Brazil — 4K 06/28/25

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

It was amusingly dystopian in 1985, but it’s terrifyingly normal now: Terry Gilliam’s elegant gloss on ‘1984’ opens with armed, masked government agents whisking away a citizen ‘invited’ to help the government with an ‘inquiry.’ It’s an epic of creativity and imagination, and now much more profoundly disturbing. Jonathan Pryce, Robert De Niro, Katherine Helmond, Ian Holm, Bob Hoskins, Pam Greist & Michael Palin star; this one should have taken all the awards for design and art direction. Now in 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
06/28/25

Some Like It Hot — 4K 06/28/25

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

A second 4K release of the Billy Wilder-I.A.L. Diamond classic?  Yes, but the advantage goes to the extras, which include unique input from the stars and especially the director. It’s a career best show for Marilyn Monroe, and Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis give everything they’ve got to a pair of cross-dressing musicians, roles that could easily have been a career disaster under anyone else by Billy Wilder in his prime. One of the extras is an expert analysis of the film’s costumes, about which we naturally think, ‘how did Monroe’s sheer gowns ever get past the censors?’ On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
06/28/25

CineSavant Column

Saturday June 28, 2025

 

Hello!

Deep in the lists of ‘Movies That Never Were’ rests the odd tale of the second sequel to Spielberg’s  Jaws. It ended up being a cookie-cutter franchise place-holder, but decked out in fancy 3-D … but only after another idea spent some time in pre-production. For a while the 2nd sequel was envisioned as a hot comedy take on the huge summer hit, a collaboration between Zanuck/Brown and National Lampoon.

Joey Paur’s website ‘geek tyrant’ gives us a rundown of the story, evidently lifted from a 2023 documentary called Sharksploitation. The nutty comedy project picked up some momentum before it was suddenly cancelled, a common fate for movies in development. Besides producers Richard Zanuck and David Brown, the lineup of conspirators left on the beach included the Lampoon’s Matty Simmons, writers Tod Carroll & John Hughes, plus director Joe Dante.

I’d say more info is needed … was there ever a script?  Joe Dante could have made the show into a Mad Mad World of crazy comedy … but might he have become typed as an ‘auteur director of fish?’  Paur ends by saying Universal should dust off Matty Simmons’ gory R-rated version and produce it now … except they’d probably have to rough it up just to get a PG.

 

The ‘Jaws’ sequel that almost became a ridiculous comedy called
JAWS 3, PEOPLE 0
 

 


 

We love Betty Boop … we loved her even when she had ears like a Basset Hound. Joe Dante forwarded this half-hour attempt to revive the famous character, in the form of an animated TV special.

Other Dave Fleischer characters are involved too, including Bosko and Koko the Clown. Experts would probably have more to say about shortcuts in the show’s animation, but all we saw was some hula dancing that looked to be rotoscoped from an original cartoon.

The show is a curiosity that apparently didn’t develop any further … it’s busy and noisy but the attempt to replicate the original style feels crude, and the laughs aren’t there, either. It reminds us that the original cartoons were made for adult audiences, not children. Randall Cyrenne at Animated Views had a little more information on the show, from 2003.


Betty Boop’s Hollywood Mystery Movie
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday June 24, 2025

Far Out, Mademoiselle Bulle … it’s Barbet Schroeder’s trippy safari to a Lost World.

The Gentle Gunman 06/24/25

Powerhouse Indicator
Region A locked Blu-ray

What a terrible title … but it does describe a playwright’s effort to solve the ‘Ireland problem’ with a single cheerful thriller about anti-English terrorism during World War 2. Basil Dearden’s direction is mostly good, and we love the cast: John Mills, Dirk Bogarde, Elizabeth Sellars, Robert Beatty, Barbara Mullen, Eddie Byrne, Joseph Tomelty, Liam Redmond, James Kenney and Jack MacGowran. But expect a lot of speechifyin’ and earnest position speeches. Can’t we all just get along?  We can all agree that the transfer of this B&W Ealing production is dazzling. On Region A locked Blu-ray from Powerhouse Indicator.
06/24/25

Sabrina — 4K 06/24/25

KL Studio Classics
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

This gem is too charming to ever become old or creaky; a new viewing confirms it as a pleasing confection for Audrey Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart, a fairy tale with a slightly caustic edge. Filmmaker Billy Wilder caught a lot of flak for ‘brutalizing’ his actresses, when he’s really a romantic softie … with a telling sour note here and there. Along with the music, the storytelling hails from 1930, with Hepburn’s elegant French fashions bringing us back to 1954. Big star William Holden plays comic support in gratitude for director Wilder’s career support earlier on. The 4K remaster brings out the elegance in this May-December romance … or is it more of a May-October fling?  On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
06/24/25

CineSavant Column

Tuesday June 24, 2025

 

Hello!

