"Is not this a true autumn day? Just the still melancholy that I love ..." - George Eliot
11.2024
2 from Powerhouse
Family Life (U.K., 1971)
Concerned for her troubled teenage daughter, an English housewife pays a call on her psychiatrist. "Well, this is the thing that baffles me, doctor," the woman tells him. "She really was quite a model child. She was tidy. In fact, I used to go into her bedroom some mornings and it was so tidy, it really didn't look as if anyone had been in there." Mrs. Baildon ("played" by Grace Cave, a non-actor) just doesn't get her daughter, Janice (Sandy Ratcliff, a pro), and the misunderstanding is mutual, as director Ken Loach (Kes, Hidden Agenda, Sorry We Missed You) and screenwriter David Mercer make clear in their harrowing 1971 drama Family Life, adapted from Mercer's BBC-TV play 'In Two Minds', about a disfunctional working-class family struggling to get along but whose only real talent is for making a bad situation worse. Abortion, schizophrenia, institutionalization, electroshock therapy: the cascade into madness is pitiful, and at the centre of the storm is a tenebrous performance by model-turned-actress Ratcliff, making her screen debut. (She'd go on to become a household name in the '80s as Sue Osman in the popular BBC-TV soap opera EastEnders, before heroin addiction got the better of her.) New to Blu-ray on the U.K. Powerhouse imprint Indicator, in a U.S.-only edition code-locked to region A, Family Life comes with two new extras: an interview with veteran actor Jack Klaff, reminiscing about working with Ratcliff on the stage and being immensely impressed by her raw talent (18 mins.); and an hour-long presentation by film expert Michael Brooke on the cultural connections between Loach and other British filmmakers with contemporaries in eastern and central Europe, including Czechoslovakia's Miloš Forman and Poland's Krzysztof Keislowski. As well, there's a 98-minute video interview from 2007 with longtime Loach collaborator Tony Garnett, who produced Family Life. An image gallery and trailer complete the disc, which is accompanied by a 40-page illustrated booklet.
Left Right and Centre (U.K., 1959)
It's the late 1950s, and there's a by-election going on in the fictional provincial town of Earndale, where Labour candidate Stella Stoker is running against Conservative rival Robert Wilcot. She's a graduate of the London School of Economics with her feet firmly planted in a humble background as a fishmonger's daughter. He's a popular TV personality with a background in polar exploration who's entered the race with the rather naïve view that fair play and a "true sporting spirit" will win the day. Stella Stoker is having none of it. "What is a 'true sporting spirit?' I don't know, and neither does he," she proclaims. "It's simply a meaningless catchphrase, a piece of immature political goo." And she has no intention of playing by the rules, either. "Where there's mud to sling, I assure Mr. Wilcot that I intend to sling it in no uncertain manner – and I hope some of it sticks." It's ironic, then, that through some kind of adversarial alchemy the two turn mutual antipathy into admiration and admiration into an unexpectedly wild infatuation – but this is a comedy, after all. Patricia Bredin and Ian Carmichael star, alongside veteran thesp Alistair Sim; Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat (The Lady Vanishes) produced. New to Blu-ray on the U.K. Powerhouse imprint Indicator, in a U.S.-only edition code-locked to region A, Left Right and Centre comes with a new audio commentary by Michael Brooke and a new presentation of the film and its skewering of TV celebrity and politics by Josephine Botting (21 mins.). Also featured is an 18-minute vintage short about the 1959 U.K. General Election, and a 1999 audio interview with Left Right and Centre's art director John Box that can be heard as an alternate track running through the entirety of the film. An image gallery of promotional and publicity materials completes the disc, while the accompanying 44-page booklet features a new essay by Matthew Bailey and Melanie Williams and looks at Launder-and-Gilliat's filmmaking partnership, which also produced Night Train to Munich and Green for Danger.
1 from Second Run
The Hop-Pickers (Czechoslovakia, 1964)
Well, it's not quite West Side Story, whatever the critics might have said at the time. Yes, there are teenagers, and yes, two are madly in love, and good is pitted against evil, but listen up: this musical takes place in Bohemia, in early 1960s communist Czechoslovakia, and centres on a collective farm that produces hops (as the song goes, "Never fear, never fear, we're doing it for beer"). Millions of Czech cinemagoers have seen The Hop-Pickers, which stars Vladimir Pucholt (moonlighting from Miloš Forman's debut Black Peter) and directed by Ladislav Rychman. Now given a 4K restoration by the Czech National Film Archive, it's being released with new English subtitles and optional 5.1 DTS-HD sound on an all-region Blu-ray by British distributor Second Run. Extras include several appropriately themed vintage extras on the Czech hops and brewing industries: two silent shorts called "Gift of the Earth" (1932) and "110 Years of the Pilsen Brewery" (1952), the latter directed by the great Karel Zeman, and "The Processing of Hops (1964), directed by Josef Šuran. Rounding out the package is a 24-page booklet featuring a new essay by author Jonathan Owen.
1 from Criterion
Seven Samurai (Japan, 1954)
"Farmers are stingy, foxy, blubbering, mean, stupid and murderous! Goddamn, that's what they are! But who made them such beasts? You samurai did! You burn their villages, destroy their farms, steal their food, force them into labor, take their women, and kill them if they resist! So what should farmers do?" So says Kikuchiyo, a wannabe warrior played by Toshiro Mifune in Akira Kurosawa's action-packed Seven Samurai, a three-hour epic released in the mid-1950s to international acclaim. Remade as a Hollywood western several years later under the title The Magnificent Seven, the black-and-white movie is about a village in medieval Japan that hires six-plus-one samurai to protect it from marauding gangs of bandits, stocking them with equipment pillaged from samurai they killed in earlier battles. Updating its 2K Blu-ray release of the film in 2010, U.S. distributor Criterion now offer a three-disc package: one 4K ultra-high-definition Blu-ray and one standard-definition Blu-ray, both supplemented by separate audio commentaries (the first from 2006 with scholars and critics David Desser, Joan Mellen, Stephen Prince, Tony Rayns and Donald Richie, and the second from 1988 with Japanese film expert Michael Jeck, previously available on Criterion's 1998 DVD). The third Blu-ray is also in standard definition and repeats all the earlier extras: a 50-minute making-of from 2002 called "Akira Kurosawa: It Is Wonderful to Create: Seven Samurai"; a two-hour interview with Kurosawa by filmmaker Nagisa Oshima from 1993; an hour-long documentary made for Criterion in 2006 called "Seven Samurai: Origins and Influences," featuring Desser, Rayns and Ritchie again; and four trailers and two galleries of production stills and posters. The accompanying booklet runs 60 pages.
10.2024
1 from Criterion
I Walked with a Zombie (U.S., 1943) / The Seventh Victim (U.S., 1943)
Hollywood producer Val Newton – or Volodymyr Ivanovich Hofschneider, a Ukrainian Jew who at five years old emigrated to America with his mother and sister – is remembered by cinephiles today for a series of 'B' horror movies he made at RKO Pictures in the early 1940s. The first was Cat People, released in 1942. Newton followed that up with no less than four more the following year: I Walked with a Zombie, The Leopard Man, The Seventh Victim and The Ghost Ship. Now the prestige New York distributor Criterion has released Zombie and Victim in a double-Blu-ray set: one a 4K UHD, the other a standard BD, both holding the two films. Zombie, directed by Jacques Tourneur (who also did Cat and Leopard), is set on a Caribbean island where a young nurse (Frances Dee) has come to take care of a woman in a coma; soon enough, she falls prey to the power of voodoo. Victim, directed by Mark Robson, is set among a cult of devil worshipers in New York City's Greenwich Village. Extras on the discs include separate audio commentaries from 2005 by Kim Newman and Stephen Jones and by Steve Haberman, a new interview with film historian Imogen Sara Smith (47 minutes), an hour's worth of 'making-ofs' audio essays from Adam Roche’s podcast 'The Secret History of Hollywood', a 2005 hour-long documentary called
"Shadows in the Dark: The Val Lewton Legacy," excerpts from an episode of the PBS series Monstrum, hosted by scholar Emily Zarka, called “The Origins of the Zombie, from Haiti to the U.S.” (13 mins.), and trailer for both films. The accompanying booklet has essays by critics Chris Fujiwara and Lucy Sante.
09.2024
1 from Criterion
Tótem (Mexico/ France / Denmark / Netherlands, 2023)
Mexico City, present day. Preparations are underway for a surprise birthday party, and the excitement that seven-year-old Sol (Naíma Sentíes) feels is soon replaced by an entirely different feeling, as she realizes the guest of honour – her father – is dying. This party will be his last, and as his mother, sisters and other relatives bustle about the family home, his daughter comes to grips with a very personal grief over what she's about to lose. Shot in the 1.33.1 aspect ratio, à la Hollywood 'Academy' framing of old, Tótem was Mexico's official submission for best international feature film at this year's Oscars. Extras on the Criterion Blu-ray, part of its Janus Contemporaries series of recent films, include a 17-minute interview with director Lila Avilés (The Chambermaid) and a two-minute trailer.
2 from Second Run
The Valley of the Bees (Czechoslovakia, 1967)
Bohemia, 900 years ago. Ondřej, an errant knight of the Teutonic Order, returns to his home village pursued by his former mentor, Armin, veteran of the Crusades. What follows is a back-and-forth, violent battle of wills culminating in the death of one man and the uncertain redemption of the other. Shot in black-and-white, The Valley of the Bees was the follow-up to Czech director František Vláčil's masterpiece, Marketa Lazarová, and still packs a punch today as an allegory of the corrosive power of misplaced faith. Augmented with new-and-improved English subtitles, the all-region Blu-ray from British distributor Second Run includes two documentary shorts Vláčil made in 1972: "The City in White" and "Karlovy Vary Promenades." There's also a new commentary by Projection Booth podcasters Mike White and Robert Bellissimo. A 24-page illustrated booklet featuring an essay by film historian Peter Hames completes the package.
Pharoah (Poland, 1966)
Ancient Egypt, Polish-style. in the mid-1960s, writer-director Jerzy Kawalerowicz got the green light from the Communist authorities to adapt Faraon, a historical novel about (fictional) Ramses XIII by his late 19th-century compatriot Bolesław Prus that – no surprise – was a favourite of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin. Epic in scope and budget, the film was mainly shot in Uzbekistan, under very harsh conditions, and has now been restored in 2K by the prestigious Warsaw film studio WFDiF, supervised by Pharaoh's cinematographer, Jerzy Wójcik. Extras on Second Run's region-free Blu-ray include an in-depth discussion by film scholar Michał Oleszczyk, a 1964 Polish newsreel excerpt on the making of Pharaoh, and a trailer, as well as new-and-improved English subtitles. Rounding out this edition is a 24-page booklet with an essay by film historian Michael Brooke. Oh, and there's an 'Easter egg' extra hidden in the menu.
4 from Powerhouse
The Lady is Willing (U.S., 1942)
Mismatched characters, mismatched actors: Marlene Dietrich and Fred MacMurray play an odd couple in this 1942 comic melodrama directed by Mitchell Leisen (Remember the Night). Dietrich is a Broadway musical star bent on adopting an abandoned baby, and MacMurray is the divorced obstetrician she wants to marry so the adoption can go through. The good doctor has an odd hobby, too: he breeds rabbits. New to Blu-ray, on a region-B disc in the Indicator series of British distributor Powerhouse, the movie comes with two new extras: an audio commentary by Adrian Martin and a half-hour discussion about Dietrich by Richard Dyer. There's also the complete, hour-long Lux Radio Theatre broadcast of ‘The Lady Is Willing’ from 1943, starring George Brent and Kay Francis, an image gallery, and a 36-page illustrated booklet.
When Tomorrow Comes (U.S., 1939)
More opposites attracting: right after making Love Affair together for director Leo McCarey, Irene Dunne and Charles Boyer reunited for another romantic melodrama, When Tomorrow Comes, this time with an organized labour theme under producer-director John M. Stahl (Leave Her To Heaven). Boyer plays a concert pianist from Paris and Dunne the New York restaurant waitress he falls for, just as she and her co-workers go on strike. There are storm clouds on the couple's horizon, however – literally (cue the torrential rains). Indicator's region-B Blu-ray features a 2K restoration and three new extras: an audio commentary by film curator Eloise Ross, a 20-minute appreciation of Stahl by critic Geoff Andrew, and 20 minutes of critic Michael Brooke discussing crime novelist James M. Cain, whose 1938 magazine serial "A Modern Cinderella" inspired the film. There's also an image gallery and an onscreen gallery of all 305 pages of the film's screenplay. A 40-page booklet completes the package.
You'll Never Get Rich (U.S., 1941)
A more felicitous pairing, this time of dancer-actors Fred Astaire and Rita Hayworth in a hit musical comedy of Cole Porter songs called You'll Never Get Rich, from 1941. Astaire plays a choreographer and Hayworth is a star of his troupe; Robert Benchley owns the theatre and, though married, has an eye for the ladies. Sidney Lanfield (The Hound of the Baskervilles) directs. Restored in 4K, the movie comes with a number of extras on Indicator's region-B Indicator disc: a new audio commentary by film historian Peter Tonguette, a new 20-minute look at Hayworth by critic Christina Newland; 77 minutes of audio from a 1985 public lecture given by Astaire expert John Mueller; the film's narrated and truncated Super-8 version; an optional music-and-effects audio track; an image gallery; and a trailer. The accompanying booklet runs 40 pages.
You and Me (U.S., 1938)
Finally, it's Sylvia Sidney and George Raft's turn to pair off, but this time the couple they portray are a pair of equals – in crime. Raft plays Joe, who after a stint in jail finds work in a department store, where he falls for his winsome co-worker, Helen (Sidney's character), who turns out to have been in trouble with the law, too. Can two (ex-)cons make a right? The movie marked the third time that exiled Austrian director Fritz Lang (Metropolis) had directed Sidney, after Fury and You Only Live Once, and yet – despite a score partly composed by the great Kurt Weill, a German Jew who'd also fled the Nazis for America – it flopped. Indicator's region-B Blu-ray features a 2K restoration and three new extras: an audio commentary by Tony Rayns, a 23-minute look at Sidney by Lucy Bolton, and a half-hour on Weill by David Huckvale, at his piano. A trailer and image gallery round out the disc. The accompanying illustrated booklet runs 36 pages and includes a new essay by film historian Farran Smith Nehme.