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#221621 |
Blu-ray Baron
Sep 2013
Midlands, UK
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Out of the latest batch of Criterion US title announcements, am interested in getting Nothing But a Man (have never heard of the film before, but a couple of the names I've heard of (Ivan Dixon (among their directing credits are several episodes of the original Magnum, P.I.) and Julius Harris (know them best from Live and Let Die and the original The Taking of Pelham One Two Three) and The Roaring Twenties.
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Thanks given by: | CelestialAgent (11-17-2023) |
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#221623 |
Blu-ray Baron
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My Criterion wish list for 2024 is for a 4K release of Spellbound, Notorious, and Rebecca. I never got the Notorious or Rebecca blu-rays because I still have the bare bones MGM discs. Spellbound never got a blu-ray upgrade in the collection.
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#221624 |
Member
![]() Sep 2019
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The reason we have seen such a great number of Hong Kong films finally being released on Blu-ray and 4K is that L'Immagine Ritrovata opened a office in Hong Kong in 2015.
Before that, there was no such dedicated lab or restoration house in Hong Kong. You had to rely on local film processing labs with ancient telecine machines, all of which are now closed. And flying an OCN or other original elements out of the country is the last thing you ever want to risk doing. Film is fragile, easy to damage, easy to lose or even steal. In 2017, L'Immagine Ritrovata started restoring some Bollywood films. But unfortunately Bollywood movies are notorious when it comes to the condition of elements. In India, they kept on striking prints off of the original OCN for decades after that practice was done away with in the US and Europe. This means that finding usable elements for even fairly recent movies from the 80s and 90s can be highly problematic. The extreme heat and humidity in the region can also be murder on film. Kodak introduced Eastmancolor in 1950. Indian filmmakers noticed how quickly this film stock faded by the mid to late 50s. It took American filmmakers until the 1970s to notice this same color lose. Basically, the same color film started to fade 15 to 20 years earlier in India than it did in the US. That's how much of a difference temperature, humidity and proper storage make in the ultimate survival of film elements. India also continued to use nitrate film for years after that stock was replaced in the US and Europe in 1951. Indian studios bought all the ovestock at a discount from foreign labs and studios that were trying to get rid of this highly flammable film stock. The other issue is that Bollywood films have never made inroads with US or European audiences the way movies from countries like Japan, Hong Kong or even Iran have been able to do. The only exception has been arthouse fare, like the films of Satyajit Ray. Financially, this makes it very difficult to justify releasing these films in the west. I've talked at length about Japanese films and licensing before. Toho is notorious for being almost impossible to deal with. The other studios may be better, but that doesn't always mean that it is that much easier.
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Thanks given by: | amputd (11-17-2023), Batterdammerung (12-06-2023), bergman864 (11-17-2023), CelestialAgent (11-17-2023), CRASHLANDING (11-17-2023), edmoney (11-18-2023), EinCB128 (11-19-2023), hainesdogg (11-17-2023), HillSprinter (11-26-2023), JonBTS (11-18-2023), ravenus (11-17-2023), rickmiddlebrooks (11-17-2023), StarDestroyer52 (11-17-2023), Vinyl (11-17-2023) |
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#221626 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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At this point, the lack of P&P is a crime against humanity. Aside from the 4K of The Red Shoes about two years ago, I can't even remember the last time one of their films dropped from Criterion.
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Thanks given by: | Sifox211 (11-17-2023), Taylor3978 (11-18-2023) |
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#221627 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#221628 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Thanks given by: | DukeTogo84 (11-17-2023) |
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#221629 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#221630 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Even Indian arthouse fare for most western audiences begins and ends with Ray (and how many of them explored beyond the Apu trilogy and Charulata?). The Indian New Wave of the 70's is almost entirely ignored - Shyam Benegal, Mrinal Sen, Kumar Shahani, Mani Kaul - how many of their films have had decent international releases?
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Thanks given by: | CelestialAgent (11-17-2023) |
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#221632 | ||||||
Blu-ray Ninja
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Maybe if they do OLM on 4K, wil they also upgrade If.... to go along with it? |
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Thanks given by: | bergman864 (11-17-2023) |
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#221633 | |
Blu-ray Guru
![]() Mar 2009
UK
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the new wave stuff, though i've looked at it, i don't get the tone or approach of. i like the look of melville, but was never certain of the discs that have made it out, enough to put money on them over other stuff. if more modern french stuff had made it to dvd and blu-ray, i'd have probably focussed more on it. fwiw, i still think that even those that do buy japanese films here in the west just don't realise how prolific the studios have been. there's little apparent appetite for hunting out names and championing unreleased stuff. the biggest calls i hear for such films would be from those who get involved in the less legal routes to see things, and they're few and far between. |
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#221634 |
Expert Member
May 2021
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Saw a screening of this in the mid 2000s in a giant 1,200 seat house w his son in attendance. Bought the self distributed vhs he was selling off him there.
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Thanks given by: | bebop wino (11-17-2023) |
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#221635 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Thanks given by: | hawkikwah (11-18-2023) |
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#221636 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | bebop wino (11-17-2023) |
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#221637 |
Expert Member
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Thanks given by: | miller_time22 (11-18-2023), Shane Rollins (11-23-2023) |
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#221638 | |
Expert Member
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New York Times Oct. 5, 2023 Two Cult Classics Restored and Brimming With Chaotic Life Timothy Carey’s erratically brilliant “The World’s Greatest Sinner” and Emilio Fernández’s redemption melodrama “Victims of Sin” finally come to big screens. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/05/m...in-review.html |
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#221639 |
Blu-ray Ninja
May 2010
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Regarding Indian films, Criterion has, at their own expense, restored four of Bimal Roy's films: Do Bigha Zameen, Bandini, Madhumati, and Devdas. I would expect these to come out in 2024 as they only have a 10 year license on the titles and they only have theatrical and disc rights. (Since this news actually came out in 2022, I expected these titles to come out sometime in 2023, but they obviously didn't.)
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Thanks given by: | CelestialAgent (11-18-2023), ravenus (11-18-2023) |
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#221640 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Thanks given by: | Shane Rollins (11-23-2023) |
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