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#31521 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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![]() Go to the SAE home page. On the set of "Browse" buttons on the left, click "Company Labels". On the Company Labels page, scroll down to and click "Twilight Time". |
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Thanks given by: | DavidRoylance (11-10-2019) |
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#31522 |
Special Member
Feb 2013
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#31523 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Holy hell, Violent Saturday is surely one of the unsung great films of all time?
Its Sirk meets Siegel approach probably makes it difficult to classify (and I am guessing advertise) but this is extremely high quality filmmaking IMHO even if that approach is probably not going to be for everyone’s taste. The first thing that makes you sit up and notice is the expert use of the frame, Fleischer and his cinematographer put on a real show throughout with their blocking and movement. Then, the script has beautifully layered character work and the hard boiled noirish dialogue is lapped up by all of the cast (my favourite performances were Virginia Leith and Lee Marvin). There are also just all of these idiosyncratic little touches peppered over the course of the film that just add to the pleasure, a great example being the scene where one of the bank robbers gives some candy to a kid who did not realise the danger he was in and had charged the bank robbers. I saw it off Eureka’s UK blu but the TT disc is from the same stunning Fox restoration that is thankfully not too blue like a lot of Fox’s colour restorations in recent years. The colour and detail are just beautiful and really bring home the great camerawork I mention above. The 4.0 audio track was also fantastic. Last edited by nitin; 11-10-2019 at 02:51 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Aclea (11-10-2019), belcherman (11-10-2019), bonehica (11-10-2019), Dailyan (11-10-2019), oildude (11-10-2019), Professor Echo (11-10-2019) |
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#31524 |
Blu-ray Baron
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I always think of it as staging a heist in Peyton Place, but with added pissed off Amish. It's a terrific movie from the eternally undervalued Richard Fleischer.
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Thanks given by: | bonehica (11-10-2019), Dailyan (11-10-2019), nitin (11-10-2019), oildude (11-10-2019), Professor Echo (11-10-2019) |
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#31525 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Absolutely. Ever since I started collecting more Fox films I’ve enjoyed Fleischer’s work especially with “The Boston Strangler” and “Compulsion” in addition to “Violent Saturday”.
Last edited by Dailyan; 11-10-2019 at 02:36 PM. |
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#31526 |
Blu-ray Baron
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He originally studied to be a psychiatrist, and that really comes out in those two and films like 10 Rillington Place, though it wasn't always appreciated by his actors - when he tried to discuss her character's reasons for her kleptomania in Violent Saturday, Sylvia Sidney impatiently told him "Just tell me when to cry." (Which became the title of his memoir.)
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#31527 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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I think the Internet and the availability of titles on physical media has really helped to boost critical favor for directors like Fleischer, but I still feel he and other similar filmmakers are not taken seriously by the old time critic’s establishment. Time for some new blood there. |
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#31528 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Nov 2014
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Give me the likes of Wellman, Curtiz and Fleischer over just about anybody else... |
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#31530 |
Blu-ray Ninja
Nov 2014
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#31531 |
Blu-ray Baron
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#31533 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Last edited by Cremildo; 11-10-2019 at 03:41 PM. Reason: Bad English |
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#31534 |
Blu-ray Baron
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I'll repaste and expand a little on what I wrote last time the subject of Fleischer's mystifying lack of a reputation despite having so many great films on his resume came up:
