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#218441 |
Blu-ray Guru
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#218443 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Now I can stop being one of these people asking for After Hours every month or so! My brother even phoned me up to tell me! One False Move as well? Incredible!
Think this is the first line up in a while that I'm really excited about! Great news. Last edited by dtower182; 04-15-2023 at 06:54 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | Fabi T (04-15-2023) |
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#218445 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Thanks given by: | AreaFive (04-16-2023), Banned User (04-17-2023), DukeTogo84 (04-15-2023), Stewynewy (04-16-2023), Vinyl (04-16-2023) |
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#218446 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Thanks given by: | Banned User (04-17-2023), BorisKarloffice (04-15-2023), Cremildo (04-15-2023), JonBTS (04-17-2023), Professor Echo (04-15-2023), Rayjg (04-16-2023), Stewynewy (04-16-2023) |
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#218448 |
Active Member
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Long time lurker here. I've posted in this thread before, but the last time was back in 2020. Thank you all for the news, knowledge, friendly debates, etc.
Anyway, I finally watched After Hours for the first time last weekend after reading all of the posts on here about it over the last several years. My short review is that it was one of the greatest film watching experiences I've ever had. I was hooked from beginning to end and had no idea what would happen next. I get it now guys. [Show spoiler] Martin Scorsese has an interestingly diverse filmography to me. I find value in all of his films that I have watched so far. Although, I prefer the Age of Innocence, the Aviator, and now After Hours over films like Goodfellas and Raging Bull...Please don't throw tomatoes. I'll see myself out. I really do hope we get a box set of films by that director that happened to make several critically acclaimed films with Toshiro Mifune. I won't mention the director's name directly, so hopefully it doesn't get pushed back another year. Other than that box set, a 4K of Kill Bill The Whole Bloody Affair is what I want most. I will take it from Criterion or Miramax or whomever currently has the rights to it. |
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Thanks given by: | BadBart (04-15-2023), dkelly26666 (04-15-2023), DonB (04-16-2023), JonBTS (04-17-2023), jw007 (04-16-2023) |
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#218449 |
Blu-ray Baron
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I saw High Sierra today on the Criterion blu. I suppose it could be because I have seen several cooler Bogart movies before, like Big Sleep, Maltese Falcon, In a Lonely Place etc but this one struck me as a rather routine programmer, a stodgy melodrama which relies on Bogie to sell a not particularly well-written character.
At the beginning, Bogie has just had an early release from prison, when he is propositioned by an old colleague for another job, involving robbing a hotel deposit safe after the place is filled with wealthy tourists. There are 2 other accomplices in the job, and when Bogie meets up with them, he finds to his contempt, them fighting over a woman they brought along (Ida Lupino). He wants to send the dame away, but she convinces him to let her stay. In the meanwhile Bogie also comes across a traveling family with a young girl he develops feelings for. Of course, Ida has the hots for Bogie but he keeps her at a distance. Things go wrong in the job, and suddenly Bogie and Ida Lupino are on the run. There is a showdown in the titular mountains. All of the above on paper sounds good, but the film stumbles on the tone. A lot of it is a not particularly artful melodrama. The manner in which Bogie falls for the young girl is not convincing, which makes the denouement of that thread a stodgy and painful process to sit through. There's a stereotype comic relief black character with protruding eye-balls and a slow manner. There's also a cute dog character that would really have been more at home in a screwball comedy than a film like this. In John Huston's script there is little of The Maltese Falcon's acid wit or The Big Sleep's bitter poetry. Individual moments shine and that climax shot on location in the mountains is a doozy, but the bulk of High Sierra is rather dull flatland. The A/V on the Criterion blu-ray is generally quite good, save for some source inherited issues. Extras include an hour-long archival docu on Bogart, a feature-length piece on director Raoul Walsh, an old retrospective on the film's production, and some new featurettes on the director and on the problematic legacy of black actors of that era like Willie Best. And oh, there's a whole other feature, a Walsh directed Western called Colorado Territory, which is apparently inspired by the same plot as High Sierra. Given that the best part of this movie for me was the very Western like showdown at the end, perhaps that one will work better for me as a movie. ![]() Last edited by ravenus; 04-17-2023 at 11:19 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | billy pilgrim (04-16-2023), DukeTogo84 (04-15-2023) |
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#218451 | |
Expert Member
Feb 2023
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Besides Bogart, the other strength of this film is Ida Lupino. She is one of the greatest actors from Warner Brothers' Golden Age, and it is she that makes her relationship with Bogart convincing and moving. She is also wonderful in They Drive By Night and On Dangerous Ground (my favorite Nick Ray film, I despised In a Lonely Place). Other young actors who were much bigger later are Cornell Wilde and Arthur Kennedy. This film is the swan song for the 1930s gangster films, Roy Earle is obvously based on John Dillinger (if Dillinger had served time instead of being killed outside the Biograph theater). But it is also a tragedy. This is not White Heat, Earle has served time and relishes his time in the park when he gets out, but now he has to pay the price for his pardon. His love for Velma is hopeless and painful to watch, that's the whole point, he and Velma are not going to sit down with a farm someday. The dog Pard is not a Disney touch, Pard always brings misfortune to everyone he attaches to, foreshadowing Roy's doom. I have to agree that the Algernon Step'n'Fetchit character is painful and embarrassing. This was only a couple of years after Gone With The Wind. Among the extras with the Criterion disk is a documentary about Raoul Walsh. Lee Marvin makes an interesting point about these great larger than life directors that we don't see any more (thinking of the Carl Denham character that was so important to King King, who was obviously based on the real director Merian C. Cooper). There were several remakes of High Sierra. There was a Jack Palance version in the 1950s that had the advantage of widescreen, it is not a patch on this version, in case anyone doubts the excellence of this film. Walsh himself remade it as a Western with Joel McCrea. And it's an obvious inspiration for Peckinpah's The Getaway, which does not hold a candle to High Sierra for its tragedy. |
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Thanks given by: | belcherman (04-15-2023), deadheadbill (04-16-2023), Professor Echo (04-25-2023), WillieMLF (04-17-2023) |
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#218452 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Then Warners remade it again as I Died a Thousand Times with Jack Palance in the Roy Earle role. |
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Thanks given by: | Doc Moonlight (04-16-2023) |
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#218454 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jul 2012
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He's done so many different things. I love all of his films. |
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Thanks given by: | deadheadbill (04-16-2023), Meek12345 (04-15-2023) |
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#218455 |
Senior Member
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Absolutely. I mean, the man has a whole damn religion trilogy that’s arguably one of the great yearning cinematic spirituality statements ever made. He directed one of the all-time great female-led films of all time right out of the gate with Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore. His percentage of gangster films compared with total output is less than Coppola’s, but HE gets tagged as the gangster director. It’s revoltingly unfair and grossly inaccurate.
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Thanks given by: | dkelly26666 (04-16-2023), Meek12345 (04-16-2023) |
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#218456 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#218457 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jul 2012
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Thanks given by: | bergman864 (04-16-2023), DukeTogo84 (04-16-2023) |
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#218458 |
Senior Member
Feb 2015
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