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Old 07-01-2018, 06:21 PM   #177701
YouGotMeFeelingBlu YouGotMeFeelingBlu is offline
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Picked up the Jacques Tati set and now I'm thinking of picking up the Jacques Demy one. Worth it?
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Old 07-01-2018, 06:28 PM   #177702
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdw89 View Post
Hey all, I don’t post in this thread often so here goes...

I’m trying to build a film noir collection and I know the Criterion sale is ongoing now at Barnes and Noble, does anyone happen to know all of the film noir films that Criterion has released thus far? And a second question, which ones would be in a higher priority list to get? Thank you!
Your in luck its one of the Criterion Filters
e.g here are the Film Noir Blu-ray's
https://www.criterion.com/shop/brows...format=blu-ray
From that list, there are a lot of good titles.


Unfortunately my top rated Film Noir title is out of Print, the Criterion version of "The Third Man". Non-Criterion version are available
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Old 07-01-2018, 06:29 PM   #177703
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Originally Posted by evilive View Post
My picks:


All blind buys with the exception of Seven Samurai. I'm still really tempted on grabbing Haxan on dvd, but still holding out for a blu-ray. Going back for another round in the next few weeks.
I want to get Ride The Pink Horse, maybe the next sale since there are other titles I want to place the 1st week of August.
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Old 07-01-2018, 06:37 PM   #177704
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I think that's all I can do this time

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Old 07-01-2018, 06:37 PM   #177705
StarDestroyer52 StarDestroyer52 is offline
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Originally Posted by Martin_31 View Post
What are some silent films on Blu-ray? I own The Kid but want to watch more silent films.
All the Chaplin's, the Harold Lloyd's, Passion of Joan of Arc(this is one of the greatest films ever), The Lodger(this is the first Hitchcock film of the Hitch we all know).
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Old 07-01-2018, 06:47 PM   #177706
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdw89 View Post
Hey all, I don’t post in this thread often so here goes...

I’m trying to build a film noir collection and I know the Criterion sale is ongoing now at Barnes and Noble, does anyone happen to know all of the film noir films that Criterion has released thus far? And a second question, which ones would be in a higher priority list to get? Thank you!
Gilda, The Asphalt Jungle, The Killing, In A Lonely Place, Night and the City, Mildred Pierce, They Live by Night. Also while there not film-noir I would try and get M(which many consider the grandfather of noir) and the crime films made by the French New Wave directors

EDIT: As mentioned below IDK how I failed to mention The Breaking Point which is another top-notch noir and closer to Hemingway's source material. As much as I loved the Bogart-Bacall version I liked this even better.

Last edited by StarDestroyer52; 07-01-2018 at 10:05 PM.
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Old 07-01-2018, 06:52 PM   #177707
StarDestroyer52 StarDestroyer52 is offline
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Anyone have the Eclipse 46: Ingrid Bergman DVD set?

I do like Bergman, and not just her "Hollywood" films. But not sure about the early Swedish work.

Clearly, I'm looking for an excuse for another B&N shopping trip...
I've only seen A Woman's Face but it's a top-notch film.
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Old 07-01-2018, 06:54 PM   #177708
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GILDA GILDA GILDA! One of the most fatale of the femmes you'll ever meet.

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Old 07-01-2018, 06:54 PM   #177709
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Should have known I would go back for more. I had been saving up Amazon credit for a new TV but once I saw some of their prices on Criterion bundles I blew it all on the following:

Trilogía de Guillermo del Toro (Cronos / The Devil's Backbone / Pan's Labyrinth)
Dekalog
The Apu Trilogy
A Whit Stillman Trilogy: Metropolitan, Barcelona, The Last Days of Disco
The Before Trilogy
Roberto Rossellini's War Trilogy (Rome Open City, Paisan, Germany Year Zero)


So in addition to initially picking up The Uninvited, Innocents, and The Three Colors Trilogy from B&N, I'm hoping this will be the final damage. These sales, man...

