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#28742 | |
Banned
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"But the Disney must be a classic, it got an Oscar 'n stuff!"...I can take Jiminy Cricket, dwarves with names, and mermaids with happy endings, but the graffiti Linda scrawled over the original story was nothing short of character assassination. ![]() So... ![]() I know it's preaching to the choir on a Criterion thread, but just to get a more or less unscientific sampling of what people think the "real" story is like. It's one step on the road to cultural therapy. (I've advocated that parents show it to their kids at least once instead-- Or, if it's a bit too dark for the youngers, at least the analogous Roger Vadim-directed episode of "Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theater", which basically cribbed every Cocteau shot in color, and substituted Susan Sarandon and Klaus Kinski.) Last edited by EricJ; 04-17-2011 at 04:43 AM. |
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#28743 |
Blu-ray Champion
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I'm a fan of both the Cocteau film and the Disney film. This'll be my third time owning the Cocteau (DVD, DVD re-release, BD), and I happily purchased the Disney film for the third time (VHS, DVD, BD). There's plenty to enjoy in both.
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#28744 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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My first viewing of Cocteau's Beauty and the Beast was about nine years ago, but I saw Coppola's Dracula when it was first released. Coppola cribbed a LOT from Cocteau when he made his Dracula. One of the special features on the Criterion Bram Stoker's Dracula laserdisc showed clips from Beauty and the Beast and compared them to similar sequences in Dracula. That was actually my first exposure to Cocteau's film.
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#28745 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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While I say this all the time about a variety of films, you have to understand these films within the context of their time, including what it was like to make a very low budget anti-Hollywood movie. Unless you watch movies made for the internet, we don't have films at all like this today. These were made by new filmmakers who were experimenting with the form. "A Safe Place" is probably the worst of the bunch. Tuesday Weld plays a very selfish woman (or maybe two) in a story that is both confusing and goes nowhere. Orson Welles is in the movie in an obvious and terrible performance that I think was purposely bad. (Maybe he was pissed that he wasn't getting paid much.) "Drive, He Said" is about a college basketball star who tries to have an affair with a mentor's wife. It was considered to be a very personal and radical film in its time, but it doesn't hold up well today. "Head" is a mess (even though it was "written" by Jack Nicholson) and I've always harbored a suspicion that it was made purposely to destroy the Monkees career. The picture did nothing commercially because it was too confusing and too different from the TV show for the young, largely female Monkees fans and hipper audiences wouldn't see it because it was the Monkees. I think you had to be stoned to see this one. IIRC, the Blu-ray.com reviewer loved this film, but different strokes... "The King of Marvin Gardens" is a pretty good character piece with some fine performances as is "Five Easy Pieces", even if Nicholson's character is unlikable. "Easy Rider" is probably the most commercial of all the films and has a great soundtrack, which is interesting because when they made it, they probably thought it was the most radical. It also shows some small towns and cultures in the U.S. that simply don't exist anymore. And Peter Bogdonovich's "The Last Picture Show" is easily the best of the lot with a fine story, a great performance from a very young Jeff Bridges, Cybill Shepard playing essentially the same character she would play in "The Hearbreak Kid", as well as Ben Johnson (Sugarland Express), Cloris Leachman (Young Frankenstein), Ellen Burstyn (The Exorcist) and Eilenn Brennan (The Sting, Private Benjamin, FM). Also beautiful black & white photography and brief frontal nudity, which was shocking in its time. All IMO, of course. Last edited by ZoetMB; 04-17-2011 at 05:12 AM. |
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#28746 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Sep 2009
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They also have a new album that came out a week or 2 ago and still need to pick up. Like I said, I don't really listen to alot of today's bands, but I made a connection with them due to my likes of The Velvets, the Warhol scene, etc. With her, I follow The Dead Weather stuff, but that is hit or miss (loved most of the 1st album), due to me not being a huge Jack White fan, but I respect his stance in today's music scene and would gladly listen to him than everything you see on T.V. (what little of music is left on T.V.). My taste in music is everywhere though. Last edited by SpiderBaby; 04-17-2011 at 05:23 AM. |
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#28747 | |
Banned
