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
The Agatha Christie Collection 4K (Blu-ray)
£49.99
 
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest 4K (Blu-ray)
£22.99
 
The Pusher Trilogy 4K (Blu-ray)
£39.99
 
Lethal Weapon 4K (Blu-ray)
£30.60
1 day ago
May (Blu-ray)
£16.99
 
Heart Eyes (Blu-ray)
£9.99
 
The Lion in Winter 4K (Blu-ray)
£13.99
 
The Thing 4K (Blu-ray)
£16.99
 
Nosferatu (Blu-ray)
£10.99
 
Diva 4K (Blu-ray)
£14.99
 
The Last Voyage of the Demeter (Blu-ray)
£9.99
 
The Monkey (Blu-ray)
£9.99
 
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 - International > United Kingdom and Ireland
Register FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 06-11-2019, 02:37 PM   #5361
BarnDoor BarnDoor is online now
Blu-ray Baron
 
BarnDoor's Avatar
 
Jan 2010
343
6018
3
Default

Remember that interview from last year wherein Ben Stoddart teased this release?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ben Stoddart
As for the future of Flipside, there are a few titles I’m looking at, a couple that I think will work really, really nicely. They’re not in the schedule at the moment because we’re just inking the deal. There’s another release I’m looking at for around Halloween-time, which is down the lines of folk horror type stuff. It’s basically a double bill, sort of like we did with Duffer and The Moon Over the Alley. Almost feature-length kind of things; that sort of 40-, 50-, 60-minute length where you need something else to bump it up really. But there’s one film that has not been published anywhere yet, and we own the material. And another film that, I think, is on Player, but hasn’t really been done very well. And we have all the original film materials.

So, like I said, we’re trying to do something along the lines of witchcraft, folk horror sort of stuff. It’s something I think would be really cool to do around Halloween. A couple of the films on there, they’ve been screened in East London film clubs and they’ve done really well. They’ve definitely got a bit of a cult following.
Well I've just been informed (in a very nice e-mail reply from Mr Stoddart) that the release (indeed a Flipside one) is scheduled for 14th October. Can't wait to find out what it actually is...
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
Aficionado (06-14-2019), Fnord Prefect (06-11-2019), StarDestroyer52 (06-12-2019)
Old 06-11-2019, 02:49 PM   #5362
johnpaul2 johnpaul2 is offline
Banned
 
Aug 2018
Default

I didn't read this interview at the time, but it's fascinating to see a display of what seems to be like a true consumer-minded globalized view. These remarks about the studios, especially, feel like abstracts from discussions here. It's fantastic.
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
BarnDoor (06-11-2019)
Old 06-11-2019, 03:04 PM   #5363
BarnDoor BarnDoor is online now
Blu-ray Baron
 
BarnDoor's Avatar
 
Jan 2010
343
6018
3
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by johnpaul2 View Post
I didn't read this interview at the time, but it's fascinating to see a display of what seems to be like a true consumer-minded globalized view. These remarks about the studios, especially, feel like abstracts from discussions here. It's fantastic.
It's a really great interview, I said as much at the time. I wish we could get these kinds of interviews with most labels on a semi-regular basis (say once a year).
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-2019, 07:15 AM   #5364
koberulz koberulz is online now
Blu-ray Knight
 
koberulz's Avatar
 
May 2016
Australia
206
2291
532
17
Default

I just got Birth of a Nation from Zavvi, and it's four minutes shorter than the IMDB-listed runtime. Anyone know why this is?
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-2019, 07:40 AM   #5365
minister_x minister_x is offline
Contributor
 
minister_x's Avatar
 
Mar 2013
Dinas Powys, UK
177
666
293
Default

Not entirely sure on what the significant differences (if any) are, but one thing is that IMDb isn't a reliable resource for timings, and in this case appears to have rounded to the nearest 5 minutes. Seems to be at least three versions, running 187 mins, 191 mins and 193 mins:

http://dvdcompare.net/comparisons/film.php?fid=20693
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-2019, 08:57 AM   #5366
Yami Yami is offline
Blu-ray Knight
 
Aug 2008
158
1830
32
Default

Running times are particularly useless for silent films that can be run at different framerates.