Until next time!
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Old 07-01-2018, 07:01 PM   #177710
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Quote:
Originally Posted by StarDestroyer52 View Post
Gilda, The Asphalt Jungle, The Killing, In A Lonely Place, Night and the City, Mildred Pierce, They Live by Night. Also while there not film-noir I would try and get M(which many consider the grandfather of noir) and the crime films made by the French New Wave directors
Criterion's release of "M" is included in the sale. Definitely worth while. It is on many list's as German Film Noir.
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Old 07-01-2018, 07:05 PM   #177711
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tns49 View Post
Your in luck its one of the Criterion Filters
e.g here are the Film Noir Blu-ray's
https://www.criterion.com/shop/brows...format=blu-ray
From that list, there are a lot of good titles.


Unfortunately my top rated Film Noir title is out of Print, the Criterion version of "The Third Man". Non-Criterion version are available
Thanks for posting this link, my favorite film genre. I own everything on the list except for Moonrise and Elevator to the Gallows. Already placed an order, but will enthusiastically place another if the opinion of the forum is that these are must owns. Thanks

I love Le Doulos, but believe it is now out of print just like The Third Man - which sets the standard for film noir.

Last edited by colbyw; 07-01-2018 at 07:21 PM.
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Old 07-01-2018, 07:20 PM   #177712
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Quote:
Originally Posted by YouGotMeFeelingBlu View Post
Picked up the Jacques Tati set and now I'm thinking of picking up the Jacques Demy one. Worth it?
It's my favorite Criterion blind-buy.
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Old 07-01-2018, 08:11 PM   #177713
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For those interested in good films, and especially good noir films, I highly recommend Ride the Pink Horse. One of my best new discoveries from the Criterion Collection.

Here is the review I wrote about it over three years ago, recycled for those who are wondering about picking this up in the B&N sale:




I love film noir, but I have to confess that prior to Criterion's announcement of Ride the Pink Horse I had never heard of it. Shame on me. Thankfully, that mistake has been remedied. There is a line of dialogue early on where the moll of a New Mexican gangster, referring to the anti-hero lead character played by Robert Montgomery, says "I'm afraid that Mr. Gagin cannot be seduced". I can attest that the same assessment does not apply to this film. Ride the Pink Horse seduces, wraps itself around you, pulls you in, and does not let you go. Welcome to film noir done Southwestern style, and I am here to tell you, amigos, this dark little tale of money, murder, and mayhem, as well as a haunted man accidentally rediscovering his humanity, is muy muy bueno.

We know we are in for a different noir experience right from the opening credits, when we see a bus approaching the camera along a panoramic New Mexican highway to the uplifting strains of Latin-infused orchestral music. Robert Montgomery does double duty here as star and director, and he handles both roles superbly. Prior to this film, I only knew Montgomery as the father of Elizabeth Montgomery, future star of classic 1960’s sitcom Bewitched. Here, Montgomery plays a disillusioned tough-as-nails WWII vet named Lucky Gagin on a mission to find a New Mexico gang lord named Frank Hugo, an oddity of a mob boss with a hearing aide and a gift for gab. What exactly that mission is doesn’t become clear until later in the film. The bus deposits Gagin in a city named San Pablo (a fictional name representing Santa Fe). The air surrounding him is electric, filled with music and laughter as hordes of tourists flock the streets to celebrate the annual Fiesta, all of which appears lost on Gagin.





Gagin comes out of nowhere and remains a mystery, what we see is what we get…..a lot of anger and rude behavior with little indication of his background, where he came from or where he is going. All we know is that he had a war buddy best friend who is now dead, and that somehow Hugo is involved. As the plot unfolds, he comes into contact with the local New Mexican culture and his softer side begins to appear. He is befriended by Pancho, the poor operator of an antique carousel, played outstandingly by Thomas Gomez whose performance in this role earned him the first ever Oscar nomination for a Hispanic American. Another local who crosses paths with Gagin and proves integral to the story is a girl named Pila (an 18-year old Wanda Hendrix, future wife of Audie Murphy). Pila is a Native American from a pueblo many miles away who has recently moved to San Pablo and is experiencing the big city for the first time. As it turns out, this dichotomy of Gagin’s character - on one side the world of the Anglos where gangsters, dreams of money as the ticket to the good life, and the increasing threat of violence are ever present, and on the other the easy-going culture of New Mexican Hispanics and Native Americans where, as movingly explained by Pancho, friendship is more important than money and that as long as a man has his pride and strong back there is no shame in being poor – becomes one of the central themes of the film.