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Yes, there were stories that Disney "didn't know what to do" with the long passage of time in the original tale and felt they had to creatively make up for it--But that still didn't excuse their version turning the Beast into a loud, selfish jerk who is "punished" for his insensitivity, and Beauty into the soul of progressive feminism(she's the only one in her village who--gasp!--reads books!) who must show him the error of his testosterone-driven ways. In the original tale, the Beast is generous but trapped by his own misunderstood angst, and it's Beauty who has to learn the lesson about seeing past appearances...But, heavens, we can't have the female character learning lessons, that might suggest they were imperfect! (Again, if you cringed watching what Linda did with "Alice", you ain't seen clueless yet. ![]() The Cocteau captured the eerie-corridor sense of magic in the castle, and the ominous elegance of a dinner table that didn't sing and dance. (Come to think of it, that's a pretty good Three Reasons suggestion: "#3: The Candelabras don't sing.") ![]() ...Sheesh, even Ron Perlman and Linda Hamilton, with their Shakespearean sonnets and medieval sewers, got closer to the spirit of the original tale than Disney! ![]() Last edited by EricJ; 04-17-2011 at 08:07 AM. |
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#28748 | |
Expert Member
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And Howard Ashman was one of the finest lyricist of his day. |
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#28749 |
Active Member
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I'd like to know, why is it important to get the essence of the original tale? The Disney film is different from the original story and the 1946 film, but that hardly makes it less worthy. To my mind it is a beautiful film, with a more engaging emotional core than either the original story or the Cocteau film. I love the 1946 version, with its gothic beauty and stunning surreal effects work. But I find that film to be at once more atmospheric and more cerebral. The Disney version attempts just enough atmosphere and intellectualism in order to hold up some more developed characters and stronger emotional beats. As much as I love watching Cocteau's Beauty and the Beast, I don't cry like I do when Belle's tears bring the Beast back to life. Two different approaches, and in my mind both are amazing examples of cinema.
I also don't think the film is dated at all, and the music is some of the finest for a musical film since the 60s, or maybe earlier. In fact, I always wish there had been more songs instead of dialogue scenes. Ashman was something of a genius and it's so unfortunate we lost him so early. |
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#28750 | |
Special Member
Feb 2010
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Edit - back to Le Cercle Rouge, I think the first three caps in Beaver - Mattei in the train carriage and on the ground, and Corey in Rico's apartment illustrate the colour differences best. Last edited by charnier; 04-17-2011 at 11:09 AM. |
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#28751 | |
Active Member
Jan 2010
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#28752 |
Expert Member
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Hello Criterion collectors.
This is a bit off topic (not about the newest releases) but I am trying to collect all of the spines and had a couple of questions. First, I bought a copy of "The Harder They Come" and the audio on it sounds pretty terrible IMO. The dialogue sounds very sibilant, tinny, and thin, as does the music on the soundtrack. Has anyone else experienced this? ![]() Also, what should be the "top dollar" paid for a legit (frosted white ring and nimbus logo) copy of "The Killer" DVD? I have tracked down a copy that may be legit, I have e-mailed the guy asking for info and pics, but he wants $150.00 for it...that seems a bit steep to me. What do all of you think? ![]() Thanks. -Dave |
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#28753 |
Member
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#28754 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Sep 2009
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#28755 | |
Expert Member
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![]() I wish that was the case, as I would (probably) be about done with tracking down all of the OOP Criterions and working on getting all of the in print BDs. ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#28756 | |
Expert Member
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They only person perceiving a Cocteau vs Disney war is you. It seems like everyone else knows that this isn't Highlander. Remember when everyone still liked Casablanca after Barb Wire came out? |
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#28757 | |
Power Member
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If you buy on Amazon, you are protected. Ask for pictures from the seller(s). I saw several that were much more affordable. |
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#28758 | |
Power Member
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#28759 | |
Banned
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At least it WAS, before Disney gave the girl top billing. ![]() (That's probably why Woolverton dumping all the blame on The Guy just rankled right up my spine, when the original Beast had enough to deal with already: How much does a guy have to DO, to get a little respect for himself? ![]() |
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#28760 | |
Expert Member
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Out of curiosity, do you guys react as strongly when adaptations of Peter Pan tell the story as Peter's story, even though the story is really about Wendy coming to terms with growing up? Or is it that boys just won't relate to girl characters because they have cooties? |
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