the idea, read the
book, and agreed that it was “right up their alley.” McCarthy’s dialogue-filled
prose turned out not to be much of a challenge—they dispensed with most of it,
making their filmed adaptation more of a silent picture than one might expect.
There are extended sequences of nonverbal action: characters in seedy motel
rooms waiting and scheming, chases across the West Texas countryside, small
town urban street gunfighting, and the ever-picturesque tableaux of actors’
faces that reveal so much without a word spoken.
The
time is 1980. A Mexican cartel drug deal has gone badly out in the desert-like
landscape somewhere in Terrell County, Texas. Several men are dead. Llewelyn
Moss (Josh Brolin) stumbles upon the crime scene and makes off with a suitcase
full of cash. Unfortunately, due to a dumb-headed move on his part, the cartel
figures out who he is. Fixer/assassin Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) is sent
after Moss to retrieve the money and make sure no one lives to tell the tale.
Meanwhile, the county sheriff, Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones) begins to
investigate the incident and tails the players, except that he remains one step
behind the parties as Moss continues to stay one step ahead of Chigurh—while
the body count adds up.
No
Country is
one of the Coens’ more serious thrillers. Always known for injecting dark humor
into their crimes dramas, this one is practically devoid of laughs. Sure, there
are moments of very dark humor that can be only in a Coen Brothers film,
but for the most part this is a knuckle-biting, grim, no-holds-barred noir tale
in which there is a pervasive feeling of doom. We know nothing good is going to
come out of this.
Another
theme, illustrated by Chigurh’s penchant for a coin toss to determine the fate
of a character (“Call it,” he menacingly commands), is how nothing is
predetermined… one’s life can turn on a dime, or in this case, a quarter. The
point of McCarthy’s novel is that this is a world that has surpassed “old men”
like Sheriff Bell. He can’t understand the violence, the cruelty, and the fire
that drives these men who will kill with abandon—all for the sale of illicit
drugs.
It
should also be noted that the Coens’ movies tend to be about stupid people but
are made for smart audiences. So many of the brothers’ characters make
boneheaded mistakes that set the plots in motion. In this case, Moss makes the
mistake of his life, bringing about the hellfire that will affect him, his wife
(Kelly MacDonald), and innocent bystanders.
The
film was a big critical and financial success for the Coens. It won Oscars for
Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay (the brothers went
home with three statues each; it might have been four had the nomination for
Best Editing won for “Roderick Jaynes,” their pseudonym as editors), and Best
Supporting Actor for Bardem’s chilling performance.
The
Criterion Collection’s new 4K UHD and Blu-ray release is certainly up to the
label’s standards. The new 4K digital master, supervised and approved by
director of photography Roger Deakins, with a 5.1 surround DTS-HD Master Audio
soundtrack, is packaged as a 2-disk edition with the UHD movie on one disk and
the Blu-ray and supplements on the second (a Blu-ray only edition is also
available). The picture quality is painterly gorgeous.
Supplements
include brand new interviews with the Coens conducted by the inimitable
award-winning crime author Megan Abbott, who seems to be Criterion’s go-to host
for the brothers as of late. Could a Coens-Abbott collaboration be a
possibility in the future? One can only hope! Abbott also interviews DP Deakins
and associate producer David Diliberto. Archival interviews with the cast
(Jones, Brolin, Bardem, and MacDonald) are included, plus a short behind-the-scenes
documentary made by Brolin. Port-overs from a previous Blu-ray release include
a vintage making-of documentary, more interviews with the cast, and a
documentary from the POV of Jones’ character. There are English subtitles for
the hard of hearing, plus an essay by author Francine Prose and a 2007 piece on
the film by Larry McMurtry in the accompanying booklet.
No
Country for Old Men is
highly recommended for fans of the Coen Brothers, the main actors involved, and
tense crime thrillers.
Cinema Retro's MarkMawstonattended the Heritage Auctions Hollywood Platinum Auctions preview night on Nov 27th in London's Hanover Square. On display were the original props and costumes from the likes of Easy Rider, Thor, Captain America and Jumanji. Highlights of the show, however, were the original scripts and costumes from The Wizard Of Oz with the big draw being the original Ruby Slippers as worn by Judy Garland's Dorothy in the film. The slippers' owner Michael Shaw kindly posed with one of the most famous articles of clothing in cinema history for Mark and Cinema Retro. The amazing story behind the slippers and why they are now being auctioned by Heritage is here:
Here is the original 1979 production featurette for "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century", derived from the T.V. series that has since developed a loyal fan following.
Norman
Lear helped raise me. Born two months
after All in the Family premiered in 1971, his signature sitcom and the
string of seminal hits that followed—Maude, Good Times,The
Jeffersons, One Day at Time, etc.—were and still are a part of my
DNA. Despite the very adult themes, the adults in my life always let me watch and
they made an indelible impression.
So,
too, did the man in the white hat. And I had always hoped (and in some ways
believed) that he would be around forever. Starting in 2020, of the biggest thrills of my
life has been getting to teach a class on Norman Lear at my alma mater Emerson
College in Boston, which he also attended, and where he graciously dropped in
over Zoom twice during the pandemic to visit with my students. He even called me afterwards, not only to tell
me how much he enjoyed it, but that he hoped to be there in person someday.
Over
the last decade, I was blessed to cross paths with him on several other
occasions. Always deferentially addressing him as “Mr. Lear” even though he
insisted on Norman, the first time was by phone in 2011 for a 40th
anniversary retrospective I did on All in the Family for TV Guide.
He couldn’t have been nicer. Soon after it ran, I received in the mail one of
my most prized possessions: a letter on his personalized stationery telling me
he “loved” the article.
The
last time I saw him was in 2018 when Emerson dedicated a statue of Norman Lear that
stands prominently in the middle of our campus. As many others who met Norman observed, one of
the things that made him so special was his uncanny ability to make you feel
like the most important person in the room. “It’s taken me a lifetime to get
here,” he’d say. “And I couldn’t be happier.”
Of
course, in the back of my mind I always knew Norman’s eventual passing was
inevitable. In the immediate months
before, I also became increasingly aware that it could be imminent as his
public appearances diminished while pictures of him in a wheelchair, sometimes
wearing an oxygen tube, began surfacing on social media.
Then
last December, Norman died at the age of 101.As fate would have it, I was just putting the finishing touches on my
biography about him.My heart sank.
Within minutes of his death, I began receiving dozens of phone calls, texts,
emails and Facebook messages from family members and friends. Although many
were aware of the biography I was working and my class, mostly they were
condolences from people who knew how much Norman and his sitcoms meant to me.
I sat
glued to my computer reading the tributes as they poured in from news outlets
around the world and on social media. And sentimentalist that I am, I couldn’t
help but tear up as the theme songs from his classic shows, especially “Those
Were the Days” from All in the Family played in the background.
I also
felt like I was starting from scratch and found it difficult to concentrate
when it came to the task of getting back to the book even though most of the
heavy lifting had already been done.
Though
Norman was unable to participate, his team gave me their blessings as did his
daughter Kate and many of the surviving actors from his shows, including
Adrienne Barbeau, Louise Lasser, Mary Kay Place, James Cromwell and John Amos,
in what turned out to be one of his final interviews, agreed to talk to me.
There
was the profound sense of sadness and disbelief I felt now writing about him in
the past tense. But far tricker was trying to figure out how to capture the
essence of an American icon who had lived for more than a century and remained
active until almost the very end.
As for
legacy, Norman’s stands in perpetuity among the most seminal and enduring cultural
figures America has ever produced. Forever altering a sitcom landscape that had
previously been populated by white picket fences and cardigan-sweater and pearl-necklace-wearing
parents, Lear offered the world a window into the lives and homes of families who
looked like the people who were watching them, giving underrepresented members
of society their first-ever prime-time voice.
Interestingly,
by his own admission, he also did so by default, telling Harvard Business
Journal in 2014, “I never thought of the shows as groundbreaking, because
every American understood so easily what they were all about. The issues were
around their dinner tables. The language was in their school yards. It was
nothing new.”
And as
a result, Norman became the first television producer to become as famous as
the shows he created. Off-screen, he was an impassioned social activist and
advocate for free speech, a pursuit to which he devoted much of his later life.
Most notably was the progressive advocacy group he founded in 1981, People for the American Way, dedicated
to the preservation of free speech and counteracting the political sway of the Christian
Evangelical right.Later on, he purchased
an original copy of the Declaration of Independence and toured it for a decade across
all 50 states.
In a
statement, President Joe Biden called Lear a “Transformational force in
American culture.”
But
even more importantly, he was a human being and we are all the better for
having had him in our midst. Luckily for all of us, he will live on forever through
his unrivaled body of work. Thank you, Mr. Lear.
#
##
Tripp Whetsell is the
author of Norman Lear: His Life & Times, and an adjunct media
studies professor at Emerson College in Boston where he teaches the only
college level course in the country on Lear and classic sitcoms.
Cinema Retro's Mark Mawston attended the DarkFest 7
convention in London's Whitechapel and managed to assemble a who's who of
Hammer talent on the famous Genisis Cinema stairway. Those taking part in the
specially posed shot are:
Jenny Hanley (Scars of Dracula, On Her Majesty’s Secret
Service)
Caroline Munro (Dracula AD 72, The Spy Who Loved Me)
Madeline Smith (The Vampire Lovers, Live & Let Die)
Judy Matheson (Twins of Evil)
Linzi Drew (An American Werewolf in London)
Marianne Morris (Vampyres)
Virginia Wetherell (Demons of the Mind)
Pauline Peart (Satanic Rites of Dracula)
Valerie Leon (Blood from The Mummy's Tomb, The Spy Who
Loved Me)
Mark confirmed his favourite shot was of Caroline Munro
(Dracula AD 72) and Pauline Peart (Satanic Rites of Dracula) saying " This
was a perfect place to shoot as the "To Be Kept Locked" door looked
like the ideal place for Dracula's coffin to be resting! ".
Also in attendance was Adrienne King (Friday the
13th) who is seen here posing with the poster that adorned Marks wall as a
teen, alongside DarkFest organizer, publisher Allan Bryce.
(Photos copyright Mark Mawston. All rights reserved.)
Thursdays in December | 59 Movies/ Official Press Release:
In 2002, TV Guide ranked
the Mickey Rooney-led sitcom “One of the Boys” among the 50 Worst Shows
of All Time. On the plus side, it inspired one of Dana Carvey’s most
indelible celebrity impressions. In one of his earliest roles, the
future “Saturday Night Live” cast member costarred with Rooney, who
portrayed his colorful and energetic grandfather. As Carvey told it in
interviews, a then-62-year-old Rooney regaled cast and crew with stories
from his then-half-century career. (He continued to act until his death
in 2014 at the age of 93.) Carvey’s impression crystallized Rooney’s
mixture of joie de vivre and bitterness: “I was the number one star in
the world. You hear me? Bang. The world!”
