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#28901 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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![]() Along with Alpha Beta the most obscure entry in Albert Finney’s filmography – and Ray Bradbury’s too, for that matter - The Picasso Summer is pretty much the dictionary definition of what the French call a ‘film maudit’: a cursed film. Made by Bill Cosby’s production company in the days before he was a pariah, originally shot in 1969 by Oscar winning Sundays and Cybele director Serge Bourguignon from a short story by Bradbury (who wrote the screenplay under the name Douglas Spaulding, a character from Dandelion Wine), it’s about a couple who travel to France in the hope of meeting Pablo Picasso to thank him for all the joy his work has given them (well, him, since his wife has no real say in the matter). Picasso dropped out of the picture because of shenanigans with bullfighter, former friend and go-between with the producers Luis Miguel Dominguín and guest star Yul Brynner’s wife and, as was so often the case, Bradbury fell out with his director (his first choice had been Francois Truffaut, who dropped out after reading Bradbury’s too ‘conventional’ script) – so much so that after the rough cut was screened they actually physically attacked each other and had to be separated while Cosby stormed out of the screening room, announcing “I don’t need you people to waste my money. I’m going to go waste it myself!” He wasn’t the only one who was unhappy. Warner Bros. were obviously hoping for another Two from the Road – it even stars Yvette Mimieux, the wife of that film’s director, alongside Finney – but got something rather different and much more experimental and hated the rough cut so much that they hired another director, Robert Sallin, and The Bill Cosby Show writer Ed. Weinberger (billed as Edwin Boyd), to reshoot and rework it – and then shelved the film, now minus Brynner’s cameo, Barbra Streisand’s vocal version of Michel Legrand’s main theme and Bourguignon’s screen credit, before eventually dumping it as a late night TV movie through their TV arm in 1972. Which was especially ironic since the project began as a proposed half hour TV special in 1967… Of course, to be a true film maudit it has to be unfairly maligned, and it’s hard to judge if that’s the case since Bourguignon was so disgusted with the process he never made another film and its doubtful his version even exists anymore or that there would ever be enough interest to attempt to restore it. Certainly the tone and style are all over the place – some scenes use flash frames, freeze frames, split screen montages and animated sequences, other settle for lightweight picturesque sightseeing – and at times it’s obvious from the changed appearance of the leads, along with most of Dominguín’s scenes being in English but his big monologue being delivered in Spanish with an English voice over, that some time has passed between Bourguignon’s shoot and Sallin’s. The biggest problem, as Truffaut bluntly told Bradbury when bowing out, is the script, which doesn’t delve very deep into its characters or Picasso’s work (a brief bit of Mansplaining from Finney aside), surprisingly little of which appears in the film. Where Two for the Road used its continental road trips to dissect the dissolution of a marriage as ennui took hold, this seems more sporadically pleasant travelogue than character study, emotional reawakening or investigation of art. The trip begins on a whim and even though it briefly geographically separates the two leads when Finney goes off in a sulk to Spain to try to get an introduction to the great man from Dominguín, it never really develops into an obsession so much as one of those holidays where nothing really works out. We never discover anything more about the characters than we knew in the first reel, and by the end Finney is clearly struggling with some awkward nothing dialogue while Mimieux generally fares better in the second half with less screen time. ![]() How well Wes Herschensohn’s three animated sequences work is a matter of individual interpretation and whether you think they’re in tune with the paintings’ intentions or crass expansions (or indeed both at the same time). Certainly a case could be made for the first of them turning his War and Peace mural on its head by turning it into Peace and War to give it more drama, while the inclusion of an animated Picasso painting from live action documentary footage of death camp victims is at best problematic. Dominguín does get a scene where he explains the need to confront death in both his bullfighting and Picasso’s art as a prelude to the last of these, but it’s only in a scene between Mimieux and Peter Madden’s blind artist that the film really finds a sense of the life enhancing magic that art can bring. The end result is gossamer thin, mostly pleasant until the lengthy bullfighting detour (and yes, animal lovers, you do see a bull tormented and killed after Dominguín convinces Finney he needs to fight a bull to understand Picasso) and pretty superficial, ending exactly as you expect it to, given some surface charm by Vilmos Zsigmond’s cinematography (with additional contributions from Henri Alekan and David Shore) and Michel Legand’s memorable score. Whether it was ever anything more we’ll probably never know. To the best of my knowledge the film has only had one screening in the UK, on Channel 5 in the channel’s early days and precious few outings in the States since its original broadcast, making Warner Archive’s manufactured on demand US DVD-R the only practical way to see the film at the moment. Sadly the disc is a bit problematic: picture quality is for the most part good, with fluctuations in quality possibly down to the different cinematographers and shoots, but the 1.78:1 transfer has clearly been cropped from what was presumably the originally intended 1.66:1, with the framing too tight in some shots – it’s particularly noticeable in the split screen montages which crop the top of heads off. No extras. ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | easydreamer (07-10-2018), Jobla (07-09-2018), krasnoludek (07-09-2018), mja345 (07-09-2018), oildude (07-10-2018) |
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#28902 |
Blu-ray Baron
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#28903 | |
Power Member
Dec 2016
Gentrification Central
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#28904 | |
Power Member
Dec 2016
Gentrification Central
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#28905 | |
Power Member
Dec 2016
Gentrification Central
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#28906 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Went to check out SAE's site, and look what I found!