I think we’re all looking for some sane distractions. Joe Dante circulated this page with some interesting, well-chosen quotes by a short list of stars, accompanied by good images.

The page is by Dean Brierly, the editor of Black & White magazine. The newest entry seems to be from 2015, and shows us some interesting things Robert Ryan had to say. Other names listed include Jan Sterling, William Holden, Lee Van Cleef and Ernest Borgnine, just to name four. Light reading, maybe, but relaxing in these days of high blood pressure.

 

Classic Hollywood Quotes
 


 

And Wayne Schmidt forwards this BfI featurette about the revival of an original 1977 35mm Technicolor print of Star Wars, the original version that wasn’t yet part of a longer series. You know, this is the real, suppressed picture where Han Solo shoots first.

It’s amusing that the English restoration people make so much of the ability to see an original print from 1977, in perfect condition … it doesn’t matter that it’s not in 70mm and may not even have a stereophonic soundtrack. An older generation of film fans that haunted repertory theaters, the Director’s Guild, museum screenings, etc., were routinely exposed to vintage studio prints, sometimes in nitrate, that blew away what we could see on TV. It was an addiction.

The featurette is a good little primer on archive activities … and it proves that the Star Wars that conquered the world and won the Oscars is technically a ‘lost’ movie, buried by its maker. The BfI was able to access a preserved opening title crawl for their screening, with the original not-episode-IV text.

 

Inside the Archive: Star Wars in Technicolor
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday June 21, 2025

Treachery ! Scandal ! And a perfectly-sculpted film career.

Black Bag — 4K 06/21/25

Universal Home Entertainment
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital

Steven Soderbergh and writer David Koepp fashion a thinking-fan’s spy picture about a hunt for traitors among a group of agents that socialize together… Cate Blanchett and Michael Fassbender are a warm couple in a ‘cool’ business, with a marital arrangement that makes room for ‘professional mistrust’ … no agent should be expected to trust anyone on faith alone. It’s packed with interesting detail and smart dialogue; the suspense is all ‘who knows what,’ not gimmicks or action gadgets. Don’t expect anything warm & fuzzy — the show has a ‘cool’ surface, and the leading players don’t try to be lovable. On 4K Ultra-HD + Blu-ray + Digital from Universal Home Entertainment.
06/21/25

Midnight — (1939) 06/21/25

The Criterion Collection
Blu-ray

This gem of a romantic comedy is as fresh now as it was 86 years ago. Mitchell Leisen’s lightest farce is also a comic triumph for the writing team of Charles Brackett and Billy Wilder. Claudette Colbert, Don Ameche, John Barrymore and Mary Astor make the most of delightful characters and a glowing Paris created on the Paramount back lot. Criterion’s extras include input from Michael Koresky, David Cairns, plus a vintage audio interview with director Leisen. On Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
06/21/25

CineSavant Column

Saturday June 21, 2025

 

Hello!

Once again Michael McQuarrie comes up with a winner …the very first issue, fully readable, of Eric Losfeld’s Parisian publication Midi-Minuit Fantastique, from May-June of 1962.

Fully-readable comes with the caveat to brush up on one’s French. I remember when James Ursini loaned me a stack of these many a year ago, which saw me asking for quick translations from the missus. After a while you discover that film writing about horror films tends to reuse the same 300 words. Once you have a few of those down in a foreign language, you can at least get an idea what the writers are talking about.

It’s 1962 and the French critics are nuts about Hammer Films and Terence Fisher. The only Mario Bava being discussed is  Hercules in the Haunted World and they love him, too. The pages are packed with big B&W photos, plus credits and synopses. Modern readers no longer need those, as the web has full credits, and often encodings of the films themselves. Back in the day, specialty film magazines like this could be a valued resource. A plus, we learn when the titles played in Paris. I can’t imagine what attending “Le cauchemar de Dracula” would be like, in a Paris theater decked out like the one above.

 

Midi-Minuit Fantastique
 

 


 

Meanwhile, correspondent “E.” sends along a link that some readers might enjoy.

It’s to a web page dedicated to the artist Tom Chantrell, who is responsible for many classic movie poster artworks from 1938 forward.

The website is Hammer Horror Posters; follow the link and you’ll see a home page and a blog page by the site’s author ‘Dave.’ The blog is insubstantial and hasn’t been updated in years, but it has an eye-catching photo of Mr. Dave posing with 8 of Hammer’s brightest actresses, a pretty glorious portrait.

The Tom Chantrell Poster Artist page has a good interview with the artist and some more photos of Chantrell posing with his work, by Simon Greetham. The artist passed away in 2001, which makes us think that the website was originally put together in the 1990s. His  Wiki page names many of his poster commissions. This must be Old News to many, as Chantrell designed posters for the first Star Wars movie.

Other galleries give us big selections of Amicus posters, and two other categories. The Hammer posters link didn’t work for me. Don’t get your hopes up, as some of the posters are watermarked.

 

Tom Chantrell Poster Artist
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

CineSavant Column

Tuesday June 17, 2025

Wish I were there.
Hello!

The Nerve of Some People.

CineSavant is out of town for the second time in a week. That plus Jury duty drained away the time available for reviewing … but we’ll be back on Saturday with two new posts.

If you’ve never done it, check out the Review Index on the right …. which goes back 26 years and about 7200 reviews.

Thanks to the readers that drop by twice a week to see what’s new on the page. And thanks to the correspondents that offer encouragement and needed corrections. If I’m back and have my act together fast enough, the next review update may be Friday. Don’t worry about us, we’re getting a much-appreciated break.

¡Hasta el sábado!

See you then — Glenn Erickson

 

Saturday June 14, 2025

Clara Bow pushes the limits for pre-Code.

Law and Order — (1932) 06/14/25

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

What a surprise … an early sound western that’s solid gold genre entertainment. John Huston adapted W.R. Burnett’s violent retelling of the Wyatt Earp story without an ounce of moralizing. Walter Huston is magnificent as the lawman ‘Saint Johnson,’ a town-taming killer who can’t abide thugs and despots. The show is serious, and so is the body count. Terrific input from Harry Carey, Andy Devine and in a bit part, Walter Brennan. It’s a flawless 4K restoration with perfect audio. The director is none other than Edward L. Cahn, of ’50s exploitation fame. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
06/14/25

Three Comrades 06/14/25

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

Filmed in the high MGM style, this polished tragic romance stars Robert Taylor, Franchot Tone and Robert Young as Germans having a rough time in the 1920s Weimar Republic, while Margaret Sullavan’s disillusioned beauty succumbs to a dreaded Movie Disease. It is also a prime example of the negative effect of Hollywood’s Production Code. MGM wanted the name value of Erich Maria Remarque’s best seller, but not his message: conservative politics forbade any mention of (shhh!)   Nazis.   It’s still a very good movie, but it needs to be known that its content was changed to please a Nazi influencer. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
06/14/25

CineSavant Column — No Kings Day

Saturday June 14, 2025

Hello!

To show you how normal things are in Los Angeles, I reported to Jury Duty downtown on Thursday, and the only sign of unrest was a line of police cars that drove down Grand Avenue. The photo above (lifted from the web) is where I was, but taken three days before — a big but peaceful daytime demonstration.

The normalization of chaos real and unreal, here and internationally, has gone beyond strange …. Let’s hope things stay reasonably sane today.

 


 

We take our vintage space travel movies where we can find them. This one isn’t the most accomplished Sci-fi thriller ever made, but thanks to a link steer from Michael McQuarrie we are finally able to see it …

It’s Hugo Grimaldi’s Mutiny in Outer Space from 1965, an opus we never caught on 2am TV screenings back in the day. Both it and its companion feature The Human Duplicators have been scarce items ever since. A look at Duplicators’ credits reveals a more interesting cast… this one has galloping fungus clogging up an orbiting space station.

We’re not expecting much but it looks competently filmed. I wish the image were larger.

 

Mutiny in Outer Space
 


 

And I couldn’t let this fat pack of fancy Vinegar Syndrome releases slip by. Business for Blu-ray boutique labels must be good, judging by the constant flow of very high-quality editions with curated extras of the kind once found only on Criterion discs. This group contains five 4K Ultra-HD releases in elaborate packaging — stout boxes with booklets and keep cases in card sleeves. Are due July 29.

Let’s Scare Jessica to Death (1971) with Zohra Lampert
Dirty Work (1998) with Norm Macdonald
The Golden Child (1986) with Eddie Murphy, directed by Michael Ritchie
The Dark Half (1993) with Timothy Hutton, directed by George Romero from the book by Stephen King
Jade (1995) with Linda Fiorentino, David Caruso, directed by William Friedkin

Also, in Blu-ray special editions

Iron Angels I-III (1987-1989) directed by Teresa Woo
and
Charley One-Eye (1973) with Richard Roundtree, directed by Don Chaffey

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday June 10, 2025

It’s Hollywood Law: any Gloria Grahame picture that represses her hotness has serious functional issues.

Oliver! — 4K 06/10/25

Sony / Columbia Pictures
4K Ultra-HD + Digital

One of the more prestigious ’60s movie musicals was extremely popular roadshow item, but late-career director Carol Reed wasn’t treated kindly by the critics. It certainly looks attractive on Sony’s new 4K remaster… the stylized art direction comes across well. Ron Moody, Shani Wallis and Oliver Reed star, with Mark Lester and Jack Wild leading the pack of orphinks as the heroic Oliver and The Artful Dodger. The disc comes with a Digital Code, but not a 2nd Blu-ray encoding. On 4 K Ultra-HD + Digital from Sony / Columbia Pictures.
06/10/25

CineSavant Column

Tuesday June 10, 2025

 

Hello!

Just one review today — last Friday we ran East ‘to the river’ on family business, and my one peek at the Colorado lasted just long enough to take this snapshot.   (Hey, it’s not even level.)   Then we returned just in time for a rough night in L.A.. I don’t know how it was reported elsewhere, but most of our local coverage was pretty sensible.

Thanks for the concerned notes. The city was not in danger of ‘being obliterated.’  We are not ‘a city of criminals.’  We’re fine, and thinking about everybody caught up in this. I felt proud of our L.A.P.D. for doing the best they could to keep a lid on this no-win situation. Talk about being caught in the middle.

 

— A Book Review —

First up today is a look at a new film-related book described by its publisher Summit Books as Historical Fiction.  The Director  illuminates the life and unique career predicament of the famed European film director G. W. Pabst. His name is now remembered to film aficionados as the genius director of the classic  Pandora’s Box,  The Threepenny Opera and  Kameradschaft. Instead of an academic study, this fictionalization describes Pabst’s strange fortunes … that found him becoming a film director under the Third Reich.

Daniel Kehlmann’s has been translated from German by Ross Benjamin. The novel is formatted not as a straight narrative with one viewpoint, but as several dozen ‘scenes’ from shifting perspectives. More than half are from the viewpoint of Georg Wilhelm Pabst himself, but they range across several associates and family members. Thus we skip the full filmography, the star name-dropping and the dry talk about being hired for this film and not for that one, etc.. For instance, the first chapter is with a former Pabst assistant, now approaching senility. Thrown onto a TV talk show, he is ignored when he tries to clear up some misinformation about the great director. Pabst’s reputation was sustained in postwar Germany for his discovery of Greta Garbo. His greatest films are from the silent and early sound era. His name is sometimes associated with controversy — he spent the war years in Germany, and worked on films for the Nazi establishment.

Kehlmann’s narrative tells a different tale. An Austrian national, Pabst is one of Germany’s biggest director-celebrities. His wife Trude, a former aspiring actress and writer, has sublimated her career to that of her husband. When the Nazis come Pabst decides that the new political climate is not for him, and quietly leaves for Hollywood. But his time at Warner Bros. yields only one film over which he has no control; unlike Fritz Lang or Ernst Lubitsch, he hasn’t the aggressive personality for the struggle of studio politics. He takes his wife and young son to France for several films, before making the defining mistake of his life. Visiting Austria to find a nursing home for his aged mother, the Pabst family is trapped when war is declared. It’s an acute case of bad timing. The borders are closed to everyone, and his papers and visas are meaningless.

The real subject of The Director goes beyond ‘The Movies,’ to the psychology of political oppression. Author Kehlmann has a lot to say about the consequences of ‘going along to get along.’ Depending on what one reads, Pabst was either a voluntary convert to the Nazi system, or he was forced to make movies for the Reich. It didn’t matter that his reputation was that of a ‘Red’ director, having filmed Kurt Weil’s musical play, as well as the sharply pacifist (and Reich-banned) Kameradschaft. Josef Goebbels very much wanted Pabst as a PR boost for his Nazi film industry.

At his home in Austria Pabst is intimidated by a peasant caretaker, a Nazi zealot who forces the Pabsts to live in their own servants’ quarters. A Nazi representative soon arrives to courts and cozen Pabst into taking a meeting with Goebbels, whose manner is terrifyingly faux-hospitable. Pabst doesn’t have to make political entertainment, but the subjects are bland. He’s asked to co-direct a ‘mountain’ film with Arnold Fanck, which gives us several episodes with actress / director Leni Riefenstahl. She is characterized as a manipulating egotist. These encounters are almost like play-scripts, with rich dialogues. G.W. and Trude cannot speak their mind in public for fear of being denounced and imprisoned; although Pabst is in his ‘fifties he could be also be conscripted and sent to the Russian front. In Berlin, poor Trude must attend tea parties with Nazi wives intent on enforcing the Party Line. Her fear and isolation worsens. We also are present for Pabst’s son’s experience in school, learning how to be a cruel Hitler youth, so as not to be victimized by other aggressive boys.

What we get is a convincing transformation of G.W. Pabst into a shell of his artistic self. He is still the smartest person in the room. He retains some authority yet knows he must bend to the will of his masters. At times the text expresses Pabst experiencing waking hallucinations, with action repeating itself, as if he is attempting to ‘direct’ a reality he cannot control. Kehlmann’s imaginings of Pabst’s encounters with a dozen vivid personalities. Back in his Hollywood exile, he visits with his former muses Louise Brooks and Greta Garbo. One is the secret love of his life, now unable to get work and practically a nobody. The other is such a big star that he is no longer qualified to direct her. The final debacle in wartime Czechoslovakia is Pabst’s fixation on a single film project. He obsesses over it as a way of blotting out the chaos and madness around him. Thus when Czech partisans break through, Pabst is caught with other fleeing Germans, trying to escape with his precious film cans in tow.

Kehlmann reserves several ironies for later chapters. He doesn’t touch on what most of us know as Pabst’s ‘twilight’ film Der lezte Akt, about Hitler in his bunker. We instead get a sad episode with G.W. producing and directing a film written by his wife Trude. Ironic postscripts show the lack of closure  for Pabst, as his lost and uncompleted film haunts his later years. In her subsidized apartment in Rochester, Louise Brooks’ recounting of G.W. Pabst’s glories can only go so far — she appreciates art too, but what does it all really matter?

We found The Director to be an excellent read. Kehlmann’s publisher accurately defines the subject at hand as ‘art, morality and the human condition.’ Author Daniel Kehlmann plays his game honestly, reminding us in a postscript that The Director is indeed fiction — many story specifics and characters are invented, including one of the major players. But the story of an artistic life under a crushing political regime feels real. In a format of extended sketches, we’re given a fully rounded experience — an insightful one for troubling times.

The Director is published by Summit Books. We found it on Amazon here:

 

The Director
 


 

More Book Business.

This second column item is for a book I wanted to order for my daughter … but it’s not going to be available until next January. The University of Minnesota Press has an announcement up for  The Luminous Fairies and Mothra.  It’s actually a publisher’s announcement, apparently for academic appraisal. The book’s cover graphic is quite appealing.

The movie  Mosura, it seems, is not a screen original, but taken from a story by Takehiko Fukunaga, Yoshie Hotta and Shin’ichiro Nakamura. It’s fairly well-known in Japan, and has been described somewhat on audio commentaries for the movie. But this is the first time it will be available in an English-language translation, by Jeffrey Angles.

The basic story is similar, with fairy tale qualities imposed on a giant monster tale with political implications. The film’s storyline has a political message on its surface: a predatory capitalist-gangster from the powerful and exploitative country ‘Rolisica’ exploits a magic island, kidnapping a pair of tiny princesses to perform in a stage show in Tokyo. When the island’s gargantuan insect God Mosura swims to Japan to rescue them, Japan is the first nation to suffer. Without too much effort in decoding, ‘Rolisica’ would seem to be a conflation of Russia and America. Japan is an honest and innocent world citizen, caught in the crossfire.

For some tots it’s Winnie The Pooh, but there are other classics …

Years ago I wanted to take my then very young daughter to a revival screening of Mothra at the Alex Theater in Pasadena. To help her get the basic story down, I drew a little comic book she could read. Afterwards, I made a video of her narrating the story. It was a big hit. The video survived, and then we even located the original comic a few years back …

Coming in January — ? —

 

The Luminous Fairies and Mothra
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Friday June 6, 2025

Beware La Strega in Amore. That goes double for one that’s not in love.