Rooney wasn’t kidding.
In 1939, America’s theater owners voted Rooney the top box-office star,
beating out Tyrone Power. The next year, he topped Spencer Tracy and the
year after that, Clark Gable. He was nominated for four Academy Awards
and was the recipient of an honorary Juvenile Award in 1939. He was also
nominated for five Emmys, winning one (as well as a Golden Globe) for
his heartbreaking performance as a mentally challenged man transitioning
from an institution to the outside world in the made-for-TV movie Bill
(1981). He earned $12 million before he was 40 and spent it all and
then some. As was said of Charles Foster Kane, no one’s private life was
more public. He was married eight times (a fount of material for
comedians), including to Ava Gardner. The song about getting knocked
down but getting up again could have been written about Rooney.
When
it seemed like his career was down for the count, he got off the canvas
and made his boffo Broadway debut in his late 50s in “Sugar Babies,” a
knockabout burlesque that earned him a Tony nomination. In 1983, he was
honored with another honorary Academy Award commemorating his 60-year
career. “When I was 19 years old, I was the number one star of the
world. When I was 40, nobody wanted me. I couldn't get a job,” he
memorably reflected in his emotional acceptance speech. And while he
fell short of EGOT status, he did receive four different stars on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame.
This month, TCM is putting on the ultimate
show featuring Rooney as its Star of the Month every Thursday, all day.
A staggering 59 films display his astonishing range as a comedic and
dramatic actor as well as a musical performer. In his 1994 autobiography
“Brando: Songs My Mother Taught Me,” Marlon Brando called Rooney “an
unsung hero of the actors’ world… like Jimmy Cagney, he could do almost
anything.” Director John Frankenheimer considered Rooney “the best actor
I ever worked with.” And Frankenheimer worked with Burt Lancaster,
Frank Sinatra, Warren Beatty, Karl Malden, Kirk Douglas, Robert Ryan,
Lee Marvin and, well, you get it.
Roger Ebert proclaimed his “the
longest career in the history of show business.” Rooney is the very
definition of a “trouper” (or as Variety once called him, a
“socko personality”). Like Buster Keaton, he first took the stage with
his parents’ vaudevillian act. He was 17 months old. He made his film
debut at the age of six. He barely cleared five feet, but he was larger
than life, someone to whom the Energizer Bunny might have said, “Hey,
slow down.”
Following the heyday of his film career in the 1930s
and ‘40s, Rooney did some of his greatest work for television. While not
included in TCM’s Rooney roster, his solo turn on “The Twilight Zone”
in the “Last Night of a Jockey” episode and his eponymous role in the
1957 “Playhouse 90” presentation of “The Comedian” are well worth
checking out. “The Comedian,” in particular, is a revelatory dramatic
departure in which he portrays a ruthless, daringly unlikeable
character. (The identity of the actual comedian he is said to be based
on is as intriguing a pop culture mystery as who Carly Simon is singing
about in “You’re So Vain.”) Following the broadcast, Rooney reportedly
received a telegram that read, “Thanks for the acting lesson.” It was
signed by Paul Newman.
There are the timeless Rooney classics you’ll want to be sure to see: Boys Town (1938), The Human Comedy (1943) and National Velvet (1944) air on December 12. The Black Stallion (1979) and musicals co-starring Judy Garland—Babes in Arms (1939)*, Strike Up the Band (1940) and Babes on Broadway (1941)—all air December 19.
On December 26, TCM will broadcast all 16 of Rooney’s Andy Hardy films beginning with A Family Affair (1937) and ending with Andy Hardy Comes Home
(1958) (“a rockin’, rollin’ Rooney riot” according to the film’s
trailer). This is the franchise for which Rooney was best known and
beloved. Girl and car crazy, Andy Hardy was America’s quintessential
teenager from the idealized small town of Carvel, California. But the
iconic character hampered his transition into more adult roles. “I
played a 14-year-old for 30 years,” he once ruefully joked. Of the Hardy
films, be sure not to miss the fourth in the series, Love Finds Andy Hardy (1938),
which features the Holy Trinity of Ann Rutherford as steadfast
girlfriend Polly Benedict, Lana Turner as Cynthia Potter and making her
franchise debut, Garland as Betsy Booth. This was the series’ biggest
moneymaker.
But the month-long salute to Rooney is studded with
lesser-known films and underseen gems that demonstrate his boundless
versatility. Early glimpses are always fascinating. TCM kicks off its
month-long tribute on December 5 with The Beast of the City (1932), Rooney’s first film for MGM. He is unbilled as police Captain Walter Huston’s rambunctious young son. Manhattan Melodrama
(1934) is best known as the film John Dillinger was watching before he
was gunned down in the alley next to Chicago’s Biograph Theater. Rooney
shines in his “child is father to the adult” role as the law-skirting
boy who will grow up to become Clark Gable’s gambler, Blackie.
Another lesser-seen early Rooney film is Stablemates (1938), a Champ-adjacent tearjerker with Rooney reunited with his Ah, Wilderness!
(1935) castmate Wallace Beery. In his memoir “Life is Too Short,”
Rooney wrote, “I never had so much fun making a movie. I guess it showed
because the box office was sensational (the picture grossed more than
three times its cost) and so were the reviews.”
The December 12 lineup includes Killer McCoy
(1947), Rooney’s first adult role and as a boxer, he is—wait for it—a
knockout. Noted film critic James Agee called his performance “cooly
magical,” while “The New York Times” raved, “Whatever one may think of
him as a prize-fighter, he is a wonderful little actor, whether doing a
dance routine, fighting, displaying anguish upon hearing of the death of
his dear mother, consoling the wife of the opponent his blows killed or
passing wisecracks at a lunch counter waitress.”
December 19
features several films that chart Rooney’s transition to shedding his
plucky Andy Hardy persona. The day begins with Quicksand (1950),
in which Rooney stars as a hapless auto mechanic who becomes in thrall
to femme fatale Jeanne Cagney. Putting Rooney, who helped lift America’s
spirits during the Depression, in a film noir seems almost perverse,
which is what makes his crime films all the more compelling. Another
fine example is The Strip (1951), with Rooney as a
Korean War vet and nightclub jazz drummer who runs afoul of a mobster
(James Craig). (Look for another beloved child star, Tommy Rettig, of
TV’s “Lassie” and The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T, 1953, fame.)
In 24 Hours to Kill
(1965), Rooney is a luckless flight crew member whose plane is forced
to land in Beirut, home to a smuggling ringleader (Walter Slezak) whose
gold shipment Rooney has hijacked for himself. No sympathy here, as
Rooney’s transgression endangers the other crew members, but he is great
at playing desperate characters. The day concludes with six
Rooney-Garland musicals, including their first, Babes in Arms and their last, Words and Music
(1948), a biopic of songwriters Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart
(Rooney). It would also be Rooney’s last film for MGM, truly the end of
an era.
Babes in Arms was a smash that launched a
quartet of “let’s put on a show” musicals in which Garland portrayed
the archetypical “what you're looking for has been here the whole time”
friend to the oblivious Rooney. Arguably the best of these is Strike Up the Band,
with the Oscar-nominated song “Our Love Affair” and the virtuoso
stop-motion animated production number by George Pal that transforms
pieces of fruit into an orchestra.
Spending December with Rooney
is a great way to end TCM’s programming year. An icon of Hollywood’s
Golden Age, Rooney exemplifies TCM’s mission to help maintain the
cultural memory of the 20th century's greatest art form. “The audience
and I are friends,” Rooney once said, “They allowed me to grow up with
them. I've let them down several times. They've let me down several
times. But we're all family."
Due to the on-going Canadian postal services strike, the U.S. postal service will not be processing packages sent to Canada. For our Canadian customers, your orders will ship once this situation is resolved.
Film Masters presents Legendary Faces: A Celebration of Hollywood's Most Iconic Stars.
We're kicking things off with one of the greatest character actors in movie history — Peter Lorre. His distinct voice and memorable face were featured in such classic films as Casablanca and The Maltese Falcon. Join us as we pay homage to a cinema legend.
Written and Narrated by Don Stradley. Edited by Krystal Vander Ark.
Actor Earl Holliman has died at age 96. The news was reported by the Hollywood Reporter on November 26 but we just learned of it. Born in Louisiana, Holliman enjoyed a long career on television and in feature films. Holliman is best-remembered for his starring role in the 1959 classic pilot episode of "The Twilight Zone" titled "Where is Everybody?" He also had prominent roles in films such as "Giant", "Forbidden Planet", "The Sons of Katie Elder", "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" and "Sharky's Machine". He also starred as the male lead in the 1970s hit T.V. series "Police Woman" opposite Angie Dickinson.
I
was introduced to the cinema of Steven Spielberg as a child when the other
students in my class brought in their Jaws mementos which ranged from
t-shirts to records to shark toys. I had not seen Jaws yet, though if I
had it surely would have frightened me from future beach visits. When Mr.
Spielberg’s next film, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, was released
six months after George Lucas’s Star Wars (1977), I found myself taken in
by the wonderous awe of the possibility of life on other planets (The Criterion
Collection laserdisc was the first film that I bought in that format). This
film made me believe that a visit from another species was possible. The
unofficial sequel to his very own amateur film Firelight (1964) – itself a two-and-a-half-hour exploration
of interplanetary beings – captivated me.
In
October 2017, a much-needed and long overdue documentary on him premiered at
the New York Film Festival and was aired on HBO. Simply titled Spielberg
the film, which runs 147 minutes, is a greatest hits overview of his best known
and most beloved works. Directed by Susan Lacy, who produced the excellent
documentary Searching for Mr. Rugoff (2019) among others, the film delves into the
psychology behind Mr. Spielberg’s approach to filmmaking. Initially his answer
to a lonely childhood rooted in his parents’ divorce, filmmaking became his raison
d’etre and bolstered his self-esteem. He has managed, through decades of
experience, to become an on-set problem solver. By his own admission, being
nervous and panic-stricken when coming on to a film set forces him to think
outside the box and this is where he gets his best ideas from. Lawrence of
Arabia (1962), a film that he revisits annually, nearly made him not want
to direct as “the bar was set too high.” Thankfully, he relented.
