As an Amazon associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Thanks for your support!                               
×

Best Blu-ray Movie Deals


Best Blu-ray Movie Deals, See All the Deals »
Top deals | New deals  
 All countries United States United Kingdom Canada Germany France Spain Italy Australia Netherlands Japan Mexico
Batman 4-Film Collection 4K (Blu-ray)
$32.99
5 hrs ago
The Terminator 4K (Blu-ray)
$16.99
1 hr ago
The Dark Knight Trilogy 4K (Blu-ray)
$28.99
5 hrs ago
Weapons 4K (Blu-ray)
$27.95
5 hrs ago
The Mask 4K (Blu-ray)
$45.00
1 day ago
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest 4K (Blu-ray)
$29.99
7 hrs ago
I Love Lucy: The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
$44.99
4 hrs ago
Creepshow: Complete Series - Seasons 1-4 (Blu-ray)
$84.99
15 hrs ago
Batman: The Complete Television Series (Blu-ray)
$29.49
5 hrs ago
Superman I-IV 5-Film Collection 4K (Blu-ray)
$74.99
 
Joker: Folie à Deux 4K (Blu-ray)
$12.49
4 hrs ago
A Better Tomorrow Trilogy 4K (Blu-ray)
$82.99
 
What's your next favorite movie?
Join our movie community to find out


Image from: Life of Pi (2012)

Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > Blu-ray Movies - North America > Studios and Distributors
Register FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 02-20-2013, 01:37 AM   #62541
Scottie Scottie is offline
Moderator
 
Scottie's Avatar
 
Oct 2010
Rhode Island
647
Default

I just finished On The Waterfront. I am speechless.

I never saw the film before so I watched it in the 1:66:1 aspect ratio. Criterion is spot on with it's description. Marlon Brando definitely did give the performance of his career with On The Waterfront.

All I could think while watching the film was how I'm not watching actors at all - I'm watching this character.

One thing I noticed and felt was an important part of the film were the pigeons. Marlon Brando was a loner. Sure, he had the mob as his "friends" and his brother, but the pigeons were his family. He was very similar to them too. He was always caged up and restricted, just like the pigeons, and he could never break free and soar.

It's not your typical mob movie, but it is absolutely fantastic. I recommend that you guys pick it up sooner than later. It's worth whatever the current price is.

One thing I was doing throughout was changing the dialogue into modern terms with the swearing and everything. It had me laughing quite a bit. It just goes to show that you don't need excessive vulgar or extreme amounts of sex to sell a good film

By the way, tell me that Lee J. Cobb and Jason Segel do not look alike:



Quote:
Originally Posted by KrugerIndustrial View Post
My jaw literally hit the floor. We need a bigger pic.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Snicket View Post
Wow!

On a completely unrelated note, I'm going to need your real name and address as well as your hours of work. kthanksbye
Haha, thanks guys

Here's a larger picture as requested:

[Show spoiler]

Last edited by Scottie; 02-20-2013 at 01:40 AM.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 01:37 AM   #62542
Fellini912 Fellini912 is offline
Blu-ray Guru
 
Fellini912's Avatar
 
Mar 2012
USA
117
368
3
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by The Great Owl View Post
I like this analysis! The observation about lack of commitment can be applied to other areas, because I see the same end result in marathon training if someone's heart is not fully invested.

La Dolce Vita is challenging in a similar way, but it also features captivating imagery (the statue in flight, the water fountain, the chaotic party, etc.).
I strongly believe, and agree, that Fellini's imagery makes his films unique and great. Even in his weaker films Roma and Satyricon, there are scenes and images that puts me in awe. When the movie works as a whole is when you have a classic Fellini film.

