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#22282 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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EDIT: Just placed a second order. (There isn't much rhyme or reason for what I picked, as my wish list is pretty large. I could have easily chosen other titles). The Eddy Duchin Story Exodus The Roots of Heaven Shadows and Fog Last edited by Page14; 06-29-2016 at 05:01 PM. |
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#22283 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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#22284 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Just passing along a note that 2 greats who are both represented in Twilight Time's films share a birthday today ... Ray Harryhausen and Bernard Herrmann. Very cool.
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Thanks given by: | cakefactory (06-29-2016), jayembee (06-29-2016), Jobla (06-29-2016), oildude (06-30-2016), RalphoR (06-29-2016) |
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#22286 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I am putting together a final sale order at SAE. I have a few that I know I want, and a few that I am on the fence about. Any comments or recommendations on the following titles?
The Song of Bernadette (I read that the transfer is lackluster, but I do like Price in dramatic roles) Roots of Heaven Cover Girl Equus Anastasia |
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#22288 | |
Moderator
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![]() It is a shame that the The Roots of Heaven has been a slow seller for Twilight Time. Although one of director John Huston's more obscure efforts, it is by no means a lesser one and most definitely deserves more recognition. I bought it when it went up for pre-order four years ago. I found The Roots of Heaven to be a very enjoyable movie. The Cinemascope presentation is gorgeous and the colors really pop. My only PQ complaint is also identified in the blu-ray.com review - color shifts during optical dissolves. It is a problem baked into the source elements, so no getting around it for the first half hour, when dissolves for a scene change have a brief color shift for a second at the beginning of the new scene. It does go away early on and is not an issue for the majority of the run time. The acting on display here is well done, and the story works dramatically to draw the viewer in. The Roots of Heaven was ahead of its time and a bit of an oddity for 1958 for its portrayal of confrontational wildlife activism. The online reviews I have read sometimes refer to it as a misfire from John Huston, but I don’t see it that way. While not one of his best, it is still a very good film. Driven mainly by dialogue and acting, the plot pulls the viewer along between sporadic action sequences. The film is about a small ragtag group of crusaders out to save the elephants using disruptive tactics against the French colonial government and the ivory hunters allowed to pay the government for permits to kill elephants to harvest their tusks. There is suspense and some intrigue to keep things interesting. Orson Welles gives a great cameo performance, and Juliette Greco is gorgeous and does fine work with her limited role. Trevor Howard does an excellent job in a difficult leading role, as a WWII veteran and POW turned elephant savior. He is the fiery defender of wildlife who cajoles and convinces the others to rally to his cause. Initially I found his character borderline over the top, but came to accept his portrayal as fitting for someone whose passionate beliefs lead him into adopting violence to prevent violence. He is deeply flawed and Howard makes him both attractive and repellant to the audience, a war veteran fighting a new war who is both heroic and mad. Errol Flynn plays a very believable drunk, which from what I have read did not require much of an acting stretch from him during the making of the movie. His performance is one of the film’s highlights. Shot on location in West Africa, the film is something of a legend for cast and crew falling ill, drinking excessively, overcoming miserable field conditions including terrific heat, and ironically going game hunting regularly (in fact, I have read several opinions - only half joking - that Huston and some of the cast and crew made the film mainly as an excuse for an extended hunting trip to Africa). Despite all of this, the final product works. Last edited by oildude; 06-30-2016 at 11:27 PM. |
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#22289 | |
Moderator
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#22290 |
Expert Member
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Twilight Time should try and get a hold of Neighbor's, starting Dan Akroyd and John Belushi. This type of release would suit their model well, and I don't see anyone else ever releasing it. It's such an underrated, ahead-of-its-time comedy - The Cable Guy has a similar vibe to it.
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#22291 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I hate remakes, but this one maybe should be looked at, especially since it looks like in the wild, elephants will soon be gone. Last edited by Rory; 06-30-2016 at 01:40 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Brad1963 (06-30-2016) |
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#22294 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Between SAE and TT themselves, the sales seem to be coming every three months or so. There's still ones I want to get, but I figure I can afford to wait.
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#22295 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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It also helps that they are being good about putting out low stock updates. I am now more likely to pick up older releases and wait on newer ones unless they are ones that I really want.
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#22296 |
Active Member
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I'm a recent convert to Twilight Time. I already own The Big Heat (both versions), The Sound and the Fury, all the Woody Allens, Inherit the Wind, Judgment at Nuremberg, Bunny Lake is Missing, The Remains of the Day, and I had, watched and sold Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia.
I'm torn on this sale. The movies I'm interested in (but I can't afford them all): Guess Who's Coming to Dinner The Secret of Santa Vittoria Bonjour Tristesse Where the Sidewalk Ends Exodus Swamp Water Rapture Experiment in Terror When the Wind Blows Most of the above would be blind buys. Any thoughts, advice, recommendations. Maybe some of the above just aren't that good? Some may be safer to wait until the next sale than others? All advice is appreciated. Thanks! |
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#22297 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#22298 |
Power Member
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And though I could be wrong, I thought Exodus wasn't eligible for the sale, so that might eliminate one for you.
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#22299 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Guess Who's Coming to Dinner Experiment in Terror Where the Sidewalk Ends Rapture Swamp Water Bonjour Tristesse Exodus When the Wind Blows The Secret of Santa Vittoria You might want to give some priority to Experiment in Terror, however, as it's the only one of these titles currently on the Low Quantity list. |
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#22300 |
Active Member
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Thanks for all the advice! I went with everything but When the Wind Blows and Secret of Santa Vittoria. Oddly those and Exodus were the ones I was least interested in before they turned up at the bottom of your preference list. I want all the Otto Preminger and all the Stanley Kramer but Secret of Santa Vittoria doesn't seem to be flying off the shelves so it can probably wait. Since Exodus is on the hot selling list on the sidebar on the SAE website, thought I should go ahead an bite (and I can confirm, Exodus is definitely on sale).
And I bought both copies of The Big Heat because I got the original one first and then wanted the commentary and special features as I am currently working on a book on the films of Fritz Lang. I will probably end up offloading the first edition Big Heat. In fact, if anyone wants to trade something for it, I'd be down for that. |
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