Culled
from an array of interviews with Martin Scorsese, Bill Butler, John Williams, Janet
Maslin, J.J. Abrams, Sid Sheinberg, James Brolin, David Geffen, Steven Bochco, George
Lucas, Francis Coppola and Vilmos Zsigmond to name a few, Spielberg sets
out (and I believe succeeds in) dispelling the notion that simply because his
films are blockbusters they are somehow unworthy of serious study and should
not be regarded as anything other than “popcorn movies.” Jaws is an
indisputably great movie, arguably Mr. Spielberg’s finest hour, a film that had
no script, no luck, problems galore, and a filming schedule that increased
three-fold. Hiding his insecurities from the cast and crew was paramount to
getting the film finished.
There
is also input from his late parents and his three sisters and their unorthodox
and nontraditional familial experiences, which were chronicled in
autobiographical film he directed called The Fabelmans (2022). Mr. Spielberg is discussed as a prankster
who took delight in frightening his siblings, a trait taken to cinematic
extremes with getting as many screams as possible from the audience with Jaws
(1975), and later with Poltergeist (1982), which he produced. His
ingenuity and inexorable attempts to make his early short films, and an amusing
anecdote about staying behind on the Universal lot’s tour bus, landed him in
front of Sid Sheinberg, head of story development at the time. Spielberg
delves into both the personal and professional side of its subject’s life and
gives us an inside look at the Wizard Behind the Curtain, covering the
aforementioned titles, E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982), the Indiana
Jones films, and his first attempt at making a serious film, The Color
Purple (1985), which many critics rolled their eyes at with his newfound
attempt at adult material. Spielberg proves that its subject is more
than capable of making lighthearted entertainment in addition to mature films, among
them Schindler’s List (1993), Saving Private Ryan (1998), and Munich
(2005). The fact that Always (1989) and Hook (1991) are given a
cursory glance does little to alter the notion that the director considers both
films as personal misfires.
Spielberg is available as an HBO DVD that
includes eleven minutes of additional interviews consisting of comments from Jude
Law, Karen Allen, Matt Damon, and Amy Adams, all of whom have worked with Mr.
Spielberg. If you are a fan of his, this DVD is an absolute must-own.
Cinema Retro has received the following press release from Sony:
THIS HOLIDAY SHARE “HERE” AT HOME
STARRING TOM HANKS AND ROBIN WRIGHT
“THE MOST LIFE-AFFIRMING, SOUL-ENRICHING MOVIE OF THE YEAR.”Jake Hamilton, FOX-TV
AVAILABLE TO BUY OR RENT ON DIGITAL NOVEMBER 26 AND ON
BLU-RAY & DVD JANUARY 21??
SYNOPSIS
Reuniting the director, writer and stars of Forrest Gump,
HERE is an original film about multiple families and a special place they
inhabit. The story travels through generations, capturing the most relatable of
human experiences. Robert Zemeckis (Forrest Gump, Cast Away, Who Framed Roger
Rabbit, Contact, Back to the Future) directs from a screenplay by Eric Roth (Forrest
Gump, Killers of the Flower Moon, Dune: Part One, A Star is Born) and him. Told
much in the style of the acclaimed graphic novel by Richard McGuire on which it
is based, TOM HANKS and ROBIN WRIGHT star in a tale of love, loss, laughter and
life all of which happen right Here.
SPECIAL FEATURES
BLU-RAY, DVD & DIGITAL EXTRAS
oHow We Got Here (The Making of HERE)
oDeleted Scenes
Blu-ray™ & DVD include a Digital
code for movie and bonus materials as listed above, redeemable via Movies
Anywhere for a limited time. Movies Anywhere is open to U.S. residents age 13+.
Visit MoviesAnywhere.com for terms and conditions.
CAST AND
CREW
Directed by:Robert Zemeckis
Produced
by:Robert
Zemeckis, Derek Hogue, Jack Rapke, Bill Block
Based on the
Graphic Novel by: Richard McGuire
Screenplay
by: Eric Roth & Robert Zemeckis
Executive
Producers: Jeremy Johns, Andrew Golov,
Thom Zadra
Cast
(In
Order of Appearance): Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Paul Bettany, Kelly
Reilly
SPECS
Run
Time: Approx.104 minutes
Rating:
PG-13 Thematic material, some suggestive material, brief strong language and
smoking.
Blu-ray™: 1080p High Definition / 1.78:1 • Audio: English
5.1 DTS-HD MA, English Audio Description Track 5.1 Dolby Digital. Subtitles:
English, English SDH, Spanish • Mastered in High Definition • Color • Some of
The Information Listed May Not Apply To Special Features.
DVD: Feature:1.78:1 Anamorphic Widescreen • Audio:
English 5.1 Dolby Digital, English Audio Description Tracks Stereo • Subtitles:
English, English SDH, Spanish • Approx.104 Mins. •Color
Some of the information in the above listing may
not apply to Special Features
Rory Calhoun was an actor popular in the 1950s who was known
for his troubled youth, having spent time in prison for robbing jewelry stores
and driving a stolen car over state lines. Alan Ladd helped him break into
movies and befitting his image he played rugged tough guy parts, mostly in
westerns and action thrillers. “The Looters” (1955), a Universal-International
film now available on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber, is a typical Rory Calhoun
movie, although not a particularly noteworthy one. What saves it from being
dismissed as a total misfire is the presence of 50’s icons JulieAdams and Ray Danton (“The Rise and Fall of
Legs Diamond”) as co-stars.
In “The Looters” Calhoun plays Jesse Hill, an ex-GI who
lives alone in a cabin high in the Colorado Rockies. We first see him repelling
down a mountainside to chat with the leader of an Army artillery squad testing
out some new weaponry. The officer in charge tells Jesse which areas to avoid once
testing begins. Jesse returns to his
cabin and finds his solitude has been breached by a visit from Pete Corder (Ray Danton), an
old Army pal who saved his life by pulling him out of a foxhole at Anzio. When
the surprised Jesse asks what he’s doing here, Pete tells him he’s lived a life
of misadventure since his Army days and is flat broke. He thought his old buddy
might stake him to a few hot meals and a place to stay for “a few days.” Jesse says okay, but tells his friend he’s as
broke as he is. They suddenly hear a plane flying overhead above the clouds.
“Probably off course,” Phil remarks.
So, okay we’ve got two plot elements started already: the
artillery exercises and the old friend looking for a handout. Then all at once
we’ve got plot # 3 started when we’re suddenly in the small airliner we heard
earlier flying high over Jesse’s cabin. There we meet “The Creature from the
Black Lagoon”’s swimming partner, the great Julie Adams as Sheryl Gregory, an
actress/model who’s had a rough and tumble life and has a cynical attitude to
go with it.Also on board are Frank
Faylen (“The Many Loves of DobieGillis”)
as Stan Lippich, a retired Navy officer. To make things interesting, Thomas
Gomez {“Ride the Pink Horse” (1947) is aboard as George Parkinson, a man who
calls himself an “investment counselor.” No sooner do we meet these new
characters than there’s an explosion, and a close- up of Julie Adams screaming.
Next day Phil learns there’s been a plane crash and
decides to go investigate. And that’s where the plot lines converge, with a new
one added when “investment counselor”/plane crash survivor Parkinson finds a
box in the plane wreckage containing $250,000 in cash.There’s also a romantic triangle sparked by
Jesse and Cheryl, with Pete trying to horn in. When Pete finds out about the
money Parkinson found, greed combines with lust and you’ve got a real potboiler
going here. And did I forget, now they’ve got to watch how they climb down from
the mountain, because the artillery shells will start flying soon. To say that
“The Looters” ends with a bang is an understatement.
Abner Biberman directed “The Looters,” on location in the
Colorado Rockies around the Pike’s Peak area. The screenplay was by Richard
Alan Simmons, who mostly wrote for television, including series such as
“Petrocelli,” “Mrs. Columbo,” and “Ironside.”The music score is credited to Universal’s music supervisor Joseph
Gershenson, but according to film historian Toby Roan in his commentary for the
Blu-ray, the score was actually written by German composer Heinz Roemheld
(“Lady from Shanghai”, 1947). The score is one of the best features of the
movie and Kino Lorber did a good job with audio transfer elements. The film is from
a brand new HD Master of a 2K scan of the 35 mm fine grain print. Picture and
sound quality are very good.
On one hand, It’s too bad Universal International didn’t
spend a few more bucks to make “The Looters” in color. Loyd Ahern’s Rocky
Mountain cinematography would have looked spectacular in Technicolor. But then
again, shooting it in black and white adds a touch of “film noir” to “The
Looters” – suitable for the movie’s themes. It’s the first time I can remember
seeing the usually upright and solid Julie Adams portraying a gal whose
experience with men has left her down and out with a cynical outlook. But don’t
worry, Rory’s there. He’ll straighten her out. Good old Rory Calhoun. Whenever
I think of him, I’m reminded of episode 20, season six of ”The Simpsons,“ where Mr. Burns is about to
kill “Two Dozen and one” Greyhoun” puppies so he can make a tuxedo out of
Greyhound fur. When he’s about to shoot them, one of the pups stands up on its
hind legs, and Burns tells Smithers he reminds him of that actor who “always
stands and walks.” “Rory Calhoun",” Smithers
replies without hesitation.
“The Looters” is not a great movie, but certainly
interesting and noteworthy for the fact that it’s the first time it’s been
available on home video in any format. In addition to the Toby Roan commentary
there are half a dozen coming attractions for other
Universal-Internationalfeature films.
Written and Directed by Legendary Filmmaker
Clint Eastwood,
the Legal Thriller Film Arrives for Premium
Digital Ownership and Rental on December 3
Blu-ray and DVD arrive on February 4
Burbank, CA, November 26, 2024 – Juror #2, the
legal thriller from Academy Award winning director Clint Eastwood, arrives for
purchase and rental Digitally at home on December 3. The film will also be
available to purchase on Blu-ray and DVD on February 4, 2025.
On December 3, Juror #2 will be available for
early Premium Digital Ownership at home and for 48-hour rental via PVOD on
participating digital platforms where you purchase movies, including Amazon
Prime Video, AppleTV, Google Play, Fandango At Home, and more.
On February 4, Juror #2 will be
available to own on Blu-ray and DVD. Juror #2 will
also continue to be available to own in high definition and standard
definition from participating digital retailers.
Academy Award winner Eastwood directs from a screenplay
by Jonathan Abrams (“Escape Plan”). The film is produced by Eastwood, Tim
Moore, Jessica Meier, Adam Goodman and Matt Skiena, and executive produced by
David M. Bernstein, Ellen Goldsmith-Vein, Jeremy Bell.
“Juror #2” follows family man Justin Kemp (Hoult) who,
while serving as a juror in a high-profile murder trial, finds himself
struggling with a serious moral dilemma…one he could use to sway the jury
verdict and potentially convict—or free—the accused killer.