In this case, the booklet with Birth of a Nation explains the sources used and I believe that it is the most complete version of the film out there.
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-2019, 01:27 PM   #5367
jackranderson jackranderson is offline
Blu-ray Samurai
 
jackranderson's Avatar
 
Feb 2019
United Kingdom
205
1682
79
Default

Woodfall down to £40 on amazon...tempting!
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
thuata (06-12-2019)
Old 06-12-2019, 08:12 PM   #5368
thuata thuata is offline
Expert Member
 
thuata's Avatar
 
Aug 2018
Everywhere at the end of time
-
-
-
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by jackranderson View Post
Woodfall down to £40 on amazon...tempting!
Got this one in the recent BFI sale, haven't yet had the time to watch any of it but I'll say this: in term of presentation this is up there as one the their best, and the selection of extras not to mention the sheer quantity of it are spectacular.
Eight movies for 40£ given this level of care is very generous in my opinion.

Last edited by thuata; 06-12-2019 at 08:21 PM.
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-2019, 08:39 PM   #5369
Cremildo Cremildo is offline
Blu-ray Archduke
 
Cremildo's Avatar
 
Jul 2011
Brazil
166
1052
51
Default

Back to £64 already.
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-2019, 08:43 PM   #5370
thuata thuata is offline
Expert Member
 
thuata's Avatar
 
Aug 2018
Everywhere at the end of time
-
-
-
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cremildo View Post
Back to £64 already.
Looking at the price history it seems to drop at 40.94£ every now and again, I recommend using a price tracker so you don't miss out if it does so once more.
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
Cremildo (06-12-2019)
Old 06-12-2019, 08:49 PM   #5371
Cremildo Cremildo is offline
Blu-ray Archduke
 
Cremildo's Avatar
 
Jul 2011
Brazil
166
1052
51
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by thuata View Post
Looking at the price history it seems to drop at 40.94£ every now and again, I recommend using a price tracker so you don't miss out if it does so once more.
I'll do that, thanks.
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-2019, 10:39 PM   #5372
Dailyan Dailyan is offline
Blu-ray Baron
 
Dailyan's Avatar
 
Feb 2015
Beyond the Blue Horizon
198
2251
197
58
56
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by 36crazyfists View Post
I have laptop connected go my tv i looking for a external bluray drive in order to change the region to play my us criterion titles. Looking for suggestions thanks i bought Barry Lyndon finally i can't wait to see the extras and the restoration .
I think you want this thread:
https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...0#post16503590
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-2019, 11:37 PM   #5373
36crazyfists 36crazyfists is offline
Senior Member
 
36crazyfists's Avatar
 
Jul 2013
Earth Solar System
9
620
101
2
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dailyan View Post
Mea culpa ..
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-14-2019, 06:50 AM   #5374
Dougling Dougling is offline
Blu-ray Guru
 
Dougling's Avatar
 
Jan 2015
Bristol, UK
45
2102
1
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by muchogris View Post
Is there a chance to also see a DVD release of Derek Jarman's Blue? I'm sure more people will feel like me that it is stupid buying this particular movie on blu ray...
I think at this point you'd be better trying to pick up the old AE DVD release second hand. It may be a tad more expensive but if that's your preferred viewing experience it's the only option at present.
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-14-2019, 07:19 AM   #5375
nam4077 nam4077 is offline
Active Member
 
nam4077's Avatar
 
Jul 2018
Hants, UK
3
1642
203
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by muchogris View Post
Is there a chance to also see a DVD release of Derek Jarman's Blue? I'm sure more people will feel like me that it is stupid buying this particular movie on blu ray...
Kino Lorber just announced its release in the states
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-14-2019, 10:48 AM   #5376
nam4077 nam4077 is offline
Active Member
 
nam4077's Avatar
 
Jul 2018
Hants, UK
3
1642
203
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by muchogris View Post
Is there a chance to also see a DVD release of Derek Jarman's Blue? I'm sure more people will feel like me that it is stupid buying this particular movie on blu ray...
ah... I see what you did there - my bad
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-14-2019, 11:47 AM   #5377
Fnord Prefect Fnord Prefect is offline
Banned
 
Jul 2015
Isle of Albion
924
9
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by muchogris View Post
Is there a chance to also see a DVD release of Derek Jarman's Blue? I'm sure more people will feel like me that it is stupid buying this particular movie on blu ray...
Vastly improved sound, £5 less than the OOP DVD and no PAL speed up? I'd pick up the blu-ray.

