Electric Shadow

Ah, L'Amour

Warner Bros. has collected Catlow, The Sacketts, and Conagher into a single Louis L'Amour Collection. These doses of Sam Elliott, Tom Selleck, and Yul Brynner/Leonard Nimoy are worthy additions to the L'Amour shelf in your dad's study.

 

 

I covered Catlow when it came out almost exactly a year ago in a series that I never continued. To wit:

"The last thing I expected to encounter today was a movie with Leonard Nimoy fighting in the nude. Two years after the original Star Trek series and just before his appearance in one of my favorite episodes of Night Gallery, Nimoy played a snarling bounty hunter baddie in Catlow. His presence and the fact the movie is based on a book by Louis L'Amour are likely the reasons why this wasn't made a Warner Archive title. The movie is really quite enjoyable and a welcome alternative to the crap clogging the multiplexes."

 


Elliott with a lot less grey in his hair as the titular Conagher

 

Seeing as The Sacketts is $15 on its own and Catlow and Conagher are $13 apiece, $17.49 for all three is pretty damn good deal when that equals over six hours of solid oaters. Combo/value packs like these are the future of catalog media.

Pow!

I saw Isaac Florentine's Undisputed III: Redemption last night, and while it is exactly what it appears to be (a prison fighting tournament movie), it's in a class all its own. I wouldn't call it fight porn, but it is the result of letting guys who really know staged combat and choreography run the show.

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Master of His Destiny

Earlier this year, we saw the release of the mammoth 35-movie, 35-DVD Clint: 35 Years boxset. The last two weeks have seen a flood of Eastwood-starring and -directed movies hit Blu-ray, some in mini-collections. If I were laid up in a hospital for a few weeks, it'd be a great time to wheel in an HDTV and a pile of Blu-rays and get to know his filmography better. I watched Invictus and the new Extended Cut of Richard Schickel's career retrospective piece The Eastwood Factor in the same afternoon recently.
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Speculation: Criterion "New Hollywood" Box


the inside cover of Sony's recent Blu-book version of Easy Rider.
The CriterionCast guys have done some digging and seem to have some solid info that Criterion recently acquired rights to various Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider-produced pictures, Easy Rider and The Last Picture Show in particular. They go on to say their sources indicate a 5-7 movie boxset in the fall, available in Blu-ray and DVD editions. Here's my take on what I think they'll include, with proviso cases for both 5-title and 7-title editions:
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522 (Red Desert Preview)

 

 

Il deserto rosso (Red Desert) was Antonioni's fourth film in a series preceded by L'avventura, La notte, and L'eclisse. It was also his first film made in color. Criterion's Blu-ray of Desert, which I watched late last week, is rich with texture and nuanced color. I need to re-watch it because I saw a vertical reddish-yellow streak in a few frames at one point and didn't note the timestamp so I could glance back at it. The transfer is otherwise visually flawless, with the look of a pristine 35mm print. More on this disc soon.

Please, Accept the Mystery

I missed out on the movie blogger lovefest on this movie last summer, catching it the other night on DVD and loving it instantly. It is the opposite of the general implication of "a comedy sketch at feature length". The leads are all still "gee shucks" boy detectives at age eighteen. They live in enough of a different reality that they could be considered criminally insane.

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Expect Delays

Unforeseen personal matters have come up over the last few days that have unfortunately brought the column (and life in general) to a screeching halt. I can assure you that I should return Monday or Tuesday with a flood of things, including Ozu pieces (that are mostly-done, but need some polishing). Thanks for your patience.

Summer Films: Dueling Spouses in Thin Man Double

I've yet to see any of the wonderful movies in the Thin Man series in 35mm, but that changes this week thanks to the Paramount Theatre's Summer Film Series. Tuesday and Wednesday, Austinites can see a double bill of Another Thin Man and The Thin Man Goes Home, the third and fifth pictures in the 6-title franchise.

 

 

Notable landmarks in the series include the introduction of baby Nicky Jr. in Another, and the late-WWII setting of Goes Home, which was released in January of '45. The movie that came between these two, Shadow of the Thin Man, is notable for its release coming just two weeks before the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Also, the previously ultra-rich Charles family transplants from a mansion to an apartment to better reflect the populace at the time, all of whom were cutting back.

 

 

It's rare to see lots of the movies the Paramount Theatre is showing this summer on the big screen, but especially these classic Warner mystery/comedies. Show times and days are listed below.

Another Thin Man 7 Tues; 9:10 Wed.
The Thin Man Goes Home 9:15 Tues; 7 Wed.

Karate Then and Now

I watched the first two Karate Kid movies practically on repeat one summer. I'm reasonably certain that I wore out that pair of tapes. Revisiting the movies on Blu-ray, I quickly realized that I'd never seen them in widescreen, just VHS. As a result, I have no standard for comparison in terms of "theatrical" picture quality. Needless to say, there were various little visual details that I'd never picked up on before. I don't share the kind of "Godfather III"-level hatred of The Karate Kid Part III as some of my friends do, but I don't miss it nearly as much as I would "Kid II" if it'd been missing. Also, unlike various friends, I'm not freaked out about the remake, and in fact welcome it. The keeping of the title bothered me until I saw the international trailer that explained it. Now it only sort-of irks me. I dig the premise, since it links the disadvantaged kid sticking up for himself with the broader globalization and outsourcing facing the modern working world. I'm also an unapologetic supporter of putting Jackie Chan in the Miyagi role. As reviled as he is by critics for the Hollywood paycheck jobs of his that they've been subjected to, I like him for things like The Shinjuku Incident, The Myth, and The Forbidden Kingdom. Even though I don't have time to put it together in time for the release of the new movie, I'm putting together a career retrospective on Chan. It'll cover everything from well-known to less-known stuff and hit later in the year. The Ozu thing is going so well that I've decided to make these retros an ongoing thing, pacing them such that they never fall behind and, most importantly, continue to interest me.
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Ft. Worth Joke-Telegram

I thought I had little to do this morning after a cup of tea. There are a few articles to give last glances to, a to-do list to update, and some notes to make on a cited resource. I watched another silent Ozu that I'd never seen while working out. All around, I was ready to attack the day. Then I found out that the Fort Worth Star-Telegram has apparently gone into competition with The Onion for satirical "news" reporting.
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This Summer, Buckles...Will...Swash

Last weekend, Iron Man 2 beat Robin Hood on the latter's opening weekend, with neither claiming the dollar advantage of 3D screens. It would seem that word of mouth and brand value didn't propel people to the 55th or so retelling of the outlaw story. Maybe if they'd gone in the fundamentally different direction of the original Nottingham script, it would have been a bigger deal. If you want to see the same general story retold in a way you haven't seen before, you have better options on DVD.

Just last week, Sony issued four catalog Robin Hood titles on DVD that I hadn't seen before. Two of them are "next generation" sequels starring someone as Robin Hood's son, and the others are new permutations of the standard Hood tale. Read on and add to your Netflix queue as appropriate.

 

 

The Bandit of Sherwood Forest (1947)
Coming scant years after the end of WWII, Cornel Wilde plays Robin Hood's son Robert, who teams up with good ol' dad to prevent a reign of tyranny. THe Regent of England (William of Pembroke) locks up the boy King and tries to swipe the throne for himself. Beautifully-shot by the same Cinematographer as The Adventures of Robin Hood (Tony Gaudio), Bandit looks great in Academy ratio Technicolor.

 

 

Prince of Thieves (1948)
Costner's movie swiped its title from this flick, which stars Jon Hall, the same guy who played Ali Baba in Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, as Robin Hood. This one was done as a reworking of the traditional Robin Hood myth, and only runs 72 minutes. Shot in Cinecolor instead of Technicolor, darker scenes early in the movie look like they were colorized from black and white with a dash of acid. I don't mean that as a bad thing.

 

 

Rogues of Sherwood Forest (1950)
Another "son of" Robin Hood tale, I never thought I'd see a "Hood" movie directed by the same guy who made THEM! (Gordon Douglas), but here it is. Rogues was Alan Hale Sr.'s final film appearance, which was also his third time playing Little John over a span of 28 years. Hale's first go was opposite Douglas Fairbanks and his second was in the iconic and much-beloved Michael Curtiz-directed Adventures of Robin Hood with Errol Flynn.

 

 

Sword of Sherwood Forest (1960)
Some people only need the incentive of seeing Peter Cushing play the Sheriff of Nottingham to get them. Add in the director of Hammer Films' Horror of Dracula (Terence Fisher), and you seal the deal. Richard Greene, who played Hood throughout the 50's on TV, plays him on the big screen for the first time here.

Of the four "Hood" movies released on disc recently, this is the only one in 2.35:1 MegaScope widescreen, and it looks wonderful. Combine solid visuals with a story involving an assassination plot against the Archbishop of Canterbury, and this one's more irresistible than the rest. Oliver Reed and Desmond Llewelyn appear in a couple parts early in their careers.

All four titles are $9 from Amazon and can be ordered by clicking on the accompanying screenshot.

Private Ryan Re-deployed

I haven't had time to re-watch the replacement copy of Saving Private Ryan that arrived this afternoon, but I thought it'd be good to get the physical differences in packaging out there to those who'd be interested.

 


I find the implication here hilarious. That is to say: the original disc that I was sent was unclean and impure.

 

 


The Yellow UPC label is the only noticeable outward difference...

 

 


...but the key is that the new Disc 1 now has a blue label instead of grey (like Disc 2 seen on the left).

 

Everybody Comes to Rick's

In his commentary track on the Casablanca DVD and Blu-ray (recorded in 2003), Roger Ebert hits the nail on the head, to wit:

"We're living in a time when, for a lot of people, cinema history begins with Star Wars. A lot of younger viewers are not too interested in old movies, they aren't interested in silent movies, they don't like black and white movies, and yet...they make an exception for Casablanca."

 

 

That, better than anything I could come up with, is why the movie is always a good way to start a Summer Film Series.

I've agreed to contribute some regular column inches to the Summer Film Series held annually at the historic Paramount Theatre here in Austin.

My payment is being remitted in the form of a summer-long, all-access pass and complimentary soda/popcorn for myself and a guest. Don't tell anyone at the Paramount that I was planning to do this anyway, but the comped admission and cinema staples make it more financially feasible to spend as much time at the Paramount as I'd really like to this summer.

The style of the programming is predominantly double features running two days apiece, reversing order the second night. The 2010 lineup has great movies coming out of its ears. Here's a taste of some must-sees from now until early September:

Another Thin Man
The Thin Man Goes Home
On the Waterfront
Frenzy

Batman (1966) with Adam West in-person
The Taking of Pelham One, Two, Three
Goodfellas
Raging Bull
Giant
The Last Picture Show
Lone Star
The Adventures of Robin Hood
Shane
The Searchers
Freaks
Alien - The Director's Cut
All That Heaven Allows
Rebecca
All That Jazz
Showgirls
Valley of the Dolls
Mutiny on the Bounty
Captain Blood
Bride of Frankenstein
A Night at the Opera
Badlands
The Red Shoes
Ran
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg
Breathless
Sunrise
M. Hulot's Holiday
West Side Story

Lawrence of Arabia (in 70mm)
Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
Vertigo
(in 70mm)
The Big Lebowski

There are even more wonderful titles peppered in there, so take a look at the full calendar and don't miss a chance to see classics the way they were meant to be seen.

"Film Fan" members of the Paramount get a sneak show of Casablanca tonight preceded by an opening party. Casablanca is tonight at 7pm, followed by The Maltese Falcon ay 9:20pm. They swap showtimes tomorrow night. They show again Sunday in a double-double as follows:

Casablanca
3:45pm & 8:20pm

The Maltese Falcon
1:30pm & 6:05pm

Whether you live in Austin or not, seek out your local summer retro film series and support it. These classics of various stripes are the backbone of the cinema world, and they need support.

Clever Valentine's Day-related Title

I give a pass to sappy rom-coms that actually try, rather than cobble together a pseudo-ripoff of something that's already successful. Valentine's Day is full of people I like in other movies, and a director that seems like a helluva nice guy to work with, but the movie doesn't know what it wants to be.
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Return to Darkness

It's frequently tossed aside that Martin Campbell directed the now-classic original BBC miniseries version in addition to the recent feature version of Edge of Darkness. In one of the "focus point" featurettes included on last week's Blu-ray, Campbell mentions that the only guy who would have made a movie work was Mel Gibson, and he does, for the most part.
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Faux-Controversy Over Waco

I'm disappointed that there's still a false perception as to why Waco isn't shooting in Texas. Frankly, I think it's hilarious that anyone thought a movie about the Branch Davidian thing was going to shoot in Texas in the first place.
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Making Time

Late last year, I covered Criterion's wonderful Golden Age of Television set. Included was the teleplay version of No Time For Sergeants, whose massive success translated into a feature film version three years later.

I'd originally seen the movie before the Golden Age set introduced me to the predecessor. Now that I've seen the movie again, I kind of miss the low-rent, faster-paced vibe of the teleplay performance. Andy Griffith is wonderful as he always has been, but as with all great performers, once you've seen them do their thing in front of a live audience, there's nothing like it. The DVD includes no extras, but is worth having rather than renting for me thanks to there just not being enough Andy Griffith on my shelf that I always have access to.

The trio that made the move from Broadway. Don Knotts played the Army shrink.
The Andy Griffith Show was a comfort program for me. It always reminded me of the moments in life where things are more patient and considered. The world where there were consequences and you felt bad about screwing up. My generation is the one that grew up blaming everyone else for everything we did wrong or not well enough. We could be "anything", we were told, if only we'd put our minds to it. Mayberry introduced me to a place where people figured out what they were going to be and doing it, rather than pissing life away bullshitting about the million things that they were never going to do, or were always about to do. Amazon has the No Time for Sergeants DVD listed at $12.49.
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