The film stars Nicholas Hoult (upcoming Superman, The
Menu), Oscar nominee Toni Collette (upcoming Mickey 17, The Sixth
Sense), Oscar winner J.K. Simmons (Whiplash), and Kiefer Sutherland (Designated
Survivor, 24), and also features Chris Messina (Air, Based on a True
Story), Gabriel Basso (The Night Agent), Zoey Deutch (The Politician, Zombieland:
Double Tap), Cedric Yarbrough (Unfrosted), Leslie Bibb (Palm Royale, Tag),
Amy Aquino (Bosch) and Adrienne C. Moore (Orange Is the New Black).
BASICS
Premium Digital Ownership: December 3, 2024
Blu-ray and DVD Street Date: February 4, 2025
BD Languages: English, Latin Spanish,
Spanish Castilian, Parisian French, Italian
BD Subtitles: English, Latin Spanish, Spanish Castilian,
Canadian French, Parisian French, Italian, Japanese, Dutch
DVD Languages: English, Latin Spanish
DVD Subtitles: English, Latin Spanish, Japanese
Running Time: 113 minutes
Rating: PG-13
DVD: DLBY/DGTL
Blu-ray: ATMOS TrueHD
The Credits
From legendary filmmaker Clint Eastwood comes “Juror #2,”
a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
The film stars Nicholas Hoult (upcoming “Superman,” “The
Menu”), Oscar nominee Toni Collette (upcoming “Mickey 17,” “The Sixth Sense”),
Oscar winner J.K. Simmons (“Whiplash”), and Kiefer Sutherland (“Designated
Survivor,” “24”), and also features Chris Messina (“Air,” “Based on a True
Story”), Gabriel Basso (“The Night Agent”), Zoey Deutch (“The Politician,”
“Zombieland: Double Tap”), Cedric Yarbrough (“Unfrosted”), Leslie Bibb (“Palm
Royale,” “Tag”), Amy Aquino (“Bosch”) and Adrienne C. Moore (“Orange Is the New
Black”).
“Juror #2” follows family man Justin Kemp (Hoult) who,
while serving as a juror in a high-profile murder trial, finds himself
struggling with a serious moral dilemma…one he could use to sway the jury
verdict and potentially convict—or free—the accused killer.
Academy Award winner Eastwood directs from a screenplay
by Jonathan Abrams (“Escape Plan”). The film is produced by Eastwood, Tim
Moore, Jessica Meier, Adam Goodman and Matt Skiena, and executive produced by
David M. Bernstein, Ellen Goldsmith-Vein, Jeremy Bell.
Eastwood’s creative team includes such frequent
collaborators as director of photography Yves Bélanger, production designer Ron
Reiss, Oscar-winning editor Joel Cox (“Unforgiven”) and editor David Cox,
BAFTA-nominated costume designer Deborah Hopper (“Changeling”); Mark Mancina
created the original score.
Warner Bros. Pictures Presents A Dichotomy Production, A
Malpaso Production, “Juror #2,” to be distributed by Warner Bros.
Pictures.
"A BRIDGE TOO FAR" (1977) chronicles the events of infamous World
War II mission 'Operation Market Garden'. More than 41,000 American, British, and Polish
soldiers were parachuted into German-occupied areas of the Netherlands, the
largest airborne operation ever mounted. Stunningly recreated for the film by
director Richard Attenborough, this ambitious sequence required enormous
military expertise to execute - performed by hundreds of real-life soldiers and
practiced jumpers. This is just one of many extraordinary sequences in the
film, newly restored in a brand NEW 4K scan and restoration of this key piece of
cinema history. Loaded with brand NEW and archival Special Features, and housed
in a strictly Limited Edition 3-Disc Hardbox with an exclusive booklet, this is
the definitive treatment of a true masterpiece."
James Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson accepted the Motion Picture Academy's coveted Thalberg Award for lifetime achievement in the film industry. It's the same award that was earned by Albert R. Broccoli in 1981. Barbara and Michael inherited the mantle of producing the Bond films when Cubby retired from that role prior to "GoldenEye" going into production. Since then, they have overseen the series reaching new heights in terms of boxoffice receipts around the world and also the kind of critical praise that unjustly eluded many of the earlier Bond films. There was a time when the annual Oscar awards telecast would include the presentation of the Thalberg Award. Indeed, the presentation to Cubby in 1981 inspired an impressive stage production in honor of the Bond films. However, in recent years, the award was presented at a separate ceremony. Here is Daniel Craig's introduction and Barbara and Michael's acceptance speech.
Elvis Presley is almost always associated exclusively with movie musicals. However, he did stray from the genre to make a Western in which he didn't warble one lyric. The film is Charro!, which is available from Warner Bros. Just as seemingly every actor tried to get on board the spy movie phenomenon of the mid-1960s, by the end of the decade they were attempting to similarly capitalize on the spaghetti western genre. This 1969 film is non-descript as a western - not among the best of the era but far from the worst. It does merit special consideration because perhaps more than any other of his films, Charro! exhibits a persona that Elvis had never been able to reflect onscreen - thanks to Colonel Parker's iron-fisted control over his career and his insistence that The King appear in outdated teen musicals. The razor-thin plot has Elvis trying to distance himself from a murderous gang he used to ride with. Gang leader Victor French isn't the kind of guy you quit on so he frames Elvis for crimes he didn't commit then tortures him into participating in an audacious plot that finds them stealing a giant cannon from the Mexican army and using it to blackmail a town.
The movie has competent but pedestrian direction from old hand
Charles Marquis Warren and the supporting cast is largely unknown with
the exception of Ina Balin who makes an enticing romantic partner for
The King. Where Charro! distinguishes itself is in presenting
Elvis with one of his few mature film projects. You keep anticipating
the moment in which he starts leading a conga line of senioritas through
the sagebrush but the film is happily devoid of songs, save for the
title track that had been released as the flip side of Elvis' classic Memories. Elvis
looks terrific, wearing a scruffy beard in true Eastwood/Leone style
and gives a subdued but thoroughly convincing performance, including
performing some fairly rough stunts. The mind reels at what Elvis might
have been capable of in terms of his film roles if he had not been under
the thumb of The Colonel. By the time Charro!was released,
Elvis' movie career had virtually ended. Ironically, just as he was
getting with the times, he had lost most of his film audience. The movie
was supposed to be even more adult: it was originally titled Come Sundown, Come Hell
and originally featured a nude scene by Ina Balin. Rumors continue to
surface that prints of this version still exist, but the scene was cut
before general release.
Charro! isn't high art - it's not even a top-notch western, but it is pleasing entertainment one of Elvis' best film roles.
Extras: The only extra included on the Warner Brothers DVD is
an original theatrical trailer which tried to emphasize this was not
your big sister's Elvis movie, but an entirely new persona for The
King.
The DVD is officially out of print and a Blu-ray edition has never been available. However, you can click here to order the DVD from an Amazon seller. The film is also available for rental or purchase streaming on YouTube.
Ray Milland was an Oscar-winning actor but most movie fans probably don't realize he was also a film director. His productions were generally modestly-budgeted and played to modest results. In 1965, Milland was offered the opportunity to star in a stage production of writer Jack Roffey's whodunnit "Hostile Witness". The play had opened the year before in the West End. Milland, who had not appeared on stage in quite some time, was sufficiently impressed enough to accept the offer. The show later opened on Broadway and ran for 157 performances. It was deemed (fittingly for Milland) a modest success. However, Milland stuck with the production and toured with the show with markedly better results. In 1967 he struck a deal with United Artists to bring the play to the screen with Roffey writing the screenplay and Milland starring and directing. The film was completed in 1968 and was released in most countries the following year. However, it's UK release was delayed until 1970 and some countries didn't get the film until 1972.
Milland is well-cast as Simon Crawford, a widowed London barrister who enjoys the reputation of being able to win seemingly unwinnable trials on behalf of his clients. He's a bit a of a snooty fuddy-duddy and runs his office at times like a drill instructor. Nevertheless, his small but loyal staff endure his moods because they realize they are learning from a revered lawyer who has earned the respect of his peers. Crawford's world comes crashing down when he learns that his grown daughter has been killed by a hit-and-run driver. The inability of the police and private detectives to find the culprit take their toll on him and he undergoes a nervous breakdown. This requires Crawford to suspend his legal duties and recuperate in a health facility. He returns in a seemingly better mood but he is about to undergo more stress. He suspects that an old friend of his might have been the person who was driving the car that struck and killed his daughter. From this point, the plot kicks into gear as the person he had been accusing ends up being murdered. Making matters worse, Crawford is attacked and knocked unconscious by an unseen stalker. He later becomes suspected of killing the man he had denounced as being responsible for his daughter's death. Adding to the burden of his defense, the police have found incriminating evidence in Crawford's flat that seems to indicate his guilt.
"Hostile Witness" suffers somewhat from its rather meager budget. It's clear that United Artists viewed this as mid-range product in the hopes of making a modest profit. Such was the norm in the era before budget-busting blockbusters defined studio releases. Indeed, there are almost no exterior shots in the film and the few that are there are relegated to the studio back lot. The movie plays out like a TV production from the era, but that isn't meant as a knock. The average episode of "Perry Mason" was engrossing and this film is, too.The plot twists and turns and there is some genuine suspense in terms of whether our protagonist might actually be guilty of murder. The finale finds Crawford dismissing his loyal defense attorney, a protege from his own law firm well-played by Sylvia Sims. The stubborn Crawford takes over his own defense, ignoring the old adage that anyone who acts as their own lawyer has a fool for a client.
The movie came and went quickly, making little impression on critics or the scant audiences who went to see it. Milland directs the film in a competent but pedestrian manner. Milland the actor fares better with a sharp performance as a mostly unlikable character whose moments of charm and compassion are outnumbered but his temper tantrums. Still, it's reasonably entertaining and certainly worth a look.
"Hostile Witness" is currently streaming on Amazon Prime.
On 25 January, 2025, Imprint is releasing a limited edition boxed set of four Blaxploitation flicks from the 1970s. Details below:
Four classic films from the
Blaxploitation genre come to stunning high-definition Blu-ray for the
first time ever worldwide, all from brand NEW 4K scans.
When Robert Altman's "M*A*S*H" was released in 1970 it was a critical and boxoffice sensation. Audiences immediately recognized that, although the film was set in the Korean War, it was very obviously an analogy to the current controversial conflict in Vietnam. The film thrust Donald Sutherland and Elliott Gould into the top tier of leading actors and the movie spawned the classic TV series that was a phenomenon in its own right. The film's success, along with the simultaneous triumph of the more traditional war film "Patton", helped stem the red ink that was plaguing 20th Century Fox and played a key role in making the studio solvent once again.
