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#2881 | |
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Just to give you a flavour of what to expect if you've not seen them before, here's Roger Ebert's review of 42 Up. |
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#2882 | |
Senior Member
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#2883 | |
Senior Member
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#2884 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#2885 | |
Active Member
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Dream Home Hell Drivers Jack The Ripper The Naked Civil Servant The Night Has Eyes Quatermass The Rebel Séance On a Wet Afternoon The Woman in Black |
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Thanks given by: | edmoney (08-05-2020) |
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#2886 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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![]() For decades the hardest of the Archers’ films to see, and then usually only in poorly panned and scanned versions, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s 1955 musical Oh… Rosalinda!! isn’t a triumph, but it’s the kind of film that offers too much fun along the way to not quite hitting the target to be called a failure. A lavish Technicolor CinemaScope version of Die Fledermaus updated to post-World War Two Vienna still occupied – just - by the Four Powers (the UK, USA, France and Russia), it makes imaginative use of the wide, wide screen, its stylised sets and character interaction consciously designed for the frame. Dennis Arundell’s updated lyrics are often witty, as is some of the choreography, and at times you get the odd hint of the Lubitsch touch (indeed, P&P originally tried to enlist regular Lubitsch collaborator Maurice Chevalier, one of many – Bing Crosby and Orson Welles among them – to turn them down) while it’s set in a not too dissimilar world to Billy Wilder’s Irma La Douce and One, Two, Three if they had been designed in expressionistic style by Tales of Hoffman’s Hein Heckroth instead of Alexander Trauner. The problems are certainly noticeable but not insurmountable when it comes to enjoying the proceedings. Anton Walbrook, always at his best with anger and frustration, isn’t entirely successful at pulling off his charmingly manipulative fixer Dr Falke, not quite managing the ingratiating charm his opening direct to camera address to the audience before all that music starts really needs but acing other scenes. The dubbing of many of the singing voices, such as Mel Ferrer, never feels a convincing match, which allows those who can sing their parts to steal scenes – not least Michael Redgrave, whose high kicking French Colonel is quite a delight, the actor’s obvious enjoyment of cutting loose quite infectious (the usually reliable Anthony Quayle’s Russian is sadly not so successful). The casting is hit-and-miss too: while famed soprano Anneliese Rothenberger gets the chance to do what she did best there’s a certain wilful playful perversity to hiring ballerina Ludmilla Tchérina and barely having her dance and giving her a singing part that has to be dubbed (by Sheri Barabas), while the prolific Oskar Sima (despised by the gay Jewish refugee Walbrook for his reputed links to the Nazi Party) is pure dead weight as comic relief. There are also bit parts from a few future notables of varying degrees, some easy to spot like Jill Ireland when she was still a featured dancer and Arthur Mullard, others, like John Schlesinger or Roy Kinnear (the latter’s presence in the film the subject of some doubt), less so. We’re never really invested in or rooting for any of the characters, but there’s still amusement to be had from watching their plans go awry and, being Powell and Pressburger, there are the odd flights of visual fancy, such as Dennis Price’s drunk scene being shown through a wildly misaligned and distorted Scope lens ( [Show spoiler] ), as well as slyly staged throwaways jokes like the Russian soldiers hiding bottles behind their backs. Like most parties, perhaps it goes on a little too long but even when it doesn’t fly as high as it clearly wants to, it never drags you down, and at its best it’s absolutely delightful.![]() As with some of Network’s other film restorations there’s not much in the way of noticeable grain and it’s clear DNR has been applied in some scenes (Quayle’s in particular), but it’s a sharp and clean transfer and Christopher Challis’ vivid use of colour comes through a treat. Extras are limited to original trailer, stills and poster gallery and a tiny reprint of the pressbook that is absolutely impossible to read. Last edited by Aclea; 08-05-2020 at 07:59 PM. |
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#2889 |
Blu-ray Guru
![]() Apr 2017
England
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I remember many years ago seeing Michael Powell's film Honeymoon (no Pressburger on this particular movie) on the BBC, late 80's I would say, which also starred Ludmilla Tcherina and Anthony Steele. A decent blu-ray from Network would be nice - and uncut too. There is a Spanish blu-ray, but it doesn't contain the English soundtrack, although it's a more complete version of the film than the one broadcast here on TV.
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Thanks given by: | Aclea (08-05-2020) |
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#2890 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Peeping Tom and his episodes of Espionage (released on DVD by Network) aside, Powell's post-Pressburger work is perhaps his hardest of all to see -The Queen's Guards, Bluebeard's Castle and They're a Weird Mob (which did at least get a good Australian DVD) and his producing work on Sebastian (originally intended as his big directorial comeback) and Pavlova have all become