CineSavant Column

Tuesday August 27, 2024

 

Hello!

Wartime motivational inspiration is the subject of a link sent by advisor Gary Teetzel. World War II saw lots of morale-building entertainment; this short subject reminds the hundreds of thousands of defense plant workers that they’re soldiers too, with a duty is to stay fit to keep those assembly lines moving. The 8-minute film is called Keeping Fit. It’s in the form of a lecture to 4,000 aircraft workers … gee, the company president is talking about workers wasting time, but his tirade has shut down the entire plant.

The Universal picture has an all-name cast: Robert Stack, Broderick Crawford, Lon Chaney Jr., Andy Devine, Anne Gwynne, Dick Foran, Louise Albritton, Don Porter, Ralph Morgan, Mary Wickes. Handsome Stack is the star of the day, and shirtless for part of his 90-second appearance. Universal’s stock company Adonis faints on the assembly line, and is scolded by the factory doctor to get in shape. Nobody’s about to suggest that the men at the plant might be being overworked. As Gary noted, the movie blames wives for not serving nutritious meals. That can’t have been easy when everything desirable is rationed.

Gary sent the link because it’s yet another rare and unusual appearance by a horror star. ‘Fat ‘n’ Lazy’ Andy Devine licks a giant lollypop at work; neighbor Lon Chaney Jr. talks him into taking up bowling or playing horseshoes. Chaney appeared to age 15 years between 1945 and 1950, so maybe Andy should have been coaching Lon … in real life, Devine outlived Chaney by a few years.

Too bad Broderick Crawford and Lon Chaney Jr. had no scenes together — they could have kicked each other in the shins!

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday August 24, 2024

The most excellent Baron Munchausen acquitted himself very well in this Sci-fi oddity.

The Shape of Night 08/24/24

Radiance Films
Region A + B Blu-ray

Yet another eye-opener from 1960s Japan — the story of a young woman’s downfall is told with truth and conviction, with an especially powerful performance from star Miyuki Kuwano. Director Noboru Nakamura’s intimate account is bathed in the neon of the vice district; the fine script makes us realize how easily girls are ensnared in sexual exploitation. Not really seen here until a restoration ten years ago, the show just dazzles — it makes no compromise with sensationalism. On Region A + B Blu-ray from Radiance.
08/24/24

High Noon — 4K 08/24/24

KL Studio Classics
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

It’s the most over-analyzed and over-interpreted western ever. Postwar politics may be quicksand, but it’s still about Gary Cooper’s Marshall Kane getting caught in a three-way taffy pull: how does The Code Of The West prioritize his conflicting pledges to his community, to law and order, to plain survival, and to his Quaker bride Grace Kelly? Fred Zinnemann got his second of 7 Best Director noms with this grandly OPO (Over-Performing Oater). It’s still a winner. Coop took home a Best Actor prize. The 4K remaster glows; two new commentaries dish the controversy. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
08/24/24

CineSavant Column

Saturday August 24, 2024

 

Hello!

You didn’t derive enough nightmares from  August 10th’s  CineSavant Column dose of AI horror?  Never despair:

The Vape is back with more dreadful visions, this time leaning toward enormous, Kaiju-like rude beasts slouching toward Bethlehem. Giant ill-defined silverfish-things floating in the sky, anybody?  It’s as if the hinges busted on Julian Karswell’s portal to Hell, setting free Satan’s entire demonic menagerie.

Quick, gather up little children that you want to see scarred forever — why should the illusion of a benign universe be quashed only for adults?

‘Village Live’ epizode 99530 zoology special.
 


 

And we confess to having purloined a link circulated by Joe Dante, a quite satisfying video lecture by matttt about a legend of comic books.

The Hunt for the Anonymous Cartoonist who Transformed Pop Culture.

Many of us already know about this great talent, but the real issue here is his suppression by a publishing company with illusions to maintain — and a desire to pay peanuts for the genius of ‘hired help’ that brought in millions in profits. This particular story has a happy ending … the bona fide great artist wasn’t acknowledged until he was retired and no longer working, but he could have remained unknown, thinking that his life’s work wasn’t significant or appreciated.

The video is really sentimental and inspirational, and the art shown is wonderful.

 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday August 20, 2024

It’s like I’m 8 years old again, and everything on TV is wonderful…

Risky Business — 4K 08/20/24

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

This big hit from the yuppie decade launched a career that won’t die: with digital de-ageing, Tom Cruise can now throw out that portrait in his attic. What other 62 year-old enters via parachute at the Olympics? Paul Brickman brought the pubescent sex fantasy to the mainstream, with the spectacle of Cruise dancing in his underwear; Rebecca De Mornay’s slick hooker is admittedly irresistible. The screenplay is frequently witty, too. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
08/20/24

Navajo Joe 08/20/24

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

Burt Reynolds was among the first American actors to ‘do a Clint Eastwood’ and rush to Rome, but in his case the career boost didn’t happen. Sergio Corbucci turns out a Spaghetti with neither rhyme or reason, just continuous action, stuntwork and slaughter. Burt’s impressive athleticism is a kick but what really brings us back is Ennio Morricone’s wrenchingly radical soundtrack music, with a great chorus backing a main vocal that’s mainly screaming! On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
08/20/24

CineSavant Column

Tuesday August 20, 2024

 

Hello!

Friend Dick Dinman has a new podcast up for Kino’s 3-D Blu-ray of Arch Oboler’s Bwana Devil, the first movie of the 1950s 3-D craze.

His guests are two of the experts from the 3-D Film Archive, Robert Furmanek and Mike Ballew, talking about the restoration job in three dimensions. Get down in the technical weeds with a full discussion of Ansco color and trying to match up the color. CineSavant’s coverage of the disc release is  here.

 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday August 17, 2024

A basic survival story gets me every time.

Marie: A True Story 08/17/24

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

This excellent true story of political bribery in Tennessee has a genuine heroine at its center. Sissy Spacek plays a governor’s aide set up to grease pardons for violent offenders, who blows the whistle in her own defense. Jeff Daniels is the fixer running the scheme; attorney and future Sentator Fred Thompson became a film actor in this show, playing himself. This almost-forgotten but worthwhile drama was photographed by the great Chris Menges. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
08/17/24

Bob le flambeur — 4K 08/17/24

KL Studio Classics
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Take a trip to the ’50s roots of French crime cinema, now redubbed ‘French noir.’ Obsessed with American cars and movies, Jean-Pierre Melville nevertheless brings original flavor and philosophy to his first thriller. ‘Bob the Gambler’ is a friend to all in the Paris underworld and a gent when it comes to women. But he’s still a slave to his addiction to cards. It’s a heist movie with characters more colorful than Hollywood’s, filmed with a street sense that inspired the French New Wave. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
08/17/24

CineSavant Column

Saturday August 17, 2024

 
Hello!

The good news this week is all about disc announcements, some for October and November…

Leading off the hot news is word that Kino Lorber has a 4K Ultra HD disc coming for Sidney Hayers’ Circus of Horrors, a horror film with a good reputation that happens to be a CineSavant favorite. It’s due on October 29, so if it ships early it might arrive in time for Halloween fun.

They don’t have box art yet, so we’ll be curious to see if they find an alternative to the garish original poster graphic.

The giddy, oversexed big-top plastic surgery epic is also one of the screen’s better circus thrillers, and the Grand Guignol sadism is pitched perfectly for CineSavant sensibilities — you don’t take it seriously, but it’s excellent high-tension play acting. The cast is great too — Anton Diffring, Donald Pleasance, Yvonne Monlaur, Erika Remberg, Yvonne Romain, Jane Hylton and Kenneth Griffith. It certainly has spirit — plus exploitation, sadism and galloping misogyny. Just be kind to dancing bears and be wary of monster apes, and you’ll be fine.

 


Also high on our list of desired titles: the disc boutique Fun City Editions has already released excellent Blu-ray discs of Jeff Bridges’  Rancho Deluxe and  Cutter’s Way.

We just learned that the oft-requested Robert Benton western Bad Company will be out right away, on August 20. It’s up up for preorder.  I had forgotten the film’s cast — starring with Bridges are David Huddleston, Barry Brown, Jim Davis, John Savage, Geoffrey Lewis and Ed Lauter. It’s a story of draft evaders during the Civil War.

 


Available October 22 from Film Masters is an unofficial ‘Euro Kinski Double Bill’ Blu-ray disc. The leading title is a German Edgar Wallace ‘Krimi’ thriller, Creature with the Blue Hand. Klaus Kinski plays an asylum inmate. The press notice doesn’t mention a European version or German language, so this might be the U.S. release version only. We’ll have to see.

On the same disc is Web of the Spider, Antonio Margheriti’s Nella morsa della ragna, the 1971 remake of Margheriti’s own  Danza Macabra starring Anthony Franciosa and Michèle Mercier. Klaus Kinski plays Edgar Allan Poe in this remake. For this one they say it’s the U.S. release version, surely in English language only.

 


 

Hitting us all at once is surprising news with The Criterion Collection’s announcement for November. In any given month we hope for a vintage Hollywood picture, some nice genre title or a remaster of a classic from an artist like Akira Kurosawa. Criterion is already celebrating the company’s 40th anniversary with a giant  CC40 Collector’s set, but their other releases for November are a collectors’ dream wish list, all with something in common …

 

In alphabetical order:

•  William Wyler’s Funny Girl arrives in 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray, with a stack of extras including a new audio interview with Barbra Streisand.

•  Also in 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray is a new disc of Ishiro Honda’s orginal ’54 Godzilla. It has the same extras as the older Criterion release, including an encoding of the American re-cut Godzilla King of the Monsters.

We’re hoping that the ‘new 4K digital restoration’ is as good as the bit of a Japanese disc I was able to see several years ago … it looked better than anything we’ve gotten over here, so much so that we grumbled that Toho was withholding ‘the good stuff’ for export.

Heck, we still wish Criterion could market the Bill Sienkiewicz cover art for this disc, first seen twelve years ago.

•  Next up, we’re more than ready for a 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray of Peter Bogdanovich’s Paper Moon, the one where he channels the look and tone of a Depression-era John Ford / Will Rogers comedy. O’Neals Tatum and Ryan are truly charming, and Madeline Kahn hilarious. The extras list a lot of input from favorite Polly Platt.

 

 

•  Fourth up is Howard Hawks’ hands-down absolute classic, the original 1932 preCode Scarface with Paul Muni. We’d go for this just to see Criterion’s extras, but it also is listed in 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray.

We definitely want to see this new digital restoration, as the accepted wisdom on this old Howard Hughes production is that its sound & picture film elements are ‘very limited.’  The best Blu-ray transfer hits a limit of contrast and sharpness. How much better than the Blu-ray can the movie look?  We’ll hope for the best.

•  Next comes a 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray upgrade on Akira Kurosawa’s original Seven Samurai, which always scores high on the list of best movies ever made. No arguments here … it’s from the same year as Godzilla and we’re hoping that a remaster can make it look even better.

Seven Samurai was Criterion’s 2nd ever DVD, spine number 2. I’ve never reviewed it, just because it’s so intimidating and I didn’t want to just rehash things I’d read elsewhere. I’ll try to give it a shot this time.

•  And finally, the lineup finishes with a new 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray edition of Guillermo Del Toro’s The Shape of Water, a rare picture that was my favorite film for a year, and also took home the Best Picture Oscar.

The transfer may be the same as the existing Fox disc, but of course there are those Criterion extras to contend with. Mr. Del Toro can be very candid when evaluating his work, so I’ll be interested in hearing what he has to say.

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday August 13, 2024

Life is a Carousel … poor Liliom didn’t foresee the celestial petting police.

Northwest Passage 08/13/24

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

Want to follow Spencer Tracy in search of the elusive Northwest Passage?  Not in this movie!  Taken from American history and treated like gospel, Kenneth Roberts’ story gives us Spencer Tracy as a colonial ‘special forces’ Major whose troop marches hundred of miles to wipe out an Indian encampment near the Canadian border … it’s the Apocalypse Now of 1940. MGM’s gigantic production lugged giant Technicolor cameras all over Oregon and Idaho under the direction of famed director King Vidor. Robert Young is the artist who becomes a guerilla fighter; the whole movie plays like propaganda to prepare American boys to fight Nazis. The digital Technicolor restoration is excellent. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.

08/13/24

World War III 08/13/24

Deaf Crocodile / Vinegar Syndrome
Blu-ray

Once again an Iranian film yields an experience found nowhere else. Houman Seyedi’s allegory of exploiters and the exploited never takes a false step, building in tension as it goes. Festival critics praised the performance of Mohsen Tanabandeh as an Everyman laborer driven to a radical extremes. The well-made picture plays with elements we expect to see in a Black Comedy, but the last thing offered is laughs … what we get is 107 wrenching minutes of Truth In Motion. On Blu-ray from Deaf Crocodile.
08/13/24

CineSavant Column

Tuesday August 13, 2024

 

Hello!

I tell ya, its great to have good friends. Photographer, electronics engineer and amateur 3-D printer jockey Allan Peach likes the CineSavant logo, and a while back made me a 3-D sign, which I showed off in these pages.

A couple of weeks back he did it again, only fancier … he may be on his third 3-D printer by now. You can see the impressive result for yourself. It lives behind my work desk and it even keeps good time … after years of digital readouts, I’m going to be reading an old fashioned dial clock again.

 


 

Here’s something new from the elusive Correspondent ‘B.’ — America’s National Parks have a fun semi-morbid toy on sale, and it looks like a bargain. It’s the perfect snuggly plush toy for people 70 years and older, who remember atom drills in grade school.

It’s Bert from the famous Duck and Cover cartoon immortalized in  The Atomic Cafe. He’s pretty cute, but we can’t tell how big he is.

He’s up for sale — what a patriotic toy!  Tell ’em CineSavant sent you.

Bert the Turtle Plush
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday August 10, 2024

Some clever story gimmicks deserve applause of their own.

Alphaville 4k 08/10/24

KL Studio Classics
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Jean-Luc Godard’s pop Sci-fi masterpiece jumps to 4K … and the splendid 2023 remaster on the 4K disc finally nails Raoul Coutard’s gritty-beautiful B&W cinematography. Agent Lemmy Caution rockets through intersidereal space to fight the computer Alpha 60 in Dr. Nosferatu’s ‘Capital of Pain’ … and to help Natacha Von Braun re-learn the word ‘love.’ The pulp saga is the story of our times, circa 1965. Stars Eddie Constantine, Anna Karina, Akim Tamiroff. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
08/10/24

The Hell with Heroes 08/10/24

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

We wanted to cover a Universal product from the late ’60s, and this one has stars we like — Rod Taylor, Claudia Cardinale, Harry Guardino and a lot of angles to discuss — the TV-movie production values, the Techniscope format short cut. Kino’s disc comes with a good commentary from Steve Mitchell & Steven Jay Rubin. The story is about smugglers in Europe, but everything we see looks Los Angeles- local. On the other hand, any excuse to see Claudia Cardinale is a good excuse. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
08/10/24