If you haven't seen the 2003 film "Owning Mahowny", put it on your "Must Watch" list if you have Amazon Prime. If you don't have Amazon Prime, consider purchasing the DVD (it has not available on Blu-ray). I was unaware of the movie but in browsing through Prime's seemingly endless selection of streaming choices, I was drawn to it by the fact that Philip Seymour Hoffman has the starring role. Hoffman, who tragically passed away in 2014, was one of the best actors of his generation and this film offers him an impressive showcase for his estimable talents. The Canadian production is based on a true story, though the title character's name, Dan Mahowny, was amended from the real-life counterpart, Brian Molony. Why? Supposedly because the real guy's name was too similar to the incumbent prime minister at the time, Brian Mulroney. The movie is set in the early 1980s when the actual events occurred. Hoffman's Mahowny is a nondescript, affable schlep who wears ill-fitting suits and drives a clunker of a car. He's a dedicated mid-management type who loyally works at a prestigious bank in Toronto that has some extremely wealthy clients. In recognition of his work ethic and loyalty, he has recently been promoted to Vice-President, which gives him access to and responsibility for overseeing the accounts of the bank's most important customers. Mahowny also has a nice fiancee, Belinda (Minnie Driver) who sees his promotion as a stepping stone for getting married and buying a place of their own.
Despite his seemingly ordinary life, Mahowny is hiding a secret: he's got a gambling addiction, though like most people plagued with this affliction, he feels he has control over this aspect of his life. He primarily does his betting through his sleazy bookie, the uncouth Frank Perlin (Maury Chakin). With his new promotion and higher salary, Mahowny is now betting recklessly, primarily on sports. He also makes periodic flights from Toronto to Atlantic City to gamble at the casinos.(Legalized gambling was new novelty in New Jersey at the time.) Mahowny disguises these trips with various excuses to Belinda that they are work related. She sympathizes with him and considers him to be a workaholic when, in fact, these trips and nocturnal activities are purely related to gambling. Mahowny is gambling so much that even Perlin wants to cut him off, but Mahowny insists on taking larger and larger advances from the bookie. He's gambling so much that it attracts the attention of Atlantic City casino boss Victor Foss (John Hurt), who views Mahowny as a very desirable client and monitors his gambling sessions via closed circuit T.V. As Mahowny's gambling debts grow, he borrows more money and draws crowds at the casino. Sometimes he wins big but ultimately it all goes back to the casino. Foss has his fish on the line and caters to Mahowny with spacious suites and offers of endless booze and fine dining, all being comped, of course. Mahowny accepts the room but turns down all the other free temptations including a gorgeous hooker sent to his room. All he requests is a meal consisting of ribs with no sauce and a Coke. Foss observes with relish that Mahowny shows no interest in booze, drugs or sex and labels him a "thoroughbred" in that he wants nothing other than the action of gambling.
Mahowny's troubles start to mount when Belinda begins to suspect his addiction. A romantic visit to Las Vegas ends in disaster when Mahowny opts to desert her in favor of the gambling tables. Meanwhile, he continues to manipulate funds at the bank and enact coverups. He crosses the line when his "borrowings" go from thousands of dollars to millions. As the pressure builds, an internal bank audit adds to his worries, leading to some genuine tension in the film, which is very ably directed by Richard Kwietniowski, working with a screenplay by Maurice Chauvet (based on a book by Gary Stephen Ross). Additionally, U.S. law enforcement is secretly monitoring him in conjunction with Canadian law enforcement in the belief that he might be a drug dealer. All of the performances are excellent with John Hurt particularly good as the superficially friendly casino boss who employees ruthless tactics to both woo and destroy his customers. Minnie Driver is also very good as the ever-patient and somewhat naive girlfriend who is in danger of being eclipsed by her finance's love of gambling. The most impressive aspect of the film, however, is the brilliant performance by Philip Seymour Hoffman, which ranks among his best. He's understated throughout, even as the pressures build on his character, whose career and personal life fall further into jeopardy.
"Owning Mahowny" is probably unknown to most movie fans but it was enthusiastically acclaimed by critics and was nominated for Best Picture and Best Actor at Canada's Genie Awards. It's engrossing throughout and the film proves that when you have a lot of talent involved, you don't always need an expensive budget. Give it a try. Will you like this suspense drama about addictive gambling? You bet!
(The film is currently streaming on Amazon Prime. Click here to order the DVD from Amazon.)
Please note: due to travel obligations, the U.S. office will be closed November 12 and will reopen on November 26. Please continue to order as your normally would and we will begin shipping issues as soon as the office reopens. Thank you!
Kino Lorber will release a 4K UHD edition of Don Siegel's "Two Mules for Sister Sara" starring Clint Eastwood and Shirley MacLaine. Here are the details:
Product Description
From Don Siegel, the legendary director
of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Coogan’s Bluff, Dirty Harry, Charley
Varrick, The Shootist and Escape from Alcatraz, comes this classic
western starring screen legends Clint Eastwood (The Good, the Bad and
the Ugly, High Plains Drifter) and Shirley MacLaine (Sweet Charity, Irma
La Douce). Eastwood is a hard-hitting drifter who rides into town and
single-handedly rescues a local nun (MacLaine) from a gang of bandits.
After meeting a band of Mexican revolutionaries bent on resisting the
French occupation of Mexico, the cowboy and Sister Sara decide to join
forces with the freedom fighters and set off on a deadly mission to
capture the enemy’s garrison. But along the way, a steamy romance
develops between them when the soft-spoken hero discovers the nun is not
what she seems. Ending with a violent climax at the well-protected
fort, this action-packed western classic cemented Eastwood’s status as a
true cinematic superstar. Featuring a masterful score by the great
Ennio Morricone (A Fistful of Dollars).
Special Features:
DISC 1 (4KUHD):
• Brand New HDR/Dolby Vision Master (International Cut) – From a 4K Scan of the 35mm Original Camera Negative • NEW Audio Commentary for by Author and Film Historian Justin Humphreys • Audio Commentary by Filmmaker Alex Cox, Author of 10,000 Ways to Die: A Director's Take on the Italian Western • At Home with Clint: Vintage Candid Interview with Clint Eastwood • Poster and Image Gallery • 5.1 Surround and Lossless 2.0 Audio • Triple-Layered UHD100 Disc • Optional English Subtitles
DISC 2 (BLU-RAY):
• 2020 4K Restoration of the Domestic Cut • Radio Spots • TV Spots • Theatrical Trailer • 10 More Clint Eastwood Trailers • 5.1 Surround and Lossless 2.0 Audio • Dual-Layered BD50 Disc • Optional English Subtitles
Laurel & Hardy: Year Two, The Newly
Restored 1928 Silents from Flicker Alley and Blackhawk Films®, adds new special
features, including the rare short, ‘Now I’ll Tell One’
Release Date: Now Available
(Los Angeles, CA — October 8, 2024) Flicker
Alley and Blackhawk Films are today announcing some new surprises for Laurel
& Hardy fans. The upcoming two-disc Blu-ray edition of Laurel & Hardy:
Year Two, previously announced for release on October 29, will be delayed by
one week to accommodate the inclusion of several new pieces of bonus content,
including the extant second reel of the 1927 Charley Chase short ‘Now I’ll Tell
One’ (courtesy of the British Film Institute.) Once considered a fully lost
film, the short features both Stan and Ollie, albeit not yet as a comedy duo.
In addition to ‘Now I’ll Tell One,’ the
upcoming set will also include some newly announced alternate audio options,
including two vintage Blackhawk Films music tracks on ‘You’re Darn Tootin’ and
‘Two Tars.’ These join original scores by Neil Brand, Robert Israel, Andreas
Benz, and Jean-Francois Zygel, as well as audio commentaries on every short by
Laurel & Hardy scholars Randy Skretvedt and Richard W. Bann.
Following their initial pairing in early
1927, Laurel and Hardy ended their first year on top. Their success moving into
1928 galvanized the efforts of everyone at Hal Roach Studios (including famed
director Leo McCarey), who proudly upped their game in support of the winning
comedy duo. Whether wreaking accidental havoc as a two-man band, doing battle
against one another as millionaire and butler, or even becoming grave robbers
for a mad scientist, Laurel and Hardy prove in their second year that they have
what it takes to not only win over audiences in the twilight of the silent era,
but generate enough momentum to make an unparalleled transition to “talkies” in
1929.
Although their names are synonymous with the
very idea of comedy, few of the original negatives for Laurel and Hardy’s early
silent work survive, elements only available from scattered sources throughout
the world, often in substantially less than pristine shape. It took the team at
Blackhawk Films four years to gather all surviving film elements, to
meticulously compare them shot by shot, and to complete the best digital
restorations possible. Today, these beloved shorts look as new as they did
nearly a century ago.
Featuring all new restorations sourced from
best available materials contributed by archives and collectors around the
world restored by Blackhawk Films® and FPA Classics, this comprehensive deluxe
Blu-ray 2-Disc collection features their ten 1928 films as a team and
additional films from the Hal Roach Studios that showcase their final solo
short film appearances, as well as the shift from silent films to films
featuring music and synchronized sound effects.
The release is curated by film historians and
Laurel and Hardy specialists; Randy Skretvedt, Richard K. Bann, Serge Bromberg,
and Eric Lange.
The full breakdown of the ten 1928 shorts on Laurel
& Hardy: Year Two is as follows:
Leave 'em Laughing
Score by Andreas Benz
Score by Jean-Francois Zygel
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
The Finishing Touch
Score by Neil Brand
Commentary by Richard W. Bann
From Soup to Nuts
- Score by Neil Brand
- Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
You're Darn Tootin’
Score by Robert Israel
Score by Neil Brand
Vintage Blackhawk Films Music Track
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
Their Purple Moment
Score by Andreas Benz
Commentary by Richard W. Bann
Should Married Men Go Home?
Score by Neil Brand
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
Early to Bed
Score by Neil Brand
Commentary by Richard W. Bann
Two Tars
Score by Robert Israel
Score by Andreas Benz
Vintage Blackhawk Films Music Track
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
Habeas Corpus
Score by Robert Israel
Original 1928 VitaPhone Track
Commentary by Richard W. Bann
We Faw Down
Score by Jean-Francois Zygel
Original 1928 VitaPhone Track
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
The set also includes the following bonus
features:
Now I’ll Tell One
The extant second reel of a rare short featuring both stars.
Score by Serge Bromberg
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
Gallopin’ Ghosts
Two surviving fragments of a rare solo Oliver
Hardy comedy.
Score by Neil Brand
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
Eve’s Love Letters
One of Stan Laurel’s final solo films,
directed by Leo McCarey and written by Laurel himself, from rare 35mm elements.
1930s French Rerelease Track
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
A Pair of Tights
A 1929 short starring Anita Garvin and Marion
Byron, who were teamed to try and replicate the success of Laurel and Hardy.
