Glenn Erickson's
Review Page and Column

Saturday March 21, 2026

Melville is a good actor. The issue in this all-night ordeal is French national honor, neatly addressed.

The Verdict   (1946) 03/21/26

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

Two of Warners favorite thriller actors worked together nine times in just a few years. This mystery tale is their last pairing, and also the first feature film directed by Don Siegel. Victorian sleuth Sydney Greenstreet gets an assist from his artist friend Peter Lorre when a murder victim is found in a room locked from the inside. How did the killer get away?  Don Siegel’s work is sharp, making the most of the studio’s high production values. The tightly directed suspense tale also stars Joan Lorring, whose saucy nightclub entertainer teases Lorre’s character by calling him ‘Vicky.’ On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
03/21/26

Salem’s Lot  — 4K 03/21/26

Arrow Video
4K Ultra HD

Prime-era Stephen King never loses its appeal! Director Tobe Hooper delivers some strong visuals in this TV movie version of King’s All-American vampire tale. Reggie Nalder channels his inner Max Schreck, and James Mason provides a top class-act horror performance. Of the supporting cast we favor Bonnie Bedelia, Elisha Cook Jr. and Marie Windsor over the blond male leads. The best news is that the deluxe edition also contains the tightly-edited Theatrical Version that was screened overseas, also in full 4K. Come to the town where bloodsuckers are Blue, and where No One Rests In Peace! On 4K Ultra HD from Arrow Video.
03/17/26

CineSavant Column

Saturday March 21, 2026

 

Hello!

Good friend Malcolm Alcala sends along a nifty little link to nine minutes of fine B&W cinematography.

12 years ago the Los Angeles County Museum of Art put on an exhibition called Under the Mexican Sky: Gabriel Figueroa — Art and Film. The most celebrated Mexican cinematographer shot scores of top Mexican classics and some of the best films by Luis Buñuel, not to mention a number of classy Hollywood pictures.

This is the exhibition’s video sampler of fine Figueroa movie images. Several appear to be from John Ford’s  The Fugitive. We’re big fans, so it certainly works for us. And nobody photographed classic ‘Spanish Eyes’ with quite the same finesse.

 

Image montage:  Under the Mexican Sky: Gabriel Figueroa
 


 

Noir City 2026 is coming back to Hollywood’s Egyptian Theater for two weekends in April. The exhibition has become practically a vacation destination over the years, what with the fine show put on by The American Cinematheque and the Film Noir Foundation, and hosted in-person by Eddie Muller and Alan K. Rode.

The lineup this time guarantees extra entertainment — the theme is Face the Music!,  in twenty films that carry musical performances. Ida Lupino and Ann Sheridan sing in  The Man I Love  and  Nora Prentiss, while Jazz performers and compositions feature big in  Anatomy of a Murder  (Duke Ellington),  All Night Long  (Dave Brubeck, Johnny Dankworth, Tubby Hayes & Charlie Mingus),  The Sweet Smell of Success  (The Chico Hamilton Quartet),  Odds Against Tomorrow  (John Lewis), and  Pete Kelly’s Blues  (Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee).

Some of these pictures really take off on the big screen — the talent roster has some of the best directing work of Otto Preminger, Raoul Walsh and even Jack Webb.

Noir City screenings are always ideal, like an old-time communal theater experience. They will be having live music at every show, often with vocal accompaniment — 20 movies in two weekends!  I might try to attend this year!  Full information is through the American Cinematheque link:

 

Noir City Hollywood  April 3-5  and  April 10-12
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday March 17, 2026

My vote for the best actress of 1950.

Killers of the Flower Moon   — 4K 03/17/26

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Martin Scorsese’s epic (and epic length!) adaptation of David Grann’s eye-opening novel is great filmmaking with impressive performances from Robert De Niro and a marvelous showcase for Lily Gladstone, who provides the heart within a heartless tangle of utterly loathsome villains. It’s a true story, unsensationalized yet carrying an unspoken message — moral degeneracy would seem a founding principle of the human species. Come learn the awful truth about ‘Indian politics’ — such as a law that classified Native tribespeople as ‘incompetents’ in need of white guardians. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
03/17/26