I also agree that with age you tend to appreciate Fellini and Bergman more. I remember watching their films when I was 18, And think they were boring and pointless. At the same age, I thought The Matrix was the greatest movie ever.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 01:48 AM   #62543
ShellOilJunior ShellOilJunior is offline
Blu-ray Ninja
 
ShellOilJunior's Avatar
 
Mar 2009
USA
3
10
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by iScottie View Post
I just finished On The Waterfront. I am speechless.
Marlon Brando definitely did give the performance of his career with On The Waterfront.
Agreed. Many seem to think his best is The Godfather - he is great in it of course but I think his best is in Waterfront. Brando can take his craft to heights that very very few actors can reach. Jimmy Stewart in Mr. Smith is another example.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 01:59 AM   #62544
broganreynik broganreynik is offline
Blu-ray Guru
 
broganreynik's Avatar
 
Sep 2007
Nebraska
60
124
2113
111
4
46
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by iScottie View Post
By the way, tell me that Lee J. Cobb and Jason Segel do not look alike:
[Show spoiler]



Haha, I thought the same thing when I saw 12 Angry Men for the first time. I thought "He HAS to be Jason Segel's father."
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 02:02 AM   #62545
joie joie is offline
Special Member
 
joie's Avatar
 
Mar 2011
1
1
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fellini912 View Post
Great analysis of the film on 8 1/2. As an amateur artist and writer, one becomes captivated by an idea or an ideal. Artwork is made by an idea and commitment to that idea. You can have the greatest idea, but if not committed to pursue that idea, you will eventually fail (and sometimes fail miserably). The higher you are up, the harder you fall.

I think that 8 1/2 is about the lack of commitment. [..]
That's a possibility, but I thought it's more about "director's block," with the "block" something writers and directors may have in common, occasionally.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 02:10 AM   #62546
The Great Owl The Great Owl is offline
Blu-ray Archduke
 
The Great Owl's Avatar
 
Dec 2012
Georgia
921
6031
28
255
6
Default

I just finished my Criterion Blu-ray of The Lady Vanishes.

I wore my old DVD of this movie out watching the movie multiple times within the same month that I bought it, but I had even more fun revisiting it in the new format, since the transfer is spot on.

The ending of The Lady Vanishes is quite far-fetched, but stranger things have happened, and I like how everything comes together. I love how both this film and The 39 Steps rely on musical tunes for encoded information. Maybe secure websites should ask us to hum different tunes for our passwords, instead of making us type combinations of upper/lower case letters, numerals, and special characters.

Funnily enough, I never got around to watching the included Charters and Caldicott film, Crook's Tour, that comes as an extra, when I owned the DVD. I finally decided to watch it tonight after I was finished with The Lady Vanishes. It's a pleasing film, even if it does not hold a candle to the Hitchcock main feature. I'm glad that Caldicott hooked up at the end, after everything that he had been put through.

I've had a blast going through these Blu-rays of The Man Who Knew Too Much, The 39 Steps, and The Lady Vanishes. I'm going to watch some non-Hitchcock Blu-rays for a short while, then resume my course by watching my recent Blu-ray purchases of Notorious, Rebecca, and Spellbound.

Incidentally, I cannot help wondering if the underrated 1997 film, Breakdown, starring Kurt Russell, was influenced by The Lady Vanishes.



I own Breakdown on DVD (no Blu-ray availability, sadly), and saw it years before watching The Lady Vanishes for the first time, so I always think of it whenever I watch the Hitchcock film. The scenarios are remarkably similar.

Last edited by The Great Owl; 02-20-2013 at 02:13 AM.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 02:23 AM   #62547
rkish rkish is offline
Blu-ray Samurai
 
rkish's Avatar
 
May 2008
Dutchess County New York
581
57
1
Default

For those that don't know about the accomplishments of Donald Richie, the New York Times did a nice write up on him:

[Show spoiler]
Donald Richie, 88, American Expert on Japan, Is Dead.

Donald Richie, a prominent American critic and writer on Japan who helped introduce much of the English-speaking world to the golden age of Japanese cinema in 1959 and recounted his expatriate life there spanning seven decades, died on Tuesday in Tokyo. He was 88.

His death was confirmed by Christopher Blasdel, a friend.

Mr. Richie wrote prolifically, not just on film and culture in Japan but also on his own travels and experiences there. He won recognition for his soul-baring descriptions of a Westerner’s life in an impenetrable but permissive society that held him politely at arm’s length while allowing him to explore it nonetheless, from its classical arts to its seedy demimonde.

Openly bisexual, Mr. Richie also wrote frankly about his lovers, both male and female, saying Japan’s greater tolerance of homosexuality in the 1940s, relative to that in the United States, was one reason he returned to the country after graduating from Columbia University in 1953. Mr. Richie first saw Tokyo as a bombed-out ruin, arriving in 1947 as a 22-year-old typist with the Allied Occupation forces after serving on transport ships during the war. He spent most of the next 66 years in Tokyo, gaining a following among Western readers for textured descriptions of Japan and its people that transcended Western stereotypes.