Score by Neil Brand
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
George Mann Footage
Home movies shot behind the scenes of Hal
Roach Studios, including the filming of ‘Should Married Men Go Home’.
Score by Neil Brand
Commentary by Randy Skretvedt
Audio
Interviews Conducted by Randy Skretvedt
Personal
interviews with Anita Garvin, Thomas Benton Roberts, and Hal Roach.
Audio Interview with Stan Laurel
Conducted by Tony Thomas in 1959, the year
following Oliver Hardy’s death.
Laurel & Hardy On-Location in Year Two
A video essay by historian John Bengtson on
selected location exteriors.
Film Specific Image Galleries
Containing original publicity materials,
press reviews, and rare production stills.
Souvenir Booklet
Containing a new collection introduction by
Serge Bromberg and Eric Lange; A look at the supporting players and other
creative personnel in the world of Hal Roach Studios by historian Sara Imogen
Smith; A new essay exploring the development of the Vitaphone sound-on-disc
system in 1928 by Randy Skredvedt; and comprehensive notes on each film
English SDH Subtitles
Blu-ray Authoring by David Mackenzie of
Fidelity In Motion
Blackhawk Films® was founded in 1927 as a
producer of film advertising for merchants and as a distributor of regional
newsreels. From 1950 until 1995, Blackhawk expanded and began distributing new
8mm and 16mm prints of Laurel & Hardy comedies from Hal Roach Studios as
well as other classic film titles through its legendary monthly catalog. Today,
Blackhawk Films® is both a unique collection of classic films (more than 5000
titles), and a restoration laboratory established in Burbank, CA, handling cinematic
masterpieces for the biggest archives and films owners throughout the world.
About Flicker Alley, LLC
Flicker Alley, LLC was founded in 2002. Each
Flicker Alley publication is the culmination of hundreds of hours of research,
digital restoration, graphic design, music composition, and scoring.
Collectively, they reflect the creativity, expertise, and shared passion of
many talented collaborators. The Flicker Alley brand has grown to enjoy
national and international acclaim. The company is a four-time recipient of the
National Society of Film Critics Film Heritage Award for publishing "rare
early U.S. and foreign silent film.”
The second box set from Imprint devoted to the career of Marlon Brando will be released in January. Cinema Retro's Lee Pfeiffer and fellow film historians Paul Scrabo and Tony Latino provide the commentary track on the first special edition Blu-ray for "The Missouri Breaks". The set also contains the first Blu-ray of "Last Tango in Paris" to feature bonus features. Also included is the remarkable feature film documentary "Listen to Me Marlon" in which unveiled audio tapes of Brando describe his life and career.The other feature films are all gems: "The Night of the Following Day", "The Nightcomers" and "A Dry White Season", which afforded Brando his last Oscar nomination.
Click here to pre-order. This will be a limited edition release of 1500 sets.
Note: Prices are in Australian dollars. Use currency converter for non-Australian orders.
Writer/Producer Alan Spencer narrates the trailer for the 1980 "Get Smart" feature film, "The Nude Bomb" starring Don Adams. Spencer idolized Adams and when the film ran into some snags, he donated his talents and provided some gags. Spencer acknowledges the missteps in the production, namely the refusal to include Barbara Feldon's essential Agent "99" and a less-than-family friendly modern approach that seemed tasteless at times. Nevertheless, he assures us the film was profitable. He also fills us in on the scuttled plans to bring a "Get Smart" film to the big screen as far back as 1965.
Kino Lorber has released
the 1975 Charles Bronson crime thriller "Breakout" as a Blu-ray special edition. Bronson
was riding high at the time, coming off the sensational success of
"Death Wish". The film was originally supposed to star Kris
Kristofferson under the direction of Michael Ritchie but those plans
soon fell apart. Bronson took over the lead role with veteran director
Tom Gries at the helm. The film finds Bronson well-cast as Nick Colton, a
shady businessman/con man/grifter who operates a variety of small time
business ventures on the Mexican border with his partner Hawk Hawkins
(pre-kooky Randy Quaid.) Nick is living hand-to-mouth when he is
approached by Ann Wagner (Jill Ireland) with a proposition to help her
husband, equally shady rich guy Jay (Robert Duvall), escape from a Mexican prison where he has
been sentenced after being framed for a murder. Time is of the essence
because Jay is in declining health and may well be too weak to help
effect his own escape. Colton and Hawk's first attempt to spring him
ends disastrously and they barely escape back to America. Colton
concocts an audacious plan for a second escape attempt that involves
split-second timing. He will arrange for a helicopter to land in the
courtyard of the prison and in the inevitable confusion, Jay is to make
his way on board and presumably fly away to freedom. In order to pull
off the caper, Nick enlists the help of a professional helicopter pilot
as well as Myrna (Sheree North), a married ex-call girl who will be used
to distract some of the guards when the copter lands inside the prison.
When the pilot gets cold feet, Nick is forced to fly the chopper
himself despite the fact that he only has minimum experience doing so.
Another complication ensues when Jay is confined to the prison hospital
and doubts he will be able to be in the courtyard at the precise moment
Colton lands.
"Breakout" was inspired by an incredible 1971 real life escape in
which an American was indeed rescued by helicopter from a Mexican
prison. The screenplay has some other sub-plots that are poorly
developed and quite confusing, but some of which are obviously related
to the actual escape including some rumored involvement by the CIA. In
the film, Jay Wagner's frame-up takes place at the behest of his evil
tycoon grandfather, Harris Wagner (John Huston) for reasons that never
become clear. Apparently, Harris is concerned that Jay may inherit some
control over the company Harris runs with an iron fist, though these
plot points remain murky as does the involvement of some CIA characters.
Another potential plot device, which finds Nick and Ann obviously
attracted to each other, also goes nowhere. The film has a rushed look
to it and there are some unsatisfying aspects caused by the movie's
rather abrupt ending. The movie studio, Columbia, apparently felt the
film was a rather weak production and thus gambled on a massive ad
campaign that probably cost more than the film's modest budget. Ads for
"Breakout" were everywhere: in newspapers, on TV and on radio.
Additionally, the film opened wide in 1,000 American theaters, which was
a big number in 1975. The movie was dismissed by critics with Variety
calling it a "cheap exploitation pic", and indeed the main poster
artwork (different from the Blu-ray sleeve artwork) and graphics looked surprisingly amateurish considering this was
a golden age for film poster designs. Nevertheless, Bronson's appeal
seemed to override these negative factors. "Breakout" proved to be a
major hit and helped cement his status as a top boxoffice attraction ,
though his clout would gradually diminish henceforth.
Like a lot of older movies, "Breakout" probably plays better today
than it did at the time of its initial release. Bronson is in top form
and gives an unusually energetic performance that allows him to stress
his rarely-used talent for light comedy. The only other standout member
of the cast is Sheree North, as the epitome of the sexy cougar. She's a
fast-talking, tough cookie who parades about in sexy lingerie in an
attempt to seduce Bronson. (Surprisingly, Bronson's character does not
engage in any sexual action throughout the movie.) Robert Duvall is
largely underutilized in a low-key role and performance that could have
been credibly played by almost any other competent actor. Huston's
presence in the movie is disappointing, also. His role is confined to a
few scattered cameo appearances that probably don't last more than two
minutes. Some other familiar faces include Paul Mantee, Alejandro Rey,
Roy Jenson and the Mexican cinema's favorite bad guy, Emilio Fernandez.
As for Bronson teaming for the umpteenth time with real life wife Jill
Ireland, the gimmick was wearing thin. Some screen couples could team
without wearing out their welcome. Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton
made many films together but they were always playing entirely different
characters in entirely different scenarios. Bronson and Ireland,
despite being competent actors, were no Liz and Dick. It became clear
that their films together were largely made possible by Bronson's clout
with the studios. Although Ireland always gave credible performances,
she never lit up the screen. After a while the sheer predictability of
their on-screen teamings probably undermined Bronson's popularity
because it constrained him from interacting with other actresses. It was
a trap Clint Eastwood also fell into for a period of time when he cast
Sondra Locke in the female lead in six of his movies over a period of
only seven years. Despite these gripes, it must be said that director
Tom Gries keeps the pace moving briskly and there isn't a dull moment.
He also knows how to milk some genuine suspense out of the helicopter
escape scene, which is exceptionally well photographed by the great
cinematographer Lucien Ballard. Jerry Goldsmith also contributes a
typically fine score. The movie was shot in a wide number of locations
including California, Mexico, Spain and France, where the impressive
edifice that serves as the prison is located.
The Kino Lorber Blu-ray looks great
and features a very informative commentary track by Paul Talbot, author
of the excellent "Bronson's Loose" books, which analyze his action
movies. There is also a trailer, TV spot and radio spot. In all, an
impressive package for a fun '70s adventure flick. Recommended.
The legendary Alfred Hitchcock
is recognized for directing some of the most unforgettable and
groundbreaking films of all time. Now, for the first time ever, six of
the most recognizable films from The Master of Suspense are available
together in Alfred Hitchcock: The Iconic Film Collection including Rear
Window, To Catch a Thief, Vertigo, North by Northwest, Psycho and The
Birds. Starring Hollywood favorites James Stewart, Cary Grant, Grace
Kelly, Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, Tippi Hedren, Eva Marie Saint, Kim
Novak and Rod Taylor, this collection captures the most memorable
moments in the career of a true cinematic master.
Bonus Content:
Disc 1 - Rear Window:
Includes
a digital copy of Alfred Hitchcock: The Iconic Film Collection (Subject
to expiration. Go to NBCUCodes.com for details.)