Cutter’s Way   — 4K 03/17/26

Radiance Films
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

A fresh 4K encoding reveals a finer visual texture on Ivan Passer’s highly-respected film, which features career-best performances by its stars. Disaffected 20-somethings in Santa Barbara investigate a murder and then try to blackmail a corporate CEO; it’s a superb coda to the ’60s counterculture generation. John Heard is the maimed, one-eyed veteran already judged unstable, Jeff Bridges the yacht bum who gets by on his good looks, and Lisa Eichhorn the most forlorn woman of the early ’80s, in need of a reason to give a damn about something. Jordan Cronenweth’s cinematography and Jack Nitzsche’s music track couldn’t be bettered; the movie is a lonely wail against a moral undertow that is distinctly American. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from Radiance Films.
03/17/26

CineSavant Column

Tuesday March 17, 2026

 

Hello!

This first link is fun … Gary Teetzel sends along a little bit of music heaven, credted to Stereozentrum. It’s the main title cue from Alfred Hitchcock’s  Psycho, arranged for solo piano.

Since the YouTube video is a live performance, we get to see the pianist’s skill uninterrupted. The post has a couple of paragraphs of learned music talk, that happens to discuss something called the ‘Hitchcock Chord’ … if it’s a joke, I wouldn’t be able to tell. But I was certainly entertained.

‘Stereozentrum’ doesn’t identify himself directly, so forgive the omission of the name of the talented pianist.

 

Prelude from Psycho for Piano Solo!
 

As long as we’re in the neighborhood, here’s some extra Psycho links — for  Petra Hayden’s Psycho Acapella;   Bernard Herrmann’s Psycho score explored for A-level music students;  and score explored for A-level music students; and of course the immortal  Psycho Sleigh Ride medley.

 


 

Producer-director and restorationist Arnold Leibovit has another Puppetoon release coming on Blu-ray. It’s a 4K remaster of a restored Director’s Cut of the original 1987  The Puppetoon Movie.

It sounds like a digital overhaul of the entertaining feature, which includes classic by producer George Pal, and creative contributions by Ray Harryhausen, Willis O’Brien, Gene Warren, Sr., Wah Chang, Fred Moore, Buddy Baker, Louis Armstrong, and Peggy Lee. A look at the sales page gives a full description of the restoration, and the improvements made to the Puppetoons included.

The disc is due in late April, the link is to a preorder page — it’s loaded with bright Technicolor images.

 

The Puppetoon Movie Director’s Cut  Blu-ray
 

Other Puppetoon compilations are at Arnold Leibovit’s  Puppetoons Productions Home Page.

 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday March 14, 2026

The empty bluescreen was for a newspaper montage; when they saw Ann-Margret they knew it would just be a distraction.

Classe tous risques   — 4K 03/14/26

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray
In what some consider the best classic crime film to come from France, writer-director Claude Sautet and writer José Giovanni give star Lino Ventura the role of Abel Davos, a convicted crook in a squeeze play. When he tries to return to Paris he’s forced to abandon his wife and boys as both the law and his faithless cronies close in for the kill; he gets help from gunman Jean-Paul Belmondo and a girl they meet on the road, Sandra Milo. It’s a tense situation at all times — Davos’s consistently outwits his foes, but his good luck can’t last forever. Remastered in 4K Ultra HD, it looks like a new picture. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.

03/14/26

The Man Inside 03/14/26

Powerhouse Indicator
Region B Blu-ray

Powerhouse Indicator dips into the Columbia library for a Warwick Films production from Albert R. Broccoli and Irving Allen. It’s an international genre blend that would seem a stab at the perfect mainstream box office formula — crime violence, a tough American star, a sexy European star, upbeat music and comic relief around the fringes. Bruiser Jack Palance plays it non-brutal, Anita Ekberg is a cool femme fatale and Nigel Patrick is an eccentric jewel thief. It’s a definite pecursor to Broccoli’s future James Bond franchise. On Region B Blu-ray from Powerhouse Indicator.
03/14/26

CineSavant Column

Saturday March 14, 2026

 

Hello!

It’s a Book Review Day.

A fistful of years ago, we first encountered Chris D.’s movie writing in his encyclopedic look at Japanese crime and Yakuza films,  Gun and Sword  (scroll down to May 25).  Those 900+ pages are still a key item on my reference shelf. It is one of those books that makes one realize that the worldwide volume of film and film art is much bigger than we thought.