![]() July 12th - A SPECIAL TWILIGHT TIME SALE! 15 TITLES FOR $15 EACH! Sale begins Friday, July 13th at 4pm Eastern and the sale ends Monday, July 23rd at 4pm Eastern. Orders must be placed during the sale period to obtain the sale pricing. No past, currently pending or future orders will qualify. TO SIR, WITH LOVE (1967) THE REMAINS OF THE DAY (1993) COUNT YORGA, VAMPIRE (1970) HARLOCK SPACE PIRATE (2013 / 2 DISC / 2D AND 3D) THE LAST DETAIL (1973) THUNDERBOLT AND LIGHTFOOT (1974 / ENCORE EDITION) ROLLERBALL (1975 / ENCORE EDITION) THEATRE OF BLOOD (1973) MOSCOW ON THE HUDSON (1984) THE STONE KILLER (1973) THE VALACHI PAPERS (1972) THE CRIMSON KIMONO (1959) PLAY DIRTY (1968) BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE (1969) HUSBANDS AND WIVES (1992) Personally, I'm definitely in for Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice and Husbands And Wives. |
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Thanks given by: | belcherman (07-12-2018), Dailyan (07-12-2018), drat (07-12-2018), gregmtl92 (07-12-2018), oildude (07-13-2018), plateoshrimp (07-12-2018), StarDestroyer52 (07-12-2018) |
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#28907 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Thanks given by: | plateoshrimp (07-12-2018), RCRochester (07-12-2018) |
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#28909 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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![]() "You stick with me kid. You're gonna live forever." How times change. Back in 1974, after paying his dues co-writing Silent Running and Magnum Force, Michael Cimino was one of the most promising new directors on the scene thanks to his directorial debut Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (the characters are named after Rock Hudson and Jeff Morrow's in Douglas Sirk's Captain Lightfoot). In 1978 he was an Oscar winner whose place in movie history seemed assured by The Deer Hunter. Two years later he was the poster boy for directorial excess and hubris in the wake of the unjustly maligned Heaven’s Gate. By the 21st Century he was unemployable and his name a ghost story to scare directors who went over budget. Thunderbolt’s once-sterling reputation seems to have fallen victim alongside Cimino’s career. It’s become one of the less-remembered films from the days when Clint Eastwood ruled the box-office yet it holds up as one of the best pictures of its over-rated decade, managing the neat trick of both delivering what the audience wants and subverting their expectations at the same time. Eastwood plays a crook on the run from ex-partners in crime George Kennedy and Geoffrey Lewis (often hysterically funny here) who teams up with Jeff Bridges' extrovert drifter to retrieve the loot from a previous robbery only to find his old accomplices tagging along and things – naturally – not going at all to plan. It’s an almost perfectly judged mixture of comedy and action with both feet firmly on the ground despite the more absurd moments in a way that would be almost unthinkable today. There's a real rapport between the outstanding cast and an affection for the characters that adds to the impact of the very Seventies ending – not only is the central pairing of Eastwood’s old hand and Bridges’ cocksure kid far more convincing and genuinely affecting than it has any right to be, but Kennedy and Lewis’ untrustworthy partners in crime are beautifully drawn too. Cimino handles the mood swings adeptly and even injects a subtle undercurrent of sexual ambiguity that never gets in the way of the entertainment (well, it was inspired by a Rock Hudson film...). While his direction is bang on target - there’s a great use of mid-Western landscape too - it’s the strength of his script that keeps the film surprisingly fresh today. It’s basically a road movie crossed with a heist movie, but Cimino throws in so many unexpected and quirky left turns that catch you off guard that you never get the feeling that you’re going over the same old ground. This was a terrific movie in 1974, and if anything it's an even better one today. Just remember; never accept a lift from a man with a raccoon in the passenger seat and a trunk full of bunnies! While MGM/UA's DVD release had a poor non-anamorphic transfer and only a trailer as extra, Twilight Time's limited edition Blu-ray is a massive improvement with a fine 2.35:1 transfer, isolated score track, film historians' audio commentary, trailer and booklet, finally giving the film some of the love it deserves on home video. |
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#28910 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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There is a great story that Cimino expected to still have three remaining days to shoot it, and Clint Eastwood, the producer, decided "No, today is our last day," and Cimino managed to curtail his fussiness (which, though nascent, was already starting to blossom) and get through three days worth of set-ups in one day.
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#28911 |
Banned
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Thunderbolt and Lightfoot is one of my all time favourite movies, I even bought a copy of the region free Aussie disc as a back-up in case my TT copy went defective (this was before they released an encore version). Just a great piece of 70s cinema.
The Last Detail is also a cool movie, and anyone who likes Vincent Price should get Theatre of Blood, it's one of his campiest and funniest films (similar to the first Dr. Phibes movie but with a Shakespearean twist). |
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#28912 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I'll get The Crimson Kimono and probably another one. I already have the other two you mentioned. You won't regret getting The Remains of the Day. That's one of my all time favorites. Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson are at the peak of their powers in this one and the Twilight Time transfer is beautiful. I loved this movie when it was first released and the older I get the more it haunts me. I highly recommend it.
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#28913 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Thanks given by: | Dailyan (07-13-2018), hoytereden (07-13-2018), oildude (07-13-2018), plateoshrimp (07-13-2018), Widescreenfilmguy (07-14-2018) |
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#28914 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Nov 2014
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#28916 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Thanks given by: | BagheeraMcGee (07-13-2018), ilovenola2 (07-17-2018) |
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#28918 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Does anyone else have orders from the last Fox sale that are still pending? I ordered Peyton Place and Pretty Poison on June 30th from Screen Archives and the order still says pending. I'm curious if it's just my order or if there is a problem with one of those titles.
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#28919 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | plateoshrimp (07-17-2018) |
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#28920 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Thanks given by: | belcherman (07-17-2018) |
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