“I remain in a state of surprise, and this leads to heightened interest and hence perception,” Mr. Richie wrote in his diary in 1947, describing the thrill of living abroad. “Like a child with a puzzle, I am forever putting pieces together and saying: Of course.”

His books — some 40 altogether — were wide-ranging, including historical novels, studies of flower arranging and travelogues, which were widely praised for humanizing a people still remembered in the United States as a wartime foe. Perhaps his best-known travel memoir, “The Inland Sea” (1971), was the basis of a documentary shown on PBS in 1991.

Mr. Richie made his biggest mark in his writings on Japanese cinema. In 1959, he and the critic Joseph L. Anderson published “The Japanese Film: Art and Industry,” which many film studies experts regard as the first comprehensive English-language book on Japanese movies.

In his memoir, “The Japan Journals, 1947-2004,” Mr. Richie recounted how in the late 1940s he paid his first visit to a Japanese studio, where he met a director in a white floppy hat and “someone I guessed was a star” wearing “a loose Hawaii-shirt.” Thus began Mr. Richie’s enduring acquaintance with two of the giants of Japanese cinema, the director Akiro Kurosawa and the actor Toshiro Mifune.

Mr. Richie went on to write several books on Mr. Kurosawa and his films, including the 1950 samurai mystery “Rashomon,” whose innovative shifting of perspective among characters won the director global renown. (Mr. Richie wrote English subtitles for three of Mr. Kurosawa’s films.)

Mr. Richie also drew attention to another brilliant Japanese director, Yasujiro Ozu, whose sparse and subtle handling of themes like family, as in “Tokyo Story” (1953), influenced Western directors, including Wim Wenders.

“Donald Richie was the one to get these films shown abroad,” said Aaron Gerow, a professor of Japanese cinema at Yale. “He was the first gatekeeper of Japanese film for the English-language world.”

Mr. Richie met and wrote about many of the more colorful figures of postwar Japan, among them the novelist Yukio Mishima, who killed himself by ritual disembowelment in 1970. Mr. Richie struggled to make sense of the suicide, often interpreted here as an effort to draw attention to the nation’s loss of martial spirit, and expressed mild exasperation with Mr. Mishima’s widow for seeking to hide her husband’s embrace of homosexuality.

Mr. Richie came to bemoan the changes that transformed Japan from the mostly agrarian country he found in the 1940s into an industrialized landscape of unrestrained public works and American-style commercial development.

“It was the most beautiful country I’d ever seen in my life,” he wrote in 1992, “and now it’s just about the ugliest.”

Donald Richie was born in Lima, Ohio, on April 17, 1924, and lived most of his life alone, though he was briefly married to Mary Richie, an American writer.

“Donald had a sensibility that was not nurtured where he grew up,” said his friend Mr. Blasdel, artistic director of Tokyo’s International House. “He was warm but also kept his distance, even in his personal relationships. This gives his writing a sense of passionately caring, but also of objectivity and truthfulness.”

Mr. Richie said he never sought to become a Japanese citizen, but instead seemed to revel in his position on the margins of Japanese society, which, he wrote, offered him far greater personal freedom than he could have had back in Ohio.

“I may have rejected the U.S.A. where I was born,” Mr. Richie wrote in his memoir, “but I did not decide to be Japanese. That is an impossible decision, since the Japanese prevent it. Rather, I decided to decorate Limbo and become a citizen of this most attractive, intensely democratic republic.”
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 02:30 AM   #62548
metaridley metaridley is offline
Banned
 
Feb 2012
Default

I know I'll probably get flamed for this but awhile back I watched Amarcord, which is to date the only Fellini film I've seen and didn't like it very much. (The scene with the lady with the gigantic tits was really funny, though.) A lot of crude humor that I didn't warm up to. Hasn't made me want to check out any more of Fillini's filmography.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 02:35 AM   #62549
ElliesDad ElliesDad is offline
Expert Member
 