At first glance, the title of Chris D.’s new book makes us think he’s taken a dive into film noir commentary. The launch point is a section on the great femme stars of film noir, a series of essays on ‘The Humanity of Femmes Fatales’ through a group of individual noir actresses. That core theme is just the springboard for an expanded body of writing that ranges far and wide. The list of chapter headings promises interesting reading on a wide range of film trends, with a focus on genre studies, taking on directors and individual films from around the world. It’s the kind of book in which one scans the 5-page index and finds a half-dozen items one wants to read.

There is an overarching organization, but our first attention went to individual films Chris chooses to closely profile. Just a quick sampling:  Johnny Guitar,  Baby Face,  End of the Affair,  The Camp Followers,  The Night Porter,  Machine Gun McCain,  Adua and her Friends,  A History of Violence,  The Devils,  Deep End,  Bi Gan’s 2018  Long Day’s Journey into Night. It’s a fairly eclectic selection,

Chris served for years as a programmer at The American Cinematheque on Hollywood Blvd.. One might think that all that time organizing screenings would have turned him into a movie house zombie. No, he apparently continued to engage with the films themselves, compiling a mental diary of his reactions.

Chris D.’s writing style pulls one in — his concentrated thought process expresses aspects of the film experience not covered by an academic approach. We like scholarly essays, and the book does carry a sub-title worthy of a thesis paper: International Noir/Neo-Noir: Signifiers, Gender & Beyond Genre. But we found it easy to get into Chris’s flow of words and ideas. It’s a very personal account. Chris’s occasional asides are a reminder that our personal histories with films includes the particulars of how we saw them. I identify with that approach. Specific movie experiences are etched in my memory timeline, too … remembering the where, the when and the with whom.

Chris has interesting opinions to impart, and he communicates them well, in short bursts of honesty. A random example is his assessment of John Sturges’  Bad Day at Black Rock. We had internalized the critical praise given the film’s use of CinemaScope. Chris instead sees Sturges’ blocking of a large cast on the wide ‘scope screen as stilted, and relates it to his view of the characterizations as also schematic, superficial. There’s no snark factor to Chris’s observations, none of the attitude of a reviewer trying to be clever. We instead think, ‘oh, maybe Black Rock could use some reassessment.’

 

The book is not just for readers already familiar with the films he covers. It has potential appeal for film school / film culture newbies searching for new corners of cinematic interest. Some of his categorized overviews are accompanied by lists of films, some annotated and some not. These also carry his personal ratings, that are not a generalized good/bad barometer. He often makes use of detailed movie synopses, which I find helpful in that they emphasize the elements he feels are relevant.

The film writing from across the years includes Chris’s unfiltered interviews with Samuel Fuller and Mary Woronov published long ago when Chris was connected with the L.A. punk scene tabloid Slash. The tome is 826 pages long, and mostly dense text. There is a large section that’s again devoted to Japanese crime pictures, that for a few pages made me think I was back in Gun and Sword again.

That first set of Noir essays collects a group of core noir masterpieces, but the focus is on the femme fatales — each features a key actress illuminating, in Chris’s view, another aspect of gender dynamics. Not political gender dynamics, but perhaps the pondering of ‘how do the sexes get along, in the first place.’ Chris’s occasional asides tend to be choice — we wonder how someone’s love life would fare, if they tried to organize their personal relationships through what most films noir teach us about women.

Again the scope of interest is broad for this compendium of film writing from a special point of view. Chris D. devotes entire sections to non-pantheon Italian and Japanese masters. The choice of screen artists grabbed us right away: Florinda Bolkan, Francesco Rossi, Hideo Gosha, David Cronenberg, Leonard Schrader, Claude Chabrol, Robert Hossein. He looks into the Alain Delon & Romy Schneider affair, the evolution of Twin Peaks and the films of Nicolas Winding Refn.

The book has plenty of B&W photos and other illustrations. The table of contents is inviting but no index is in the back.  My copy already has several post-its to mark things to re-read, that I didn’t want to lose track of. (My bookshelves aren’t pretty, but they are practical…) I have not yet read the essays on Alfred Hitchcock, John Cassavetes and Yasuzo Masumura, knowing they’ll be there when I’m ready.