Because the viewer is never sure where things will go, the story creates the suspense that anything can happen at any moment. The bus in the opening scene could be taking Gagin on a road to rebirth and redemption that isn’t clearly marked, either a ticket to hell or a way out that may be just beyond reach. Gagin is damn tough, as events will reveal, but is that enough? Is he in over his head? Is he a walking corpse and just doesn’t know it? What is the meaning of a check he places in a bus station locker at the beginning of the film? Is Hugo’s moll Marjorie a kept woman looking for a way out through Gagin? And what does it mean for Pila, who attaches herself to Gagin like a lost puppy and in one of the film’s eerie moments gives him a talisman to protect him because she has had a vision of his pale dead face.





Ride the Pink Horse delivers the goods. It is as multi-layered and as dark and deadly as any classic noir. Yet there is something hopeful in its fabric like the effigy of the god of bad luck burned at the climax of the Fiesta. What makes the film so watchable is how it doesn’t play to expectations. Just when we think we understand what is about to happen, it goes in unexpected directions. There is a lot of symbolism in the story, represented most obviously by the fairy tale world of Pancho’s old carousel going round and round with its assortment of multi-colored horses, one of which is pink (or so we are told; it is a black and white film after all). There is a key scene when, after a night of drinking in a local saloon, Gagin convinces Pancho to open his carousel after-hours so that Pila can experience a childhood thrill for the first time in her life. The meaning of this small kindness represents something deeper that only becomes clear later. Gagin is experiencing new things too. We learn that he suffers from post-traumatic stress from years spent fighting in the steaming jungles of the South Pacific, that he still carries the war in him and is doing battle with himself as much as with the outside world, and that cervezas and tequilas with friendly locals can lead an angry man down paths he never thought for himself to travel.





As usual, Criterion has done a masterful job with the transfer of a black and white film that, for many years, was apparently not easy to find. The cinematography by Russell Metty is outstandingly stylish and evocative, with Gagin often shot over-the-shoulder and some scenes done in one long continuous take that accentuates the menace of the moment. In one chilling scene, a brutal beating is witnessed from the point of view of children riding the carousel; the viewer is therefore a trapped witness, circling repeatedly past the violence and unable to get off. If the name Russell Metty doesn’t ring any bells, then a partial sampling of his many other films will give you some idea of what to expect here, films like Touch of Evil, Magnificent Obsession, Written in the Wind, Arch of Triumph, Spartacus, and The Misfits.

And what great noir would be complete without some chewy dialogue so important to driving the narrative. Ride the Pink Horse has lots of that. Gagin delivers a particularly juicy monologue on the evils of women wearing diamonds, who are man-traps and have “a dead fish where her heart ought to be”. I could watch this film over and over just to relish the well written screenplay and roll around in all that dialogue like a man on a bed full of money. Wearing a fedora, of course. As it should be.

Note: all images above are taken from the internet and not the actual disc. The transfer is amazing, rich, and beautiful.

Last edited by oildude; 07-07-2018 at 07:49 AM. Reason: spelling corrections
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Old 07-01-2018, 08:21 PM   #177714
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdw89 View Post
Hey all, I don’t post in this thread often so here goes...

I’m trying to build a film noir collection and I know the Criterion sale is ongoing now at Barnes and Noble, does anyone happen to know all of the film noir films that Criterion has released thus far? And a second question, which ones would be in a higher priority list to get? Thank you!



The Breaking Point is one of the best noirs I have ever seen. Absolutely loved it. Amazingly crafted film with outstanding performances and edge-of-your-seat moments that will leave you transfixed. Michael Curtiz's direction is superb and John Garfield leads a stellar cast in the story of an ex-WWII naval hero trying to make a living as a charter boat captain and barely hanging on. A fateful trip with a high-roller passenger changes his life, and that of his wife and kids, forever.

