Superman: The Movie – 2-FIlm Collection 10/10/17

Warner Home Video
Blu-ray

I guess there are plenty of adults now too young to remember when Christopher Reeve made his debut as The Man of Steel. It was a massive hit across the full spectrum of moviegoers. Warners is taking good care of everyone’s favorite undocumented visitor from Planet Krypton, and has assembled two separate cuts of his big-screen premiere. On Blu-ray from Warner Home Video.
10/10/17

The Hidden 10/10/17

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

Reviewer Charlie Largent takes on Jack Sholder’s freewheeling alien police pursuit, in which a creature from another world possesses a fast string of hosts to help him make a getaway on terra firma. Starring Kyle MacLachlan and Michael Nouri. Why does this movie seem like a dream that Agent Dale Cooper would be having in Twin Peaks? On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
10/07/17

Portrait of Jennie 10/10/17

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

David O. Selznick’s marvelous romantic fantasy ode to Jennifer Jones was almost wholly unappreciated back in 1948. It’s one of those peculiar pictures that either melts one’s heart or doesn’t. Backed by a music score adapted from Debussy, just one breathy “Oh Eben . . . “ will turn average romantics into mush. With Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotten, Ethel Barrymore and Cecil Kellaway. On Blu-rayfrom KL Studio Classics.
10/10/17

Savant Column

Tuesday October 10, 2017

Hello!

Reviews were rough this time — a lot to think about and get right. I’m up against the deadline (other work, actually), and thanks to Charlie Largent have an extra title to tout today.

So I’m cheating on the links today … let me just add this nice Youtube video link sent in by Edward Sullivan, of a late- 1950s performance by a Savant favorite, who is quite a dancer: Miss Debra Paget: Live in Las Vegas! I’ve been advised that this particular video has been pulled before, so I hope it will be around more than a day.

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday October 7, 2017

Why is this picture here? CLICK on it.

Savant’s new reviews today are:

Personal Shopper 10/07/17

The Criterion Collection
Blu-ray

Reviewer Charlie Largent takes on Olivier Assayas’s metaphysical thriller from 2016, a haunting mix of existential mind games and Hitchcockian horror with a riveting performance from Kristen Stewart. Can a pact to communicate after death be kept through text messages? Is this high-fashion slice of melancholia a ghost story, or a study in delusion? It certainly divided critical opinions. On Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
10/07/17

Avanti! 10/07/17

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

Need a break from violence, misery, and injustice? Or maybe just the network TV news? Billy Wilder’s last great comic romance is an Italian vacation soaked in music, food, scenery and sunshine. It’s the best movie ever about Love and Funerals. Jack Lemmon is the ugly American who learns to mellow out; Juliet Mills the London manicurist that shows him how, and Clive Revill as the best comedy support since Edward Everett Horton went on to his heavenly reward. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
10/07/17

Big Business Girl 10/07/17

The Warner Archive Collection
DVD

What does a working girl have to do to get ahead, when all she has is an incredible face, a lavish wardrobe, and a pair of legs to make any executive wolf howl? Loretta Young juggles two egotistical swains, while Joan Blondell shines as an enticing all-pro home wrecker. Pre-Code pictures just seem to be more exciting these days . . . you know, when sex really meant something. On DVD from The Warner Archive Collection.
10/07/17

The Lure 10/07/17

The Criterion Collection
Blu-ray

No jokes about fish and visitors please — Agnieszka Smoczyńska’s horror fantasy musical is indeed about delectable creatures from the deep, but these particular mythical misses have their own agenda, and woe to the man who trifles with their affections. What’s today’s catch? A Polish phantasmagoria seemingly teleported from the glitzy 1980s. On Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
10/07/17

Savant Column

Saturday October 7, 2017

Hello!
More 3-D news and rumors: Bob Furmanek has announced that Paramount’s 3-D Sangaree will definitely be coming in 2018, and a poster at the HTF has dropped hints that future 3-D Film Archive restorations will include the first Mike Hammer thriller I, The Jury, and a double feature of The Bellboy and the Playgirls and Adam and Six Eves.

It’ll be a solid weekend of writing — just in to the CineSavant review bin is a bounty of delights: a restored Superman: The Movie (two versions), Kinji Fukasaku’s The Green Slime, the miracle-restoration of the classic The Sea Wolf (all Warner), a new restoration of Frank Capra’s Lost Horizon (Sony-Columbia), City of Industry and Sam Peckinpah’s Junior Bonner (Kino), Cary Grant in Topper (VCI) and a much touted new encoding of Anthony Mann’s T-Men (ClassicFlix). Plus I won’t let Othello or Porky Pig 101 slip by. And I’ve just gotten a UK Region B of Colossus, The Forbin Project that I have a desire to write up.

About ten years back I could often be caught loitering on a web page called The Friends of Marty Melville, a film-friendly blog that, instead of the usual movie ephemera, obsessed over the film advertising found in the movie section of the daily newspaper. When I got desperate for interesting graphics, I’d thoughtlessly steal usually find something appropriate on the page — many of the ad mats chosen for the page are miniature works of art. Melville left the premises for a while but now he’s back, pulled into the growing stack of attractive features at Trailers From Hell, still in search of the perfect double feature. You get extra points if you know who Marty Melville is, without conducting a web search.

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday October 3, 2017

This photo is here because Tim Lucas said he liked it! Bob Gutowski called it ‘adorable’
and Bob Graham dubbed it “Pit and the Pendulum: The Musical.” Now we just need lyrics.


Savant’s new reviews today are:

Barry Lyndon 10/03/17

The Criterion Collection
Blu-ray

Stanley Kubrick’s contribution to great cinema of the 1970s offers his vision of what an epic should be. Transported by images that recall great paintings of the period, and Kubrick’s new approaches to low-light cinematography, we witness a rogue’s progress through troubled times. And even Ryan O’Neal is good! With Marisa Berenson, Patrick Magee, Hardy Krüger, André Morell, Gay Hamilton & Marie Kean. On Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
10/03/17

Titanic (1943) 10/03/17

Kino Classics
Blu-ray

In 1942, with the war going fairly well for Germany, Joseph Goebbels green-lit a lavish, technically complex account of the sinking of the Titanic, one with a decidedly different viewpoint. All blame falls on Evil British plutocrats, and a decent, ethical German officer is the only competent man on the bridge. Kino’s features a game- changing extra — a superb commentary that explains everything about this crazy picture. On Blu-ray from Kino Classics.
10/03/17

Don’t Torture a Duckling 10/03/17

Arrow Academy
Blu-ray

Charlie Largent takes a look at gore-meister Lucio Fulci’s surprisingly sanguine giallo from 1972, starring two mesmerizing but polar opposite actresses, Barbara Bouchet and Florinda Bolkan. No zombies this time, and no gates to Hell. . . just grisly murders in rural Italy. On Blu-ray from Arrow Academy.
10/03/17

Beneath the 12-Mile Reef 10/03/17

Twilight Time
Blu-ray

Pity the poor exhibitors in 1953 that splurged on 3-D equipment, only to see the payroll soar and the profits fall. Nope, Anamorphic Widescreen was the innovation that swept the world. It proved perfect for stories with scenic grandeur, such as Fox’s very early mini-epic shot on Florida locations. Thanks to Bernard Herrmann’s impressive music score, this one’s not going away. With Robert Wagner, Terry Moore, Gilbert Roland, J. Carrol Naish & Richard Boone. On Blu-ray from Twilight Time.
10/03/17

Savant Column

Tuesday October 3, 2017

Hello!

First up —
Dick Dinman has a new webcast up, an interview with William Wellman, Jr. about Kino Lorber’s Blu-ray release of William Wellman’s favorite of his silent films Beggars of Life, with Louise Brooks as a train-hopping hobo who dresses like a boy to escape the law and the lecherous Wallace Beery and his ‘rambunctious band of hobos.’

The CineSavant review of Beggars is here. On his ‘Dick’s Picks’ feature, Dinman takes on Flicker Alley’s still-hot Blu-ray restoration of The Lost World which also stars Wallace Beery, as the prehistoric monster-hunter Professor Challenger.


About a week ago (September 27) correspondent Gary Teetzel attended a ballet. . . which has relevance here because the ballet was an adaptation by Matthew Bourne of The Red Shoes, with music by Bernard Herrmann. The Center Theater Group publicity states that this ” American premiere is set to a new score arranged by Terry Davies using the mesmerizing music of golden-age Hollywood composer, Bernard Herrmann (most famous for his collaborations with Alfred Hitchcock, Orson Welles, and Martin Scorsese), whose work ranges from the witty and playfully robust to the achingly romantic and bittersweet.” Knowing how many Herrmann fans read Savant, I asked Gary for a report, which I belatedly print now:

“Last night I saw a performance of The Red Shoes ballet–based upon the movie — at the Ahmanson. I am unqualified to comment on it as a ballet but I can say that I was able to follow the story well enough. It did have have some very creative visual design with the sets, costumes and lighting. (Although I will say that The Devil in the ballet-within-the-ballet of The Red Shoes, with his slick hair, mustache and striped suit, tended to remind of Gomez Addams!)

My main interest was the use of the music of Bernard Herrmann. The music was derived chiefly from The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, Fahrenheit 451, Citizen Kane and Hangover Square. There were a couple pieces I did not recognize that did not sound Herrmannesque; I suspect they came from the classical repertoire. The music was pre-recorded for playback, not live. The orchestrations were sometimes altered slightly to make them easier to perform for a small orchestra, and also to make some of the pieces more ‘dance friendly,’ one might say.

One can imagine Herrmann fuming over this, but something else would have made him positively apoplectic: among the Citizen Kane pieces used was the End Title music, based around the “Oh Mr. Kane!” song — which Herrmann did not write. It was adapted from a Mexican pop song called “A Poco No” by Pepe Guizar, who also composed the standard “Guadalajara”. Conrad Salinger arranged the song, without credit, for the Kane end titles. One can picture the ghost of Herrmann flying into a rage and demanding his name be removed from the credits.

I took note of the way Herrmann’s music was used: Fahrenheit 451 became the Red Shoes ballet-within-the ballet. The Ghost and Mrs. Muir was used for the love story. The Citizen Kane music was used primarily for scenes of the entire ballet company busily preparing, celebrating, etc. (Herrmann’s arrangements for the “Welles Raises Kane” suite were purposed for most of these selections); Hangover Square was associated with the fiery passions of the composer.

How did the music work? Surprisingly well — or perhaps it would be more fair to say far better than I had anticipated. Herrmann, after all, is not a composer one typically associates with dance music. Choreographer Michael Bourne makes it work, although devoted Herrmannphiles won’t be able to entirely separate the music from its prior associations. (“Oh, look, people are dancing to the Fahrenheit Fire Truck music to suggest a bustling city street.”) Still, worth seeing for fans of Herrmann’s music and/or the Powell/Pressburger film. — Gary”

Unfamiliar with the catchy song “A Poco No”? Gary forwarded YouTube links to a Spanish-language version by Aída Cuevas (1990), and a low-res clip from the 1938 Mexican film Noches de gloria with a version of the same song by Esperanza Iris that sounds even more like what’s heard in Citizen Kane. You know what they say — The things that you learn, if you live long enough.


And because I haven’t linked to the wonderful Greenbriar Picture Shows page as often as I should, here’s a link to a terrific John McElwee article from October 2, with more facts about the upcoming (October 10) Warner Archive Collection Blu-ray of a reconstituted full-length The Sea Wolf. Enjoy!

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday September 30, 2017

Why is this picture here? CLICK on it.

Savant’s new reviews today are:

All the Sins of Sodom / Vibrations 09/30/17

Film Movement
Blu-ray

What’s this? Sex-oriented movies with believable psychodramatics, made by a committed artist of taste and talent? Joe Sarno’s pictures still aren’t suitable for grandma, but he’s far, far above the exploitation grind-house competition of his day. These 1968 B&W pictures are not only watchable, they’re emotionally involving. Restored to pre-print condition, they’re — how can I best put this? —  artistic and respectable. On Blu-ray from Film Movement.
9/30/17

The Wonderful Worlds of Ray Harryhausen Volume One: 1955-1960 09/30/17

Indicator UK
Blu-ray

Reviewer Charlie Largent examines the second volume of this Brit packaging of a trio of Ray Harryhausen Columbia greats — his first Schneer collaboration It Came from Beneath the Sea, the impressive 20 Million Miles to Earth and his ‘SuperDynamation’ Jonathan Swift fantasy The Three Worlds of Gulliver. With impressive extras and detailed essays. On Blu-ray from Interceptor (UK).
9/30/17

They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? 09/30/17

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

One of the best pictures to come out of Hollywood in the late 1960s, Sydney Pollack’s screen version of Horace McCoy’s hardboiled novel is a harrowing experience guaranteed to elicit extreme responses. Jane Fonda performs (!) at the top of an ensemble of stars suffering in a Depression-era circle of Hell — it’s an Annihilating Drama with a high polish. With Michael Sarrazin, Susannah York, Gig Young, Red Buttons, Bonnie Bedelia, Bruce Dern, Allyn Ann McLerie. . . and my review ends with an interesting bit of info about Barbara Steele. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
9/30/17