ElliesDad's Avatar
 
May 2011
Central Fraser Valley
399
111
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by bdmartin134 View Post
I am envious of a 'blind-buy' for Tree of Life.. I wish I could see this film for the first time again. I saw it twice in an art theater in Atlanta when it was first released and it was packed full of the 'general' moviegoer, assuming a Brad Pitt and Sean Penn film would be a little more exciting than this. I use 'general' moviegoer in a way that these people don't go to a film excited to see a Malick film, they just read their PEOPLE and go to see what the buzz is about. Needless to say, the audience was very disappointed and made sure their opinion was heard to every other person waiting in the line to buy tickets. Phrases like, "Worst movie ever, don't waste your money," were being spewed to anyone just waiting in line, not even particularly seeing ToL.
Tree of Life resonates with certain individuals more than it might with others, because, surprise here, movies are subjective. I connected with it completely, and consider it one of the best films I've seen. I love/fear the questions that are presented. The direct questions to God, and the indirect to the audience, if this makes sense...kinda rambling now.
Anyways, great film that needs to be seen with a complete open mind and no preconceived expectations, even though it seemed I hyped it up a lot in the previous paragraph.
The fact that the caliber of individual who would be obnoxious enough to openly tear into a film that people were lining up to see, did not like the film, bespeaks volumes on the merit of the film itself. Their distain can only be taken as a compliment and recommendation.

Incidentally, nice collection...
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 02:45 AM   #62550
IronWaffle IronWaffle is offline
Special Member
 
IronWaffle's Avatar
 
Oct 2010
Columbia, MD
106
793
46
80
16
3
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by ElliesDad View Post
The fact that the caliber of individual who would be obnoxious enough to openly tear into a film that people were lining up to see, did not like the film, bespeaks volumes on the merit of the film itself. Their distain can only be taken as a compliment and recommendation.
Well said.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 02:57 AM   #62551
retablo retablo is offline
Banned
 
Jul 2007
Hollywood
1307
1
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by iScottie View Post
Here's a larger picture as requested:

[Show spoiler]
Awesome to see you also have the OOP Flamenco Trilogy Eclipse set. What a marvel. Anyone know why it went OOP so fast?
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:00 AM   #62552
ElliesDad ElliesDad is offline
Expert Member
 
ElliesDad's Avatar
 
May 2011
Central Fraser Valley
399
111
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by IronWaffle View Post
Well said.
La, sir! I blush...
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:06 AM   #62553
R o d R o d is offline
Member
 
R o d's Avatar
 
Dec 2012
90
648
263
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by iScottie View Post
I just finished On The Waterfront. I am speechless.

I never saw the film before so I watched it in the 1:66:1 aspect ratio. Criterion is spot on with it's description. Marlon Brando definitely did give the performance of his career with On The Waterfront.

All I could think while watching the film was how I'm not watching actors at all - I'm watching this character.
You're right about Waterfront. There's much to admire here. In fact I've always felt that the taxi scene is the best 5 minutes in movie history. There's a lot more to this scene than the famous line we've all heard.
[Show spoiler]The framing, lighting, music, street sounds, and most importantly the well-crafted exchange between two of the most gifted actors of all time. Consider when Steiger tells Brando, "It's time to think about getting some ambition," to which Brando rather playfully replies, "I always figured I'd live a little bit longer without it." And then the way Steiger says "maybe" but puts the accent on the last syllable.

Consider the timing when Steiger yells, "What the h..." and his last word is cut off by a car horn, or the way Brando turns his head and his eyes dart back and forth when Steiger tells him to "make up your mind before we get to 437 River Street."

Consider the way Brando reacts when Steiger pulls a gun. Elia Kazan would later would say: "What other actor, when his brother draws a pistol to force him to do something shameful, would put his hand on the gun and push it away with the gentleness of a caress? Who else could read 'Oh, Charley' in a tone of reproach that is so loving and so melancholy and suggests the terrific depth of pain?"

Consider the repressed sadness on Steiger's face when Brando says, "It wasn't him, Charley, it was you."
Wow! I mean, movies don't get any better than this.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:31 AM   #62554
Fellini912 Fellini912 is offline
Blu-ray Guru
 
Fellini912's Avatar
 
Mar 2012
USA
117
368
3
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by joie View Post
That's a possibility, but I thought it's more about "director's block," with the "block" something writers and directors may have in common, occasionally.
Yes, I agree that the 8 1/2 is about director's block. I hate to answer a question with a question, but what is a writer's or director's block?