Chris doesn’t hold back — he’s there with an opinion for everything and more than a few value judgments. Reactions to The World According to Chris will of course vary, but I found him level-headed and open minded. I was attracted to his choice of topics, and never disappointed by what he had to say.

We frequently come across $60 film books that can be read in an afternoon, yet still feel insubstantial, padded. Chris D.’s killer softcover is just the opposite. It’s a recommended deep-dive read.

 

The Humanity of Femmes Fatales and Heartless Villains
International Noir and Beyond Genre
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday March 10, 2026

It’s romance in pastel heaven. Can’t she appreciate a beau with brains and tenacity?

Mogambo 03/10/26

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

John Ford went to Africa and brought home a fine remake of a 1930s pre-Code hit, with its original star Clark Gable. Clark has his hands full juggling leading ladies of the next generation, Ava Gardner and Grace Kelly. Gable is still the he-man center of attention; his advancing age is not a restrictive factor, not quite yet. The adaptation takes advantage of the African locale with the added oomph of Technicolor. It was box office gold for MGM, even with a much more chaste ‘bath in the tropics’ scene. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
03/10/26

The Day and the Hour 03/10/26

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

René Clément all but invented the resistance movie in France and returned to the topic several times. This story of an American flier and a Frenchwoman avoids political sentiment and escapist excesses, concentrating on Simone Signoret’s luminous performance as a woman facing the worst that Occupied France could dish out. It’s a multi-language production, filmed from Paris to the Pyrenees. Stuart Whitman is the American pilot, and the French cast is choice: Geneviève Page, Michel Piccoli, and Reggie Nalder. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
03/10/26

CineSavant Column

Tuesday March 10, 2026

 

Hello!

Advisor Gary Teetzel reminded me of this attractive disc, said to be coming down the pike from the company ClassicFlix. I remember Olive Films releasing several volumes of Betty Boop cartoons on Blu about a decade ago. This compendium of Max Fleischer hits throws a wider net — looking at the titles, even I recognize some great, one-of-a-kind animation masterpieces.

It all depends on the quality, but ClassicFlix is promising that the disc will measure up.

One of the better experiences in Film School was Bob Epstein’s animation class, which showed original prints of everything from Lotte Reiniger to Ladislas Starevich to Tex Avery to Ray Harryhausen. Bob demonstrated that the art was a lot more than Cartoonarooney Fun. He had a particular yen for early Max Fleischer, especially some of the silent Koko the Clown classics. They showed us 1970s faux-hipster know-it-alls that our generation invented very little — everything surreal, subversive or sexually provocative had arrived way before. Before a big screen presentation of some classics in Royce Hall, he screened Koko’s Earth Control, an apocalyptic preview of Crack in the World, only completely insane.

The link below takes one to ClassicFlix’s sales page, for the curious — this first Greatest Hits volume combines remastered Fleischer marvels of  Koko the Clown,  Bimbo,  Popeye the Sailor Man,  Superman,  and of course,  Miss Betty Boop. The expected arrival date is May 26.

 

Fleischer Cartoons Greatest Hits Volume 1
 

 


 

And correspondent Scott Stirneman surprised me today, with something I’d forgotten about entirely.

Back in the days of DVD Talk I spent a lot of time organizing and trying to keep current a ‘DVD Savant Wish List’, to which readers could contribute desired titles. It was plenty popular, as it reflected the frustration in the first years of DVD that ALL of our FAVORITE discs weren’t coming out fast enough. I knew the pain of various disc boutiques. After making an all-out effort to release some highly-desired feature, when it arrived the fan base only demanded more discs, the ones that those stingy studios and disc companies were hoarding.  That of course wasn’t the case (most of the time), but I remember the attitude very clearly.

What I forgot was where these Wish Lists were — they weren’t linked like the thousands of other DVD Talk / DVD Savant reviews. It’s rather nice that that old content hasn’t been taken down from the web, 25 years later. Someday it will surely disappear, which is why we’ve retained backups here. When that happens, Assuming I’m not six feet under (I’m not holding my breath) I should be able to recover any review, complete with misspellings, mixed metaphors, head-scratchingly odd syntax and pathetic attempts to be clever. It’s what the world needed in the Clinton and Bush years, that’s fer shure.

