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#189382 |
Blu-ray Baron
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I also noticed macroblocking in the opening credits to the Criterion disc, so hopefully then can improve upon the compression.
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Thanks given by: | professorwho (07-22-2019) |
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#189383 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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#189384 |
Active Member
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What are you guys doing with the individual releases of the Bergman titles that many of you likely have now that you own the box set? I have 5 of the individual titles and I'm trying to decide what I should do with them. Shelf space is at a premium but I also like the packaging, etc. of some of them.
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#189385 |
Senior Member
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So I had an issue with my copy of High and Low, tried to send Criterion a message last week, never heard back. What's the best way to get in contact with them? I used this email mulvaney@criterion.com
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#189386 | |
Active Member
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#189387 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The Seventh Seal Wild Strawberries Cries & Whispers Autumn Sonata as a lot. I kept Persona and Fanny & Alexander because of the packaging. |
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Thanks given by: | Gatorshea (07-22-2019) |
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#189388 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#189390 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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It's actually based on the exact posters, and their locations they have in their office. Not me below.
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Thanks given by: | bonehica (07-22-2019), Dailyan (07-22-2019), diskspinner (07-23-2019), gigan72 (07-22-2019), jw007 (07-23-2019), Kyle15 (07-22-2019), maytropolees (07-22-2019), professorwho (07-22-2019), StarDestroyer52 (07-22-2019), The Sovereign (07-22-2019) |
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#189391 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#189393 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#189394 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Thanks, Criterion!
![]() John Klute, a Pennsylvania private detective played by Donald Sutherland, travels to New York City to investigate the disappearance of a family friend, a chemical company executive. His only lead is an obscene typewritten letter that the missing man supposedly wrote to a call girl named Bree. The woman in question, played by Jane Fonda, aspires to be an actress or a model, but refuses to close the door on her career as a prostitute because it endows her with a sense of empowerment that assuages the repeated rejections from agents during her search for a more prestigious line of work. After Klute establishes a connection with Bree and enlists in her help to become familiar with the sex trade underworld of the city, the two gradually develop a mutual trust and an intimate relationship, but a mysterious stranger is also watching and following them. The 1971 crime thriller, Klute, is a beautifully nuanced endeavor that superimposes its atmospheric neo-noir leanings over a character study framework. In his first film of a “paranoia trilogy” that also includes The Parallax View (1974) and All the President's Men (1976), director Alan J. Pakula effectively juggles the leisurely-paced examination of Fonda's call girl with a steadily escalating mystery that, thanks to the unnerving music score by Michael Small, convinces us that menacing eyes are tracking every moment of our two multilayered protagonists. A cast of strong supporting actors, including Roy Scheider (Jaws) as Bree's former pimp, Dorothy Tristan (Scarecrow) as a junkie prostitute, and Charles Cioffi (Shaft) as a businessman, lends a lived-in authenticity to the proceedings. Jane Fonda, in the role that earned her a Best Actress Academy Award, is entrancing as an assertive figure whose inner vulnerability manifests itself in subtle ways. Fonda's much-publicized involvement in politics at the time only serves to enhance the verisimilitude of her call girl character's idiosyncrasies, especially when Bree is shown relaxing with a book in the privacy of her home, heard on tape recordings as she soothes the nerves of her johns during sessions, or seen during visits to a therapist. After preparing for the part by getting to know several actual sex workers in the city, she applied her strong feminist leanings in a non-heavy-handed way to complete the picture of a resilient person with many angles. The end result is one of my favorite female performances that I have seen in all of my years as a moviegoer. It is a testament to her acting talent that I feel as though I am spying on a real person as I watch her fictional persona on the screen. Donald Sutherland, in turn, combines stoic iciness with loving concern in an undeniably charismatic way that he also perfected in other 1970s works like Don't Look Now and Invasion of the Body Snatchers. One of the true joys of this film is watching how Bree's initial disdain toward Sutherland's Klute gradually dissolves as he lets his protective instincts govern his interactions with her. While Fonda excels at showing us how her call girl is inwardly afraid of giving herself over to someone in a complete way, Sutherland shines as a man whose policeman-like exterior appears similarly trouble as he lets his affection for this woman take hold. Klute shows its cards earlier than expected with regard to the identity of the villain, but this reveal does not diminish the urgency of the narrative in the slightest, thanks to the noir-edged cinematography that makes darkness a character in its own right and to a chilling overall aesthetic that would later grace the better entries of the slasher horror genre that rose to popularity a few years later. More than anything, though, this film's blend of 1970s cynicism and romantic chemistry is what really makes its seemingly disparate elements come together as a masterful whole. This Criterion Blu-ray delivers the technical goods with a nicely fllmic video transfer and an audio presentation that brings out the best in Michael Small's music that makes us hear things that may or may not be there. A present-day interview with Jane Fonda by Illeana Douglas is the lion's roar of the supplementary features, but I also love the older television interview footage of the actress. Another great extra, The Look of "Klute", sheds more light on the film's visual appeal. |
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Thanks given by: | Abdrewes (07-22-2019), belcherman (07-23-2019), maytropolees (07-22-2019), Reddington (07-22-2019), Sifox211 (07-22-2019), softunderbelly (07-23-2019), The Sovereign (07-23-2019), thebalconyfool (07-22-2019) |
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#189396 | |
Banned
Jul 2019
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I wonder if anybody double dipped on Dr Strangelove. The pop art/steelbook version is cooler than the Criterion version. |
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#189397 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#189398 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Feb 2018
Pembroke, Ontario, Canada
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It is pretty nice: ![]() |
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#189400 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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