To me a writer's block, in a general sense, is when you can not come up with an idea for your next story. But now if you are half way through your story and can not finish it, I believe that is due to the lack of structure or commitment.

Maybe there are artists here that approach their artwork differently. Before I start writing, drawing or composing music, I find a subject. Then I continue with an outline. Finally, I flesh out the story or drawing. Now if you start a project without the first two steps, I think you looking for a disaster. I think this basic structure can almost guarantee you at least a finished piece. Well there are exceptions to the rule, for example Jack Kerouac's On The Road scroll. Stream of conscious is a literary device and not a substitute for proper structure.

Directing is a whole different game. I think Guido is also the script writer. He has his producer prying him to get on with the project which he does not have a script, but has a general idea. Funding is very important element in movie making, there are deadlines, etc.

In conclusion, 8 1/2 is about a mixture of director's block, a lack of structure and commitment in one's artwork and cultural ideals. Guido in the end appears to be an empty promise.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:34 AM   #62555
Scottie Scottie is offline
Moderator
 
Scottie's Avatar
 
Oct 2010
Rhode Island
647
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by retablo View Post
Awesome to see you also have the OOP Flamenco Trilogy Eclipse set. What a marvel. Anyone know why it went OOP so fast?
No idea, but I have a feeling that Kenji Mizoguchi's Fallen Women will be OOP next. I need to find a copy soon. Every website is pretty much backordered or incredibly high priced.

Quote:
Originally Posted by R o d View Post
You're right about Waterfront. There's much to admire here. In fact I've always felt that the taxi scene is the best 5 minutes in movie history. There's a lot more to this scene than the famous line we've all heard.
[Show spoiler]The framing, lighting, music, street sounds, and most importantly the well-crafted exchange between two of the most gifted actors of all time. Consider when Steiger tells Brando, "It's time to think about getting some ambition," to which Brando rather playfully replies, "I always figured I'd live a little bit longer without it." And then the way Steiger says "maybe" but puts the accent on the last syllable.

Consider the timing when Steiger yells, "What the h..." and his last word is cut off by a car horn, or the way Brando turns his head and his eyes dart back and forth when Steiger tells him to "make up your mind before we get to 437 River Street."

Consider the way Brando reacts when Steiger pulls a gun. Elia Kazan would later would say: "What other actor, when his brother draws a pistol to force him to do something shameful, would put his hand on the gun and push it away with the gentleness of a caress? Who else could read 'Oh, Charley' in a tone of reproach that is so loving and so melancholy and suggests the terrific depth of pain?"

Consider the repressed sadness on Steiger's face when Brando says, "It wasn't him, Charley, it was you."
Wow! I mean, movies don't get any better than this.
Those are some good points that you made.

I really liked how certain dialogue in the film was cut out by the sounds of ships, cars, etc., especially when deep conflict aroused. I.E. emotions running rampant.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:44 AM   #62556
Sukuri Sukuri is offline
Active Member
 
Sukuri's Avatar
 
Oct 2009
Canada
-
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by retablo View Post
Awesome to see you also have the OOP Flamenco Trilogy Eclipse set. What a marvel. Anyone know why it went OOP so fast?
I think I read somewhere that it was taken back by Studio Canal as part of their take back all the Studio Canal titles.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:46 AM   #62557
Fellini912 Fellini912 is offline
Blu-ray Guru
 
Fellini912's Avatar
 
Mar 2012
USA
117
368
3
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by metaridley View Post
I know I'll probably get flamed for this but awhile back I watched Amarcord, which is to date the only Fellini film I've seen and didn't like it very much. (The scene with the lady with the gigantic tits was really funny, though.) A lot of crude humor that I didn't warm up to. Hasn't made me want to check out any more of Fillini's filmography.
Fellini's later films can be difficult to watch. If you want to give him a try again, I highly recommend 8 1/2. If you like Italian neorealism, try La Strada Fellini's more coherent films. If you liked his bizarre scenes, try Satyricon (it is about the Roman Empire's decadence - based on Petronius' story). Petronius was Emperor Nero's poet, so the movie is not for the faint of heart.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:49 AM   #62558
drbikeshorts drbikeshorts is offline
Special Member
 