I think this Wish List is the last one from 2012, after which I begged off — it required an extra hour a week in text management. Long-time Savant readers may find their own names listed. It starts off with that of Brad Arrington, a steady correspondent who suggested many titles, who is now gone. I told the kindly Mr. Stirneman that I was grateful for his help locating the lists. My plan is to print this last one out — the ‘collectors’ game’ could be to cross off all the AWOL titles that have since appeared — and in Blu-ray or 4K, to boot.

And hey, it’s good nostalgia for my websites, reminding me how well I’ve succeeded in keeping them stupendously unprofitable!

 

The 2012 DVD Savant Wish List
 

For fun, this extra link may be my first stab at a wish list … from (cough) 2002. The text will show me where my greedy disc-collecting brain was at back then, you know, when we were so, so, young.

Practically everything on this 2002 list is now on the shelf here at CineSavant Central, in one format or another:

2002 Waits and Wants List
Thanks again, Scott.

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday March 7, 2026

Davis and Blondell at the beach in 1931 …. how clean that water must have been.

Playtime   — 4K 03/07/26

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Reviewer Charlie Largent plumbs the comedic mystery of Jacques Tati’s eccentric conceptual masterpiece, originally filmed in 65mm. Tati’s iconic character is adrift in a modern Paris of glass buildings and confusing habits, observing ‘civilization in action’ in one fascinating set-piece after another: an Airport passenger space, a cubicle-forested office, a trade show, the debut of a chi-chi nitery. It’s like a giant game of Where’s Waldo Tati … and mysteriously, charmingly positive-minded. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
03/07/26

The Second Woman 03/07/26

Film Masters
Blu-ray

Upscale country-club noir: James V. Kern’s well-directed psychological drama has become semi-obscure for a number of reasons but has been resurrected in decent shape, yielding a handsome show with some unusual casting. Trying once again to play against type, Robert Young is a troubled architect who may have a murderous skeleton in his closet; cheerful light comedienne Betsy Drake is terrific as an assertive woman who won’t let go of his problem. Independent producer Harry Popkin gives the show an air of glamour — the setting is the beautiful shoreline between Carmel-by-the-Sea and Monterey. On Blu-ray from Film Masters.
03/07/26

CineSavant Column

Saturday March 7, 2026

 

Hello!

Lets proceed with optimism, even if the global forecast is — well, it changes every 45 minutes.

We found some cute stuff for this weekend’s Column. Michael McQuarrie directed me to the Film Board of Canada’s latest website, to see a movie about Buster Keaton. Unfortunately, the Canadians were blocking it, along with other content, with placards reading ‘Not available to view in your current location.’

In truth, I am grateful that Canadians are still having anything to do with us. That goes for pretty much the world right now.

But there are so many super, hilarious Canadian animated films. I looked up an old favorite short animated film, which thankfully was viewable. We caught up with this particular mini-masterpiece on early DVDs, 25 years ago. It is To Be by John Weldon, and features the great voices of Kim Handysides and Howard Ryshpan. It’s a science fiction fable, and as such was written up with great enthusiasm for my old  DVD Savant Sci Fi Reader (gee, anybody interested in a follow-up book?).

It’s hilarious, insightful and genuinely profound … and has a cute song, too. If you haven’t seen it, do — it’s not long and the online copy is flawless.

 

John Weldon’s animated masterpiece
To Be
 


 

 

And once again we’ve been graced with a fave disc list from Kyu Hyun Kim, whose opinions have always impressed me, along with his knack for communicating the special appeal of a picture in fewer words than I thought was possible.

We reviewed several of these titles —  Unknown World,  Winchester ’73,  Yojimbo / Sanjuro,  World Noir No. 3 — and note that Kyu draws from a couple of UK & European companies that stay mostly inaccessible to CineSavant.

He once again he comes up with releases that never crossed my radar and as such now draw my interest. Interesting that his ‘top fave’ is a Kino Lorber Jean Belmondo costume picture!

Kyu’s comments go the extra step — he names the companies that he think are overtaking Criterion in the effort to bring forth more treasures from the hidden corners of cinematic history.

 

Kyu Hyun Kim’s  Favorite Hard Media Videodiscs of 2025  at ‘Q Branch Mirror Site’
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson