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#1 | |
Banned
![]() Oct 2011
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Thanks given by: | dig311dug (03-28-2018) |
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#5 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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![]() ![]() After reading Mark Twain's novel, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, during my early childhood, I got the idea to run away from home and live an adventurous life on my own, just as Tom, Huckleberry Finn, and Joe Harper sought out to do in the book. I took a pint of ice cream and a half pack of Oreo cookies from the kitchen when my parents and brother were not around, put them into an empty school bag, and set out into the forest behind our house. I walked a half mile into the woods, sat down on a rock, ate the ice cream and Oreos, became bored, and returned home. I was clearly not cut out of the same courageous mold as Tom Sawyer, but the novel still captivated me several times over during subsequent readings back then, and it still holds a special place in my heart. For this reason, I have always enjoyed seeking out the movie versions of the tale. The 1938 film, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, which was shot in glorious Technicolor by the legendary cinematographer James Wong Howe, was the first color adaptation of the Twain story, and it remains a timeless envisioning, mostly thanks to the spare-no-expense approach of David O'Selznick, who also produced classics like Gone with the Wind and Rebecca. Actor Tommy Kelly, who excels in the title role, was chosen from a national search, but Walter Brennan (Rio Bravo), who plays the town drunk, Muff Potter, and May Robson (Bringing Up Baby), who plays the strict Aunt Polly, are the two most recognizable faces to today's audiences. I first saw this version during the mid-1980s when my seventh grade teacher showed it to the class, and I remember my friends and I cracking up at the scenes where the tattletale Sid Sawyer, who deserved a beatdown more than any cinematic kid in history, was pelted in the face with food or whitewash paint. The sequence where Tom and Becky Thatcher are lost in the cave takes up the bulk of the narrative in this particular adaptation, and it remains an example of brilliant filmmaking and art design. This movie would go on to receive an Academy Award nomination for Best Art Direction. I'm hoping that the 1939 adaptation of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which stars Mickey Rooney in the title role, receives a Blu-ray release in the future so that I can make a double feature of both films. This Kino Lorber release sports a nice-looking transfer of both the 91-minute original edition and the shortened 77-minute re-release. Last edited by The Great Owl; 08-12-2018 at 11:28 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Starchild (08-16-2018) |
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#7 |
Expert Member
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#8 |
Junior Member
Aug 2018
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I saw a restored version of this film at MOMA in I believe the late 80s during a restoration retrospective.. I was completely floored at how visually beautiful it was. This critic was not floored by the bluray transfer. So then the museum has that print buried in its vaults or it has deteriorated as well.
Funny that Cover Girl got a mediocre review as well as I saw a dazzling technicolor print at the Regency NY revival house in the 70s. I guess pristine prints of these films are lost forever. Very sad. |
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#9 |
Active Member
Feb 2016
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Look forward to the blu ray. Last time I saw this (a long time ago), the color separation was off-register and it looked awful.
HR Pufnstuf |
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#10 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#11 |
Active Member
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I watched this for the first time not too long ago. I thought it looked very nice, if not a little soft/blurry in some places. I assumed that was because the 3 strips of Technicolor film weren't properly aligned for the transfer. Is that possible?
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