CineSavant Column

Tuesday May 8, 2018


Hello!

It’s been found! Last weekend I mistakenly remembered the theme music for Los Angeles KHJ Television’s ’60s movie show Strange Tales of Science Fiction as being Henry Mancini’s ‘Experiment in Terror.’ But it wasn’t, it’s this unusual piece entitled Out of This World by the Creed Taylor Orchestra. I don’t even remember if Channel 11’s ‘Chiller Theater’ had a music theme, as the TV reception for that channel was so poor, I rarely got to see it. Happy listening.

And what’s coming up at CineSavant? Discs are in for Jacques Demy’s The Model Shop, the Vaughn Monroe western Singing Guns, the Cher movie Mermaids, the silent The Holy Mountain, Paul Schrader’s Mishima and Hepburn and O’Toole in The Lion in Winter. Just seen and awfully good is Jacques Rivette’s La Belle Noiseuse, four of the best hours I’ve spent lately.

For the balance of May we’re expecting new Blus of Leone’s A Fistful of Dollars, Brownlow’s restoration of Birth of a Nation, Mazursky’s Next Stop Greenwich Village and Schlesinger’s Midnight Cowboy. I’m also awaiting VCI’s improved encoding of City of the Dead.

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday May 5, 2018


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Happy Cinco de Mayo!  CineSavant’s new reviews today are:

Moonrise 05/05/18

The Criterion Collection
Blu-ray

Guilt, gloom, weird nightmares of death and persecution — and romance? The wondrous Gail Russell brings a spark of life into Frank Borzage’s weird expressionist masterpiece produced at the seldom-artistic Republic Studio. The bitter, despairing Dane Clark has just committed what a jury will likely call first degree murder, but the night can offer atonement and forgiveness, if he’ll just listen to Russell’s good advice. With Allyn Joslyn, Rex Ingram and Ethel Barrymore. On Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
5/05/18

Joe 05/05/18

Olive Films
Blu-ray

Reactionary deplorable hard hat hardcase Joe meets a complimentary maniac in a businessman-turned hippie killer, and the murders begin, all justified with tough talk over booze. Peter Boyle burst out of group comedy into the forefront with this surprise hit, which began a sub-genre of Nixonian retribution pictures. The show also introduced Susan Sarandon, who had to go back to TV soaps before stardom hit. Reviewed by Trailers from Hell’s Charlie Largent. On Blu-ray from Olive Films.
5/05/18

Blue Denim 05/05/18

Twilight Time
Blu-ray + DVD

Let’s go back to 1959, when just implying that two teenagers might have first-hand knowledge of sex is socially unacceptable dynamite. This adapted play about an unwanted teen pregnancy is actually quite good, thanks to fine performances by Carol Lynley and Brandon De Wilde, who convince as cherubic high schoolers ‘too young to know the score.’ And hey, the teen trauma is set to the intense music of composer Bernard Herrmann. With Macdonald Carey, Marsha Hunt and Warren Berlinger. On Blu-ray from Twilight Time.
5/05/18

Savant Column

Saturday May 5, 2018

Hello!

Olive Films has announced three Blu-ray releases for May 29 — Norman Lear’s Cold Turkey (which I’ve never seen but is recommended), Robert Wise’s Odds Against Tomorrow (which I’ve seen many times and has been needing a Blu-ray release forever) and a DVD of Roger Corman’s A Bucket of Blood (which is sublime but we wish it was a Blu, too).


I used up all my good disc news last time out, so it’s time for a CineSavant creepy culture break.

Signs in Cusco, Peru: These three street signs were within a block of our hotel in Cusco, just off the main square in the old part of town. The signs give the place a . . . contemplative feeling, especially when one is walking back down the cobbled streets at 1am.

Note that the little pedestrian streets (Via peatonal) have cars running through them, with maybe two feet of clearance on either side. They’re all within shouting distance of a cathedral, which makes the name of the first sound appropriate, if a little harsh.

The second is about two blocks away from the church, and ought to have a story associated with it. Anyway, it’s intriguing. ‘Siete culebras’ translates as ‘Seven snakes, or vipers.’ Would make a nice movie title.

I went up this street and didn’t find an undertaker’s shop. But the name felt like someplace where Eddie Poe or Vinny Price might hang out. There’s not going to be a children’s show called ‘Calle Ataud’ — ‘Ataúd’ means coffin, or crypt. An elaborate, decorative ironwork sign, I thought. When a place is 500 years old, you wonder what kind of secrets are in the basements.

That’s the culture corner offering for the day, completely esoteric . . . Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Thursday May 3, 2018


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CineSavant’s new reviews today (two days late!) are:

The Post 05/03/18

20th Fox Home Entertainment
Blu-ray + DVD

Steven Spielberg’s excellent Pentagon Papers exposé thriller comes straight from the facts. If the project wasn’t begun in 2014 we’d think it was a direct response to today’s attacks on the news media. We’ll take it as that anyway. It’s a fine performing showcase for Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks, and the direction creates exciting drama without a single car chase, assassination attempt or superhero. Co-starring Sarah Paulson, Bob Odenkirk, Tracy Letts, Matthew Rhys, Alison Brie, Jesse Plemons, Michael Stuhlbarg. On Blu-ray + DVD from 20th Fox.
5/02/18

Schlock 05/03/18

Turbine Media Group (Germany)
Blu-ray + DVD

John Landis made his first dent in Hollywood with this hilarious parody of Z-grade monster movies, and it was big enough to launch a film career. The kudos go to Landis’ comic monkey-man performance, wearing a Schockthropus ape suit by the 20 year-old self taught makeup whiz Rick Baker. Only monster movie fans will understand, but they’ll be charmed. This foreign edition is stacked with schlock-thropic extras. With Saul Kahan, Eliza Garrett, Joseph Piantadosi and Harriet White Medin. On All Region Blu-ray and DVD from Turbine Media Group.
5/02/18

Ruby Gentry 05/03/18

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

Prepare to let your jaw drop: Jennifer Jones and Charlton Heston’s sleazy bucolic ‘romance’ comes off as two-way sex harassment, with suggestive one-liners that make us cringe. Are there other pictures like this? Is this where dolts came to believe that women wanted to be treated like stupid squeeze toys? The great King Vidor directed, with no sign of intentional satire — the bizarre, eventually violent Southern-set melodrama is a one-of-a-kind grotesque spectacle. Co-starring Karl Malden, Tom Tully, James Anderson, Josephine Hutchinson, Phyllis Avery and Barney Phillips. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
5/02/18

Savant Column

Thursday May 3, 2018

Hello!

Quite a while ago Gary Teetzel forwarded a good link to clips from the film library of the late special effects artist Wah Chang. A new clip has shown up, of Chang and Gene Warren photographing effects shots of the submarine the Hydronaut cruising and diving for the Ivan Tors movie Around the World Under the Sea. I guess the blue background must not be a blue screen for matting purposes, because the submarine itself is partly painted blue — it’s just a dry-for-wet underwater sub shot. Other views of the Project Unlimited effects shop reveal the Albatross from Master of the World sitting abandoned on a shelf. As one might suspect, the miniature is not very big, at least not this particular model.


Joe Dante circulated a nice link to Ron Hutchinson’s Vitaphone article about Warners’ notorious ‘lost’ 1933 pre-Code comedy Convention City, Where is Convention City Hiding?  The article has some nice photos, and comes to the conclusion that a print of one kind or another is likely out there somewhere, ready to be discovered. Hutchinson also reminds us that, despite its reputation as an un-see-able item, the movie is almost certainly no more racy than other WB pre-Codes of the day. But with that look in Joan Blondell’s eye, we can dream, can’t we?


 Gary again scores with more research from trade magazines. Here he uncovers a vintage Spanish language ad for Warners’ Boris Karloff thriller The Walking Dead (1936). Gary’s not sure the picture was ever released with this title ‘De mis verdugos me vengue’, because ad art does exist for the Spanish title Los Muertos Andan (‘The Dead Walk’). But sometimes the foreign titles differed between markets in Mexico, Spain and South America. To me ‘De mis verdugos me vengue’ (‘I took vengeance on my executioners’) sounds like a classy sell for Buenos Aires or Madrid.


Just in from the web: Indicator has announced for July 23 their boxed set Hammer Volume 3 Blood and Terror: The Camp On Blood Island, Yesterday’s Enemy, The Stranglers of Bombay, and The Terror of the Tongs. It looks like they’ve put all their potentially PC offensive and racially insensitive titles in one basket. Stranglers is a definite favorite, and the rarely-seen Yesterday’s Enemy is one of the most honest pictures about real warfare that I’ve seen.


 Here’s something my broker and I found during the long attic search for vintage movie poster paper — a four-sheet for one of my favorites, the 1952 Sci-fi propaganda head-scratcher Red Planet Mars. I think it’s a four-sheet, because it’s in four pieces, meant to be pasted on a wall by a professional paperhanger. If there is another like this in existence, I’d be surprised, as it’s a rare item indeed. Now to find a wall big enough to hold it a buyer more nuts about the movie than I am.

Also rejected by my broker is the bottom half of an original Woodstock two-sheet. The missing top two thirds was just a big blurry image of a crowd, and this bottom half has plenty of the same graphic, plus a big representation of the credit block and famous logo. Anyone interested?

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday May 1, 2018


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CineSavant Column

Tuesday May 1, 2018

I wasn’t kidding about being late last Saturday: CineSavant has no new reviews today. We’ve been doing a mass inventory of the old movie posters from up in my attic. Many have been there for forty years. I’ve compiled a list with the aim of selling a bunch of them a little later on. I’ll report on them here, if that comes to pass. Part of starting up CineSavant as my own page was to make evil mercenary profitable ideas like this possible — I might be able to sell them directly through the page. My unwritten contract with disc providers is that I don’t re-sell review discs, but I’ve been collecting other stuff since the 1970s.

I do have a couple of reviews done but I think I’ll delay them at least another day. Hence this collector’s photo of the chaos, inventory-wise, at CineSavant Central.

Thanks for reading! Glenn

Saturday April 28, 2018


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CineSavant’s new reviews today are:

No Down Payment 04/28/18

Twilight Time
Blu-ray

The blacklist strikes back as both writer Ben Maddow and director Martin Ritt examine the booming ’50s phenomenon of The Suburbs. No money up front will get you into an ‘estate’ of your dreams, provided you’re white. Possibly a little too direct in its messaging of sickness in the American dream, much of what we see in the ticky-tacky subdivision of Sunrise Hills will ring true to those of us who lived it. And the cast can’t be beat: Joanne Woodward, Sheree North, Tony Randall, Jeffrey Hunter, Cameron Mitchell, Patricia Owens, Barbara Rush and Pat Hingle. On Blu-ray from Twilight Time.
4/28/18

Down 3 Dark Streets 04/28/18

ClassicFlix
Blu-ray

“It’s under the Big ‘W’!”  A smart cop show goes all ‘Dragnet’ on a trio of criminal cases in the good old City of the Angels. To figure out who gunned down a top detective, rough tough FBI agent Broderick Crawford must get to the bottom of three separate dramas, each involving a beautiful woman: Ruth Roman, Martha Hyer, Marisa Pavan. The producers know how to get attention for their show — the climactic shootout takes place under the Hollywood Sign. With Kenneth Tobey. On Blu-ray from ClassicFlix.
4/28/18

And God Said to Cain & Twice a Judas 04/28/18

Wild East
Spaghetti Western Collection Volume 45 Double Bill DVD

Guest reviewer Lee Broughton returns to shine a critical light on a double bill Spaghetti Western disc, two features starring the world’s favorite acting fiend, Klaus Kinski. The prolific German actor racked up credits in more than twenty Euro-Westerns, some of which amounted to brief-if-worthy guest spots. These two Italian productions feature the German actor up front in starring position, and both are pretty good genre entries to boot. Also starring Antonio Sabato and Peter Carsten. A double bill DVD disc from Wild East.
4/28/18

CineSavant Column

Saturday April 28, 2018

Hello!

The news this week is that Janus films, The Academy Film Archive and the Film Foundation have restored Edgar G. Ulmer’s Detour, the most celebrated ‘B’ noir on the books. The Criterion website describes the restoration process thusly:

“The restoration team began by examining potential sources, including: a 35mm dupe negative from The Museum of Modern Art, which was incomplete and riddled with jump cuts; a 35mm safety composite print from the Cinematheque Française; and a 35mm nitrate print from the Cinematheque Royale de Belgique. That print, thought to have been made from the original camera negative, was clearly the best element in terms of image clarity, contrast, and density, but had never been considered as a source for preservation because it contained burned-in French and Flemish subtitles.”

“This obstacle was overcome by scanning all of the print elements to 4K, then compositing frames from the MoMA print over the matching subtitled frames from the Belgian print. Where frames from the MoMA print were missing, and in shots that contained significant movement within the frame, the subtitles were removed by dedicated and talented digital artists using digital painting techniques.”

I’ll be very interested in seeing how that process works — we need to see that enormous grimy coffee cup in the Reno diner looking perfect, jump cuts and all. The Academy’s Michael Pogorzelski says he’s been keen to restore Detour for quite awhile. Official rights for the old PRC feature may have been established by now. Previously it was my understanding that it is a Public Domain title, and that the big problem with earlier restoration efforts has been that some of the better film elements have been tied up with private collectors.

The full story can be read at Ryan Gallagher’s Criterion article, Janus Films to Tour New 4K Restoration of Edgar G. Ulmer’s DETOUR.


Dick Dinman has another timely DVD Classics Corner On the Air show online, this time about two new Warner Archive Collection releases: Dick Dinman & Eddie Muller dispense a double dose of Dana. In other words, Dinman and Muller talk about Dana Andrews’ career with special emphasis on the new WAC Blu-rays of Fritz Lang’s While the City Sleeps and Beyond a Reasonable Doubt.

A set of links to other Dinman DVD Classics Corner On the Air shows is at this address.


I’ll be Out of Action this weekend, doing an inventory in the depths of the CineSavant vaults, with a friend driving in from out of state to help make it happen. So expect new reviews from myself, and I think Charlie Largent, perhaps next Wednesday.

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday April 24, 2018


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CineSavant’s new reviews today are:

Little Murders 04/24/18

Powerhouse Indicator
Region B Blu-ray

The blackest of black comedies confronts us with an urban worst case scenario — Jules Feiffer’s ‘social horror’ movie is like a sitcom in Hell, with citizens numbed and trembling over the unending meaningless violence. What was nasty satire in 1971 now plays like the 6 o’clock news. Too radical for its time, Feiffer and director Alan Arkin’s picture is more painfully funny, and frightening, than ever. A sensational cast: Elliott Gould, Marcia Rodd, Vincent Gardenia, Elizabeth Wilson, Jon Korkes, John Randolph, Doris Roberts, Lou Jacobi, Donald Sutherland, Alan Arkin. On Region B Blu-ray from Powerhouse Indicator.
4/24/18