I had never seen The Breaking Point, but had seen the earlier version To Have and Have Not. As much as I love Bogey and Bacall in the original, the remake a few years later is by far the best. The two films share similar DNA and story elements, but are completely different films, so for those like me who have already seen To Have and Have Not, be prepared for a memorable movie-watching experience. The final scene of The Breaking Point is one of the most poignant, powerful, and heartbreaking ever put on film.

Loved They Live by Night too. After it ended I sat in my chair a moment like I had been punched in the gut before moving on to the special features. The more I think about it, the more I consider it one of the truly greats of the genre and one of the best films ever made. As the special features make clear, Nicholas Ray's debut feature had a huge influence on many films that came after.

This one-two noir punch from Criterion is sublime. Both of these films belong in everyone's collections.
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Old 07-01-2018, 09:29 PM   #177715
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdw89 View Post
I’m trying to build a film noir collection and I know the Criterion sale is ongoing now at Barnes and Noble, does anyone happen to know all of the film noir films that Criterion has released thus far? And a second question, which ones would be in a higher priority list to get? Thank you!
The filtered result (https://www.criterion.com/shop/brows...format=blu-ray) seemed decent enough at first, but I just found it filtered Mildred Pierce! Of course, it's in the lineage of classic melodrama a la Douglas Sirk, but still, it's a top class film noir.

And my, oh my, there's no Sweet Smell of Success and Ace in the Hole either!

My top five Criterion film noir Blu-rays would be those three and Pale Flower and Ride the Pink Horse. (I must mention Night and the City, but I prefer UK BFI release on that one.)

Also, if you're into Eclipse Series, do not hesitate over Eclipse Series 17: Nikkatsu Noir set.

Last edited by latehong; 07-02-2018 at 02:59 AM.
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Old 07-01-2018, 09:39 PM   #177716
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Originally Posted by Martin_31 View Post
What are some silent films on Blu-ray? I own The Kid but want to watch more silent films.
Among Harold Lloyd movies, Speedy is my absolute best, although I understand the fame of Safety Last!

And there are some lesser-known gems like People on Sunday and Lonesome. The former is one of my favorite Criterion, and the latter would be an interesting double feature with Speedy.

Also, if you're really into silent films, do not miss these Eclipse sets.

Eclipse Series 10: Silent Ozu—Three Family Comedies
Eclipse Series 26: Silent Naruse
Eclipse Series 42: Silent Ozu—Three Crime Dramas


(It's a shame that I can't recommend Pandora's Box or 3 Silent Classics by Josef von Sternberg, two great silent releases now out of print.)
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Old 07-01-2018, 10:03 PM   #177717
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(It's a shame that I can't recommend Pandora's Box or 3 Silent Classics by Josef von Sternberg, two great silent releases now out of print.)
Good news, it seems we'll see Pandora's Box sometime soon. It has a new restoration and been making the rounds on the cinema circuit.

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Old 07-01-2018, 10:25 PM   #177718
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Martin_31 View Post
What are some silent films on Blu-ray? I own The Kid but want to watch more silent films.
Besides the Charlie Chaplins, Harold Lloyds, and Buster Keatons.

The Passion of Joan of Arc
Nanook of the North
City Girl
The Mack Sennett shorts
The Birth of a Nation
Sparrows
Poor Little Rich Girl
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Old 07-01-2018, 10:28 PM   #177719
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Quote:
Originally Posted by StarDestroyer52 View Post
Good news, it seems we'll see Pandora's Box sometime soon. It has a new restoration and been making the rounds on the cinema circuit.

You just made my day!!!!!!!!!!!!! My current most wanted upgrade as I have the DVD. Now if Bergman's A Film Trilogy comes out I will be in hog heaven.
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Old 07-01-2018, 10:30 PM   #177720
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Originally Posted by Old Geezer View Post
You just made my day!!!!!!!!!!!!! My current most wanted upgrade as I have the DVD. Now if Bergman's A Film Trilogy comes out I will be in hog heaven.
With that Bergman 100 retrospective touring around I would be shocked if that didnt come out by the end of the year or early next year at the latest.
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