Features High Dynamic Range (HDR10) for Brighter, Deeper, More Lifelike Color
Rear Window Ethics: An Original Documentary
A Conversation with Screenwriter John Michael Hayes
Pure Cinema: Through the Eyes of the Master
Breaking Barriers: The Sound of Hitchcock
Hitchcock/Truffaut
Masters of Cinema
Production Photographs
Theatrical Trailer
Re-release Trailer Narrated by James Stewart
Feature Commentary with John Fawell, Author of Hitchcock's Rear Window: the Well Made Film
Disc 3 - Vertigo:
Features High Dynamic Range (HDR10) for Brighter, Deeper, More Lifelike Color
Obsessed with Vertigo: New Life of Hitchcock's Masterpiece
Partners in Crime: Hitchcock's Collaborators
Foreign Censorship Ending
Hitchcock/Truffaut
Feature Commentary with Film Director William Friedkin
Theatrical Trailer
Restoration Theatrical Trailer
100 Years of Universal: The Lew Wasserman Era
Disc 4 - North by Northwest:
North by Northwest: Cinematography, Score, and the Art of the Edit
Destination Hitchcock: The Making of North by Northwest
The Master's Touch: Hitchcock's Signature Style
North by Northwest: One for the Ages
A Guided Tour with Alfred Hitchcock
Commentary by Screenwriter Ernest Lehman
Disc 5 - Psycho (1960):
4x Sharper than Full HD with High Dynamic Range (HDR10)
The Making of Psycho
Psycho Sound
In The Master's Shadow: Hitchcock's Legacy
Hitchcock/Truffaut
Newsreel Footage: The Release of Psycho
The Shower Scene: With and Without Music
The Shower Sequence: Storyboards by Saul Bass
The Psycho Archives
Posters and Psycho Ads
Lobby Cards
Behind-the-Scenes Photographs
Production Photographs
Psycho Theatrical Trailers
Psycho Re-release Trailers
Feature Commentary with Stephen Rebello, author of "Alfred Hitchcock and The Making of Psycho"
Disc 6 - The Birds:
Features High Dynamic Range (HDR10) for Brighter, Deeper, More Lifelike Color
The Birds: Hitchcock's Monster Movie
All About The Birds
Tippi Hedren's Screen Test
Deleted Scenes
The Original Ending
Hitchcock/Truffaut
The Birds Is Coming (Universal International Newsreel)
Suspense Story: National Press Club Hears Hitchcock (Universal International Newsreel)
Theatrical Trailer
100 Years of Universal: Restoring the Classics
100 Years of Universal: The Lot
This set will ship on November 26. Click here to pre- order from Amazon and save $30.
Broadcast on Sky Arts, 31 October 2024 and available to
stream on NOW.
By Adrian Smith
Like
many of my generation, Hammer is in my DNA. Hammer films were regularly
screened in the Eighties on the BBC, and my parents would tape them for me so I
could spend my Saturdays watching the likes of Dracula: Prince of Darkness
and Plague of the Zombies (both 1966). In the last twenty years I’ve
been fortunate enough to attend many Hammer-themed events (I’ve lost count of
the number of times I’ve met Caroline Munro), made friends with other Hammer
fans, written essays and articles about the company, collected dozens of
videos, DVDs and Blu-rays (with 4K UHD on the horizon), contributed bonus
features to a couple of upcoming Hammer Blu-ray releases, expanded my Hammer
library with publications from the likes of Wayne Kinsey, Marcus Hearn and the Little
Shoppe of Horrors magazine, and I even appeared as an extra in Hammer’s 2008
comeback vampire horror Beyond the Rave. It is a cliché, yet it is true
- Hammer is much like its undead antiheroes: whenever the studio appears to be
dead, it comes back to life.
With
this new documentary Hammer: Heroes, Legends and Monsters, first
broadcast on Sky Arts over Halloween, and available on NOW, the new incarnation
of Hammer (recently acquired by theatre impresario John Gore in an excellent
example of nominative determinism) are refreshing their brand and reminding the
world of their USP. Although many die-hard Hammer fans will tell you that
horror actually made up just a small percentage of their overall film output, it’s
horror that has made the Hammer name, and clearly what the new iteration is
trading on as the company hits its 90th anniversary. With one new
horror film under their belts already (Doctor Jekyll (2023) starring
Eddie Izzard in their third adaptation of Stephenson’s novel, following The
Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll (1960) and Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde (1971)),
Hammer Horror is back. Again.
Hammer:
Heroes, Legends and Monsters, directed by Benjamin Field
and co-produced by Jamie (son of Gerry) Anderson, is an excellent history of
the Hammer brand. The film celebrates the highs as well as the lows of Hammer
and brings in the opinions of experts and famous fans alike. It will come as no
surprise to see Tim Burton, John Landis, Joe Dante and John Carpenter in there,
alongside noted Hammer and genre historians such as Wayne Kinsey, Jonathan
Rigby, Axelle Carolyn, Toby Hadoke and Sarah Appleton. We also get to see some
of the few remaining Hammer stars, including Caroline Munro, Martine Beswick, Madeline
Smith and Valerie Leon (a pointed reminder that Hammer employed much younger
leading ladies than their leading men which is why it’s only women left) and
lots of archival interview footage with Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing,
amongst others.
Narrated
by Charles Dance, this documentary is beautifully shot, with purpose-built
Hammer-style sets providing some great visual interest to what could otherwise be just similar-looking talking heads.
The fact that this is produced by Hammer has allowed for great archival access,
and one suspects that there was so much material that it could easily have been
a two or even three-part series. Hammer fans would definitely buy a box set of
those. As far as I am aware, this is the first Hammer-produced documentary
about the company since the Channel 4 Oliver Reed-narrated series The World
of Hammer in the early 1990s, and Hammer’s back-catalogue would allow for
lots more documentaries should they want to mine their history further.
Although
Hammer fans are some of the most learned, there is still new information to be
found in Hammer: Heroes, Legends and Monsters, and this will also have
wider appeal and hopefully bring a new audience to Hammer’s dark and scary world.
LOS ANGELES, CA (September
17, 2024) – Legendary composer, conductor and arranger, Henry Mancini
recognized that music can be one of the most compelling characters in cinema.
His timeless works set the tone and narrative for some of the most
unforgettable moments on film. With masterful vision and skillful elegance,
Mancini’s scores brought playful fun, dramatic grandeur and heartbreaking
tenderness to 20th century popular music and engaged audiences on a deeply
emotional level. Equally engaging is the biographical tale of this celebrated,
award-winning composer, The Extraordinary Life of Henry Mancini,
a beautifully illustrated story from critically acclaimed animation studio, Fantoons.
The graphic novel features a foreword by Hans Zimmer and it is available
today, September 17, at retailers everywhere.
Mancini’s name is synonymous
with his timeless melodies, “Moon River,” “Peter Gunn,” the Pink Panther
Theme,iconic soundtracks to Breakfast at Tiffany’s, 10, Victor
Victoria andcountless works that defined how musical score could
elevate storytelling on film and screen. With many of his hits made classic by
Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Johnny Mathis and decades of iconic artists and a
body of work boasting some of the most hummed melodies of all time, Henry
Mancini’s catalog earned him four Oscars and twenty Grammy Awards.
Award winning studio, Fantoons
is now proud to present the fully authorized story of the legendary Henry
Mancini in a new graphic novel written by David Calcano, author of fan-favorite
illustrated biographies and books of Rush, Billie Holiday, Motörhead, The Beach
Boys, Tenacious D, Iron Maiden, and many others.Featuring a foreword by Hans Zimmer and
introduction by Christopher Lennertz, The Extraordinary Life of Henry
Mancini is illustrated by Svetlana Palkina, Jorge Mansilla, Lindsay
Lee, and Eriana Mirabal in this vibrant telling of the artist’s true story of
music, love and passion. A sweeping tale; wider than a mile.
The book features two editions:
Standalone hardcover edition and alimited deluxe
edition featuring an interview booklet about Mancini’s influence. Highlights
include interviews with film composer legendsJohn Powell and Patrick
Doyle, alongside interviews with legendary Disney animation directors John
Musker and Ron Clements, as well as business luminaries including Chris Montan
(former President of Walt Disney Music) and Richard Kraft (legendary film music
agent).
The interview booklet is 26 pages and is released in a
beautifully printed format that includes a limited edition 7-inch vinyl record
done in conjunction with Quartet Records. Featuring a performance never before
available on vinyl from the “Sunflower” score and a beautiful piano demo of the
“Love Theme” played by Mancini himself, the vinyl single also includes
“Giovanna,” a classic example of Mancini’s famous Touch and of course
the Pink Panther theme (from Trail of the Pink Panther). The
record features new art from Fantoons Animation Studios.
Book description:
Henry Mancini is one of the most successful and
groundbreaking film composers of all time. From the humble beginnings of his
father’s flute lessons to standing ovations at the prestigious Hollywood Bowl,
this graphic novel by Fantoons beautifully illustrates every step in the
journey of Henry Mancini’s pivotal and industry-shaping career.
Each page features vividly painted illustrations, with
color that encapsulates each of the many emotions–high and low–of Henry
Mancini’s bold, musical adventure.
Audrey Hepburn said, “A movie without music is like an
airplane without fuel,” and rightly so. Henry Mancini’s music has left an
indelible mark on the film industry, transforming it for generations of new
composers to come. Readers can learn the surprising, true stories behind the
unforgettable scores of movies such as “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” “The Pink
Panther,” and even pop-culture TV classics like “Peter Gunn.”
Before winning multiple Grammys, Golden Globes, Academy
Awards, and becoming one of the highest-regarded composers in the history of
film, step into the shoes of the boy who would bravely set out to change cinema
forever.
Get swept away in the majestic, heartwarming, and
astonishing symphony that is the extraordinary life of renowned composer Henry
Mancini, in this fully illustrated, 180-page, graphic novel.
The Extraordinary Life of Henry Mancini:
Official Graphic Novel will be available in hardcover at
retailers everywhere for a list price of $29.99 (ISBN: 978-1-97004-7-288) on
September 17, 2024.
About Fantoons:
Fantoons Animation Studios
is a group of like-minded artists with a shared passion for animation, stories,
and music. Founded by director David Calcano almost a decade ago, the vision
for the studio was simple: create content surrounding music and tell compelling
stories to celebrate it. Fantoons focuses on the artist’s personal stories
whether on the road, in the studio, or their personal journey, using sequential
storytelling in the form of graphic novels or animated content. Fantoons
creative works have received acclaim from Rolling Stone, The Guardian, PROG
Magazine, and other notable press outlets. Fantoons recently celebrated their
first Webby Award as a 2021 Honoree for Video Animation. As well as winning
multiple awards, Fantoons have accumulated over 100+ million views in their
content across social platforms, and more than 100 thousand books sold and
counting.
Conspiracy
theories flourish today thanks in large part to the universality of the
Internet and, more specifically, the ease with which once can access the World
Wide Web. The Dark Web is more than likely a better platform for every
“end-of-the-world” worry wart with a grievance huddled in a makeshift bunker to
anonymously poke the bear and make themselves heard. Following President John
F. Kennedy’s 1962 famous speech which decreed that “…this nation should commit
itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a
man on the moon and returning him safely to the Earth,” NASA set to
work to do just that, feeling they owed it to him following his assassination
14 months later. NASA accomplished this feat in a race against the Soviets, but
in the years since the 1969 moon landing, conspiracy theorists who generally
have a problem with the truthfulness of the United States’s Federal Government,
began tossing around the notion that film director Stanley Kubrick was hired to
direct the moon landing which they claim was faked on the sets remaining from MGM’s
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) film shoot. Purported hidden messages that
ostensibly appear in his 1980 film The Shining have resulted in more
Youtube.com videos than you can shake a stick at, in addition to a feature
film, Room 237 (2017), which touches upon this very notion.
