Glenn Erickson's
Review Page and Column

Sunday March 29, 2026

It’s a brave movie … but we understand why why audiences would reject its acid, hyper-cynical worldview.

Viridiana   — 4K 03/29/26

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Luis Buñuel’s top roost as a world-class filmmaker remains undisturbed: as an exile in Mexico, his commercial work continued at a high creative pitch, staying true to his surrealist principles. Invited back to fascist Spain to make a movie, he generated a masterpiece guaranteed to become an international scandal. The cinematic slap to Generalissimo Franco won top honors at Cannes, and had to be smuggled to Mexico after  la dictadura  ordered it destroyed. Silvia Pinal, Fernando Rey and Francisco Rabal star; what may be Spain’s greatest film is now remastered in 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
03/29/26

The Big Broadcast of 1938 03/29/26

Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
Blu-ray

Gee, now what year was this film released?  Paramount’s comic radio variety extravaganza is enlivened by big-scale W.C. Fields comedy scenes, crazy antics from Martha Raye and the film debut of Bob Hope. Not to mention the science fiction premise that holds it all together: a trans-Atlantic race between giant high-speed ocean liners. Mitchell Leisen gives the show a glossy art-deco look, while Hope and Shirley Ross make movie history with the song Thanks for the Memory. We’ve always loved it, even with some klunky musical interludes. On Blu-ray from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.
03/29/26

CineSavant Column

Sunday March 29, 2026

 

Hello!

We’re a day late due to some website issues — but Charlie Largent says it’s safe to publish … reviews, anyway

Mark Throop of the indispensable Movies ala Mark found this site, which has been around long enough to be familiar to lots of film fans (except uninformed me). It’s called Reel History and is run by Dr. Jared Frederick. He does a good job of analyzing movies about ‘true’ historical events, and comparing them to known historical reality.

It looks like most of the films discussed are about war or battles, at least the ones at the top of Reel History’s menu. We watched part of an illustrated video on John Wayne’s 1960  The Alamo and were impressed … the good doctor managed to relate the discrepancy between Wayne’s film and the historical record, without calling the picture an outright fraud.

I’m interested in a second video article because it’s about the Spielberg / Milius / Gale & Zemeckis  “1941”. Dr. Frederick rightly calls the epic comedy a mess, yet he has many interesting observations regarding its re-creation of / exaggeration of the real event of 1941, in which some Angelenos seem even more stupid than the characters in the movie.

Actually, it’s hard to find an article with four consecutive words that discuss “1941” in any context other that its box office success or lack thereof. I liked it. Maybe I should write an unexpurgated ‘Making of 1941’ sometime. Maybe not. From witnessing much of the filming, I have a wonderful recall of second-hand gossip, and scores of skewed subjective personal observations.

 

Dr. Jared Frederick’s  Reel History
 


 

Being reported from all sides is TCM’s schedule for April, which will set aside its Friday nights for a month-long tribute to producer-director  Roger Corman. They’ll be showing numerous Corman films, the films of some of the famed directors he helped get started, and a biographical documentary or two.

The news can be glommed at leisure, at the pages for  Warner Bros. Discovery,  All Hallows Geek and  Conskipper,

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Sunday post for CineSavant

Sunday March 29, 2026

We didn’t post reviews yesterday because Trailers from Hell has  a formatting glitch that needs to be fixed up … we assume it will be straightened out shortly.  So … nothing is wrong with CineSavant or the rest of us here in Los Angeles!

We’ll hopefully be posting again shortly.

Tuesday March 24, 2026

I wish the government had properly preserved these. They’re egregiously non-PC … in a good way!

Dead Mountaineer’s Hotel   — 4K 03/24/26

Deaf Crocodile Films
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Yet again, Deaf Crocodile opens doors to cinematic fantasy once blocked by politics and the vagaries of international film markets. This Estonian film is all but unknown here, despite coming from the reknowned authors Arkady and Boris Strugatsky. Detective Glebsky is trapped in a snowbound ski resort with a group of eccentrics that might have a good reason for being so weird — they may be aliens in disguise, stranded and having difficulty passing for human. Director Grigori Kromanov’s audio-visual treat features a remote mountaintop location and an impressive electronica / prog music score; the Sci-fi element remains 99% cerebral. Who knows who is human, alien, a robot, or a zombie?  Somebody give that Saint Bernard dog a lie detector test! On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from Deaf Crocodile Films.
03/24/26

A Man and a Woman 03/24/26

The Criterion Collection
Blu-ray

Director Claude Lelouch used the French Art Film format to shape a story of an intimate romantic encounter, and captured a world-wide audience. Star Anouk Aimée is a radiant presence, and Jean-Louis Trintignant found his footing here as a top-rank leading man. The film’s loose photogenic look caught on, and not just for shampoo commercials. The film’s auto racing background didn’t hurt either — did Lelouch produce much of his show on the Ford Motor Company’s dime?  The Francis Lai music holds everything together … and it still plays well. Criterion’s special disc extra is Lelouch’s legendary illicit car race movie … through downtown Paris at 120 mph. On Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
03/24/26

CineSavant Column

Tuesday March 24, 2026

 

Hello!

This is a fun thing to see. I met the great Nathaniel Thompson almost 25 years ago, when I think he was wrangling publicity for Image Entertainment DVDs. His  Mondo Digital page is a solid source for the wide range of fantasy and horror; Nathaniel has a knack for covering extreme horror cinema with an intelligence not seen too many other places. I worked with him off and on at TCM with people like Richard Harland Smith. It was also fun to follow his adventures working for the Academy.

This is a ‘Shelf Space’ web interview produced by Kino Lorber and starring Kino’s Frank Tarzi and Alicia Lu. The talk covers Nathaniel’s career but mostly about his audio commentary work. This is very interesting for someone who has tried a few commentaries — Nathaniel has an enviable ability to let his knowledge and ideas flow, creating coherent, entertaining tracks even on the fly.

Part of the fun is hearing the three discuss audio commentators we all know by name. Nathaniel also explains how he keeps track of his personal archive of over 30,000 discs. I was just happy to enjoy spending some more time with Mr. Thompson.

 

Nathaniel Thompson  interviewed on  Shelf Space!
 


 

CineSavant is an independent review site but the discs have to come from somewhere. One distributor has been ‘berry berry good to me,’ so I have no compunction about helping them promote a sale. It’s for The Warner Archive Collection discs at the MovieZyng page. It reads like a good deal to me — the basic come-on is 4 titles for $54 dollars.

I hope I’m communicating the details correctly. One browses eligible Warner Archive titles at the MovieZyng page, and when your cart has 4 titles, you enter code ARCHIVE17 at the checkout.

MovieZyng has an inducement program for its reviewers, but CineSavant isn’t participating. I just don’t want to be an influencer, I guess. But we’re big fans of the WAC and want it to do well. The  Warner Archive 17th Anniversary Sale  is right up top at the

 

MovieZyng Main Page
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

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