The diversity is probably one of the main reasons: the auteur theorists tended to look down on people who didn't primarily stick to one style or genre (ie Hitchcock the thriller guy, Ford the western guy, Chaplin the comedy guy, etc) and who didn't have a specific set of themes or hangups running through their work. The very diversity of Fleischer's filmography, ranging as it does from thrillers to science fiction via musicals and historical reconstructions and film noir to psychological dramas, has given him a kind of critical anonymity, with each film being treated on its individual merits rather than being taken as part of a body of work. The lack of any obvious auteurist thread running through his films for critics to grasp hold of and the fact that, unlike directors like Howard Hawks or John Ford, he has never had a critical champion for his work has only helped keep him undeservedly in the shadows. He's often either dismissed as a mere 'craftsman' (an insult I always find more of a compliment) or a studio contract company man (even though he was always an independent after getting out of his RKO contract despite a long run of big budget pictures at Fox). His tenure as a directorial stand-in on troubled productions such as The Jazz Singer or The Last Run has also given him an undeserved tag as a journeyman-for-hire, little helped by outright stinkers like Ashanti, Red Sonja and Million Dollar Mystery that littered the tail-end of his career. To an extent his problem with critics is that he lived too long (which I'm delighted to say gave me the chance to interview him in 1994 when he was promoting his memoirs) and worked too long even after he wasn't able to command the best projects or screenplays because he liked working (though conversely even at his peak there's a 'lost' period of five years between Barabbas and Fantastic Voyage where he didn't make a film because projects like Night Runners of Bengal and Sacco and Vanzetti fell through and he got caught up in the legal fallout). But if critical establishment has yet to catch on that Fleischer is one of the great post-war American directors, audiences have been in on the secret for decades: even if they don't really know who he is, they remember a lot more of his films than most directors can boast. Perhaps the lack of recognition is a family trait. His father was Max Fleischer, one of the giants of early animation, but one who is rarely given the credit or recognition he deserves. Last edited by Aclea; 11-10-2019 at 03:11 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | BagheeraMcGee (11-10-2019), bonehica (11-10-2019), CRASHLANDING (11-11-2019), Dailyan (11-10-2019), nitin (11-10-2019), octobercountry (11-17-2019), oildude (11-10-2019), Page14 (11-12-2019), Professor Echo (11-10-2019), Rzzzz (11-10-2019), SeanJoyce (11-10-2019), StarDestroyer52 (11-11-2019), The Great Owl (11-10-2019), Widescreenfilmguy (11-10-2019) |
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#31535 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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#31536 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Suffice to say, however, that the glorious exposure to all kinds of film and filmmakers since those dark days where only a few had access to them and would attempt to mold budding cinephiles to their single perspective, has been the best thing to happen to film appreciation over the years. I often get more inspiration from forums like this than I did from all those cranky critics of old. |
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Thanks given by: | Aclea (11-10-2019), BagheeraMcGee (11-10-2019), bonehica (11-10-2019), CRASHLANDING (11-11-2019), Dailyan (11-10-2019), hoytereden (11-12-2019), lemonski (11-10-2019), Mystic (11-12-2019), nitin (11-10-2019), octobercountry (11-17-2019), oildude (11-10-2019), Page14 (11-12-2019), Rzzzz (11-10-2019), SeanJoyce (11-10-2019), skylark68 (11-11-2019) |
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#31537 | |
Banned
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As for Twilight Time, I think if they do continue to exist they really do have to re-think their business model. I really can't see it being sustainable in its present form. As a two-man operation, the idea of paying up front for the licences may have worked but with the fact that people weren't buying a lot at $29.95, and then with all those sales undercutting that even further, how can they stay viable? I don't really know what a quick and easy solution would be, but I certainly hope that they don't completely go under. They've put out some great releases that are some of the most valued in my collection. |
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#31538 | |
Special Member
Jun 2017
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I was thinking the same thing too. TT could still continue releasing plenty of Sony titles that Sony themselves and other labels have no interest in releasing, as well as continue releasing films from Universal, the MGM titles no other labels have an interest in releasing(despite the lesser quality masters), and the sporadic foreign releases. Maybe Paramount could be an option in the future if they are finally opening their doors to licensing more of their films that have already had a dvd release. If we're lucky, hopefully this Disney/Fox moratorium isn't permanent and certain Fox titles could be licensed for release once again sometime in the near future. |
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#31539 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Thanks given by: | bonehica (11-12-2019), movieben1138 (11-12-2019), Professor Echo (11-12-2019), Richard--W (11-12-2019), StarDestroyer52 (11-12-2019) |
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#31540 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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