Didn't know this was getting a standalone release and as one of the three Jarman films I actually enjoy I'm definitely upgrading this from VHS.
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-14-2019, 07:40 PM   #5378
Aficionado Aficionado is offline
Active Member
 
Aficionado's Avatar
 
May 2018
Leeds, UK
2
636
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BarnDoor View Post
Remember that interview from last year wherein Ben Stoddart teased this release?



Well I've just been informed (in a very nice e-mail reply from Mr Stoddart) that the release (indeed a Flipside one) is scheduled for 14th October. Can't wait to find out what it actually is...
Thanks for letting us know, I'm definitely looking forward to it. Guess we'll have to wait until August to find out what it is.
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-14-2019, 08:05 PM   #5379
Aficionado Aficionado is offline
Active Member
 
Aficionado's Avatar
 
May 2018
Leeds, UK
2
636
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Aclea View Post


1967’s Red, White and Zero is the Bermuda Triangle of portmanteau films. Intended as a high concept trilogy of Shelagh Delaney stories to be directed by Karel Reisz, Lindsay Anderson and Tony Richardson, Reisz jumped ship in pre-production to be replaced by Peter Brook while only Anderson stuck to the original pitch with a Delaney-scripted entry in what was reworked as three separate stories with no connecting theme. Short of a unifying thread it’s hard to see why Woodfall went ahead with it, and United Artists certainly couldn’t figure out what to do with the end result. Eventually its separate parts got separated and shelved aside from the briefest escapes: the first got one TV screening many years later, the third played a few days as a supporting 'feature' to The Graduate before being laughed off the screen and only the second got even minimal exposure a couple of years after it was shot. Although the film was certified by the BBFC in 1968 it wasn’t until 50 years later it emerged in its (more or less) original form with a screening at the National Film Theatre before a Bluray release

The first episode, Peter Brook’s Ride of the Valkyrie, is easily the worst, a dialogue-free black and white comedy that sees Zero Mostel’s opera singer try to make it from Heathrow airport to Covent Garden in time for a performance, changing in Frank Thornton’s cab and navigating the underground in full costume with the aid of Julia Foster. The original cut was wildly overlong before Anderson was brought in to cut it down to size, but for all the overstated energy (at times it appears to have been shot slightly faster at around 22 frames per second while the actors were instructed to move a little slower to create a weird sense of time) there’s not a laugh in it, though it does offer one bit of synergy when Foster sits down next to a poster for Alfie, in which she was one of Michael Caine’s conquests.



The second, Lindsay Anderson’s The White Bus, is easily the best, with Patricia Healey, looking like a cross between Delaney herself and Beryl Bainbridge, a perfect calm eye of the storm of social unease as her vaguely suicidal typist takes a train full of drunken xenophobic football supporters (John Savident among them) back to Manchester where she takes a sightseeing bus on a whim. Naturally the bus contains a cross-section of society, from African and Japanese tourists to Arthur Lowe’s patronising mayor, all ushered along by a tour guide reading her script by rote. Along the way Stephen Moore’s passer-by declares his love, or more accurately the somewhat limited principled defiance of the dictates of social barriers that frown at romantic social mobility while rushing for a train, war games are staged, libraries admonished for their filthy books and liberties attempted to be taken, played with a straight face for every absurdity. It’s not exactly profound, but as a mood piece caught between reality (or the 60s kitchen Sink Realism version of it) and matter of fact moments of surreal imagination it casts its own kind of spell, Miroslav Ondricek’s cinematography hinting at the style Anderson would adopt in If… with its brief moments of seemingly random full colour amid the predominant monochrome. It also makes an interesting visual comparison with Albert Finney’s Shelagh Delaney-scripted Charlie Bubbles, which shot around the same time (and uses the same composer, Misha Donat) before being itself shelved for a couple of years and almost replicates a few shots on the main character’s return to his home town. And if you don’t blink, you can spot Anthony Hopkins in a brief shot making his big screen debut singing a Bertolt Brecht song.