Peter
Hyams’s Capricorn One, lensed in the early months of 1977 and released
on Friday, June 2, 1978, was written off by some critics as a silly thriller
with plot holes large enough to fly a spacecraft through. It posits the notion
that the Powers That Be (i.e. the Military Industrial Complex), in a bid to
keep the space race funded and afloat, need to conquer the next frontier and
send American astronauts to the planet Mars, for fear of indifference from
American citizens. NASA is ready to send Charles Brubaker (James Brolin), Peter
Willis (Sam Waterston), and John Walker (O.J. Simpson) to Mars until the men
are pulled right before takeoff by a team headed by Dr. James Kelloway (Hal
Holbrook) who explains that forces bigger than NASA want the flight to be a
success and have created a set to mimic the Red Planet’s terrain complete with
a mock-up of the lunar module. Strong-arming the three men into complicity with
the deception, it soon becomes apparent that it would be impossible for them to
remain silent regarding their involvement and there is no intention of letting
them return to their families, keeping them as prisoners locked away in the
desert.
Robert
Caulfield (Elliott Gould) is a journalist who is onto the ploy and the Powers
That Be are always one step ahead of him. Elliot Whitter (Robert Walden) is a
NASA employee who refuses to believe that the transmissions are coming from
Mars and disappears after several attempts to air his concerns to Dr. Kelloway.
This raises even more suspicion from Caulfield who established a professional
rapport with him, only to find that Whitter’s apartment is now inhabited by a
woman he has never seen before. Multiple attempts are made on Caulfield’s life,
he is framed and arrested and bailed out of jail by his non-believing boss
(David Boyle) who then fires him on the spot, however a fellow journalist
(Karen Black) comes to his aid.
There
are a lot of interesting supporting character actors who appear. Brenda
Vaccarro is on hand as Brubaker’s wife who firmly believes that she must go on
following the “death” of her husband in the “re-entry accident” to Earth; James
Karen is his usual ingratiating self as the Vice President of the United States
several years before he appeared in Poltergeist; David Huddleston is
Hollis Peaker who politely airs his grievance about the absence of the
President of the United States at the launchpad; Lou Frizzell, an actor I
always liked from Steven Spielberg’s Duel (1971), Robert Mulligan’s Summer
of ’42 (1971) and The Other (1972) and Curtis Harrington’s Devil
Dog: The Hound of Hell (1978), is quite moving as a NASA employee who gives
the astronauts a Bible to take with them; and Telly Savalas is hilarious as a
crop duster pilot who puts his skills to the test for Caulfield in a chase that
Alfred Hitchcock would appreciate after the three astronauts escape from the
desert by plane, with Brubaker being the sole survivor. The film ends abruptly like
a TV-movie, on an image that is probably framed and hanging on Barbara
Streisand’s wall. I would have liked the film to go one step further, with
Brubaker walking up to Kelloway at his “funeral,” and punching him in the face,
just like Sean Connery does to Peter Boyle in the aforementioned Outland.
Imprint,
the wonderful Blu-ray label from Down Under, has released the film on Blu-ray
in a deluxe, two-disc edition.
Blu-ray
Disc One – Theatrical Cut:
The
film had its network television debut on Sunday, May 11, 1980, and being that
it aired in a two-hour time slot on NBC, was no doubt trimmed as the theatrical
cut runs 123 minutes. This is the version that appears on the first Blu-ray,
and it includes subtitles. The transfer is adequate given that the film was
shot 47 years ago. It retains the film’s Panavision 2.35:1 framing in an
anamorphic presentation in 1080p High-Definition.
Ported
over from the Lionsgate DVD from 2008, there is a feature-length audio commentary
by director Peter Hyams, who would go on to direct Hanover Street in
1979 and the nifty High Noon redo in outer space in Outland
(1981) where deception of another kind takes place as the mining colonists on
one of Jupiter’s moons all take Polydichloric Euthimol, a drug that makes them
work harder until it kills them, and their co-workers all believe they go back
to Earth to account for their absence. He talks about the challenges that he
encountered on Capricorn One and rightly heaps praise on the performers
involved in the film. Most people today will recognize these folks and say,
“Hey, I know him/her!”
Flights
of Fancy: The Politics of Capricorn One (Standard
Definition). This piece runs 17:17 and is a fascinating look at “no-moonies,” a
term given to those who believe that the July 1969 moon landing was faked. This
notion is debunked by the onscreen interviewers. Director Hyams recounts how he
watched the event from his Chicago apartment and how it affected him. He had
been a wartime correspondent in Vietnam and saw firsthand how the government
was lying to the public. There are also discussions about audience boredom with
the space race, something brought to light in Ron Howard’s terrific film Apollo
13 (1995).
What
If?: The Making of Capricorn One (Standard
Definition). This piece runs 6:51 and is a series of quick on-camera comments
from some of the performers in the film and their thoughts on faking a Mars
landing.
On
Set with Capricorn One (Standard
Definition). This piece runs 38:22 and consists of non-narrated,
behind-the-scenes raw footage shot in June 1977 in the desert highlighting
Brubaker’s encounter with the gas station and the crop duster.
The
Photo Gallery(High Definition) contains 95 images from the film
displayed during 9:31 of running time. Ironically, when the film was released
in 1978, I saw one of the movie poster ads for it in the newspaper which
depicts the lunar module and oversized lights and crew people standing around.
I was under the erroneous impression that this was a behind-the-scenes shot
taken on the set of the film and it made its way into the film’s marketing campaign
by accident. Talk about confusion and deception!
The
requisite theatrical trailer is in High Definition and is sourced from an old
theatrical print and runs 3:09.
Blu-ray
Disc Two – Extended Cut
This
is an extended cut in high definition of the film that runs 128:30 and has some
noticeable differences that make for a different interpretation of the film and
is worth watching. There is an audio commentary by film historians Daniel
Kremer and Daniel Waters that accompanies this cut, which they announce was
recorded on James Brolin’s birthday which was August 27th. They
provide a very fun and informative examination of the film.
Conspiracy
Busting (High Definition). This is an
onscreen interview with Elliott Gould shot in 2024 and it runs 17:45 with him
discussing his history with the director beginning with their collaboration on Busting
in 1974. He is perched in front of his DVD collection, and he has a great
assortment of titles – some of which he starred in! Love him.
Confessions
of an Astronaut’s Wife (High
Definition). This is an onscreen interview from 2024 with Brenda Vacarro that
runs 13:18 and appears to have been conducted over either Zoom or Skype. She
speaks highly of her co-workers and her director and the luck she has had with
working with so many wonderful people over the years.
How
the Capricorn Was Won: Getting the Greenlight (High Definition). This is an interview with producer Paul Lazarus and
runs 26:49 and his experience working with and winning over Sir Lew Grade of
ITC Entertainment (remember their logo right before The Muppet Show?) to
get the funding for the film. Extremely interesting.
A
Lady of Wondrous Abandon: Remembering the Incomparable Karen Black (High Definition). This is a memorial piece for
the actress that runs 7:16. People weigh in on her impact on them and in film.
I first saw her in Dan Curtis’s 1976 thriller Burnt Offerings and later
his 1975 TV-movie Trilogy of Terror, and she was wonderful. Her poignant
work in Bob Rafelson’s Five Easy Pieces (1970) opposite Jack Nicholson
was heartbreaking.
Orchestrating
a Conspiracy (High Definition).
I love this piece that runs 18:00 because it discusses the wonderful music of
Jerry Goldsmith, whose work I first heard in August 1979 when Logan’s Run
(1976) premiered on NBC television. Even as a seven-year-old I could really
appreciate his contribution to the film, to say nothing of
twenty-three-year-old Jenny Agutter’s side-split “barely there” outfit – Holy Toledo,
Batman…I would later hear his work on Outland (1981) and then Poltergeist
(1982) which sealed the deal. I was a fan for life.
If
you’re any kind of a fan of this film, this is the edition to get.
Incomparable.
The region-free Blu-ray can be ordered by clicking here.
Note: Prices are in Australian dollars. Use currency converter for non-Australian orders
The Emotional Documentary Film on the Life of
Actor and Activist Christopher Reeve Arrives for Digital Ownership on November
5
Burbank, CA, November 4, 2024 – Super/Man:
The Christopher Reeve Story, the new documentary film featuring
never-before-seen home movies and personal archives that recounts the tragic
and redemptive story of actor and activist Christopher Reeve, best known for
playing Superman in the '70s and '80s films, arrives for purchase Digitally at
home on November 5.
Following a life-altering accident, Christopher Reeve
persevered, inspiring the world by using his fame to speak of hope and change
our perception of paralysis, all while remaining a dedicated activist, actor
and filmmaker, devoted dad, and loving husband to Dana, the beating heart of
the family.
From the directors of McQueen, Ian Bonhôte and Peter
Ettedgui, the film includes never-before-seen intimate home movies and an
extraordinary trove of personal archive material, as well as the first extended
interviews ever filmed with Reeve’s three children about their father, and interviews
with the A-list Hollywood actors who were Reeve’s colleagues and friends. The
film is a moving and vivid cinematic telling of Reeve’s remarkable story.
On November 5, Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve
Story will be available for Digital Ownership at home on
participating digital platforms where you purchase movies, including Amazon
Prime Video, AppleTV, Google Play, Fandango At Home, and more.
On November 19, Super/Man: The Christopher
Reeve Story will be available for Digital rental via VOD on
participating digital platforms where you rent movies.
Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story is
directed by Ian Bonhôte & Peter Ettedgui and features Alexandra Reeves
Givens, Matthew Reeve and Will Reeve. The film is written by Peter
Ettedgui and co-written by Ian Bonhôte & Otto Burnham and produced by
Lizzie Gillett, Robert Ford and Ian Bonhôte.
BASICS
Digital Ownership: November 5, 2024
Digital Rental: November 19, 2024
Running Time: 104 minutes
Rated: PG-13 for some strong language and thematic
elements
Cinema Retro Season 21 is almost here! We anticipate the first issue of the new season, #61, to ship to UK subscribers in December. Subscribers throughout the rest of the world will receive their issue in January.
Please subscribe or new today!
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Thanks to our loyal readers worldwide for their continued support!
From Bond to Benoit Blanc, few have embodied and
excavated a greater variety of masculinities on-screen than Daniel Craig.
Coinciding with the premiere of Luca Guadagnino's new film adaptation of
William Burroughs's novel, Queer, starring Craig as a sensitive wanderer in
mid-century Mexico City, writer Hilton Als sits down with the actor for an
enlightening evening of in-depth conversation.