drbikeshorts's Avatar
 
Aug 2009
Australia
12
1244
55
2
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by bdmartin134 View Post
I am envious of a 'blind-buy' for Tree of Life.. I wish I could see this film for the first time again. I saw it twice in an art theater in Atlanta when it was first released and it was packed full of the 'general' moviegoer, assuming a Brad Pitt and Sean Penn film would be a little more exciting than this. I use 'general' moviegoer in a way that these people don't go to a film excited to see a Malick film, they just read their PEOPLE and go to see what the buzz is about. Needless to say, the audience was very disappointed and made sure their opinion was heard to every other person waiting in the line to buy tickets. Phrases like, "Worst movie ever, don't waste your money," were being spewed to anyone just waiting in line, not even particularly seeing ToL.
Tree of Life resonates with certain individuals more than it might with others, because, surprise here, movies are subjective. I connected with it completely, and consider it one of the best films I've seen. I love/fear the questions that are presented. The direct questions to God, and the indirect to the audience, if this makes sense...kinda rambling now.
Anyways, great film that needs to be seen with a complete open mind and no preconceived expectations, even though it seemed I hyped it up a lot in the previous paragraph.
One of my wife's friends was explaining that she saw Tree of Life.
"Yeah, we saw the new Brad Pitt film. It was a bit different. I'd describe as an 'arthouse' film."
Pretty funny. But in reality, I'm sure this is how a lot of people ended up seeing the film. Which is kind of amazing to me.
Tree of Life is about 2 hours and 20 minutes. Throw in time for travel to and from the cinema. Maybe a meal. Add in extra costs if you need a baby-sitter. Perhaps this is also your one night of the week to go out and you've just spent up to or over 4 hours... Why would you throw all that away on a film you know nothing about?
Then again, it's not as funny as the time I saw Salo: the film has been banned on and off in Australia for a number of years, so when it does become available a lot of people come out to see this infamous film. I was standing in a large queue out the door and there was a small group of people in front of me. One of the group asked one of their friends, "So, what's this film about?"

For what it's worth, I loved seeing Tree of Life in the cinema: a beautiful experience that had me feeling emotional and inarticulate for the whole film.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:52 AM   #62559
A Sith Lord? A Sith Lord? is offline
Blu-ray Knight
 
A Sith Lord?'s Avatar
 
Dec 2012
1
575
30
1
1272
49
Default

Picked up On the Waterfront box from Moviestop today (had a bunch of store credit and also had to pickup Monsters Inc. 3D and Argo).

Going to go through with my Fry's order here pretty soon!
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-20-2013, 03:57 AM   #62560
Hendershot737 Hendershot737 is offline
Active Member
 
Hendershot737's Avatar
 
Mar 2009
Millbrae, CA
399
13
Default

Wow...well done. Many members here are envious.


Quote:
Originally Posted by iScottie View Post
I just finished On The Waterfront. I am speechless.

I never saw the film before so I watched it in the 1:66:1 aspect ratio. Criterion is spot on with it's description. Marlon Brando definitely did give the performance of his career with On The Waterfront.

All I could think while watching the film was how I'm not watching actors at all - I'm watching this character.

One thing I noticed and felt was an important part of the film were the pigeons. Marlon Brando was a loner. Sure, he had the mob as his "friends" and his brother, but the pigeons were his family. He was very similar to them too. He was always caged up and restricted, just like the pigeons, and he could never break free and soar.

It's not your typical mob movie, but it is absolutely fantastic. I recommend that you guys pick it up sooner than later. It's worth whatever the current price is.

One thing I was doing throughout was changing the dialogue into modern terms with the swearing and everything. It had me laughing quite a bit. It just goes to show that you don't need excessive vulgar or extreme amounts of sex to sell a good film

By the way, tell me that Lee J. Cobb and Jason Segel do not look alike:







Haha, thanks guys

Here's a larger picture as requested:

[Show spoiler]
  Reply With Quote
Reply
Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > Blu-ray Movies - North America > Studios and Distributors

Similar Threads
thread Forum Thread Starter Replies Last Post
Criterion Collection Wish Lists Chushajo 26 08-14-2025 12:45 PM
Criterion Collection? Newbie Discussion ChitoAD 68 01-02-2019 10:14 PM
Criterion Collection Question. . . Blu-ray Movies - North America billypoe 31 01-18-2009 02:52 PM
The Criterion Collection goes Blu! Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology bferr1 164 05-10-2008 02:59 PM



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 12:12 PM.