The last and most infamous, Tony Richardson’s Red and Blue, briefly escaped and played as the supporting feature to The Graduate at the London Pavilion before being unceremoniously pulled, according to editor Kevin Brownlow, due to virulent audience derision and buried in an unmarked grave for the next 51 years. Seen today there’s only one truly awful scene, with Vanessa Redgrave singing in millionaire Douglas Fairbanks Jr’s swimming pool about how she and her twin sister made the men go dango dango (almost certainly the key moment the audience made their displeasure so very vocal), but it’s a curious nothing of an episode.

Heavily influenced by the nouvelle vague in general and Jacques Demy in particular, it’s little more than a series of Cyrus Bassiak songs Redgrave and Richardson liked strung together by a gossamer thin not-even-a-plot as an unsuccessful singer reflects on and occasionally glamorises her messy love life. Redgrave can deliver the songs on the level of a jobbing nightclub singer but she can’t make them mean anything emotionally nor can she make us care about a character who barely seems to exist as anything other than a conduit for the lyrics, whose charm doesn’t make the trip from French to Julian More’s English translation. (They didn’t stint on the music side, with Truffaut and Godard collaborator Antoine Duhamel arranging the songs and the James Bond theme’s Monty Norman acting as music consultant.) It’s clearly where most of the budget went, with a cast including William Sylvester (who comes off best despite decidedly not being the kind of actor who looks good in Y-fronts), Gary Lockwood, a debuting Michael York and John Bird and as an exercise in style it’s impressive, with Assheton Gorton’s excellent production design - the number may be awful but that swimming pool set is a gem - and Billy Williams’ superlative colour cinematography worthy of a better film, but that just makes it a good looking corpse.

Final score: two zeros and an interesting bus ride.

The 1.33:1 transfer is strong but the film isn’t quite restored to its originally intended version: though Valkyrie retains what would have been the original opening titles, Red and White sports the new credits that were made for its brief run as supporting short. As with many a disappointing film, the extras ride to the rescue, with a 48-minute documentary shot during the making of The White Bus, new interviews with Billy Williams and Kevin Brownlow (who edited Richardson and Anderson’s entries and provided behind the scenes footage for the latter, narrated here by Williams), an introduction-cum-stills gallery by Anderson to a 1968 screening of his film, a 1969 British cartoon No Arks narrated by Vanessa Redgrave, an audio commentary by Adrian Martin that often feels a little thin on background detail, and booklet.
Good review; I've been undecided about this film, and I think you've successfully dissuaded me.
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
Aclea (06-16-2019)
Old 06-15-2019, 09:41 PM   #5380
Fnord Prefect Fnord Prefect is offline
Banned
 
Jul 2015
Isle of Albion
924
9
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Aficionado View Post
Good review; I've been undecided about this film, and I think you've successfully dissuaded me.
The White Bus and it's dedicated making of are IMO what makes this release worth picking up. If you've no interest in Lindsay Anderson's work then there's probably little to recommend it beyond it being a rarely seen failed period oddity.
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
Aclea (06-16-2019), Aficionado (06-16-2019)
Reply
Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > Blu-ray Movies - International > United Kingdom and Ireland

Similar Threads
thread Forum Thread Starter Replies Last Post
James Cameron Film Discussion Thread Movie Polls Sussudio 42 08-31-2021 01:21 PM
British version or American? TV discussion TV Shows assydingo 13 03-29-2020 08:36 PM
Will the British Board of Film Classification pass Lars von Trier's ANTICHRIST uncut? Movie Polls McCrutchy 12 06-16-2009 11:13 PM
Tribeca Film Institute, Amazon.com Launch New Site to Digitally Preserve Rare Films! Movies J_UNTITLED 1 06-10-2008 05:15 AM
Ban on discussion of religion or politics prevents film discussion. Feedback Forum aristotles 128 01-29-2008 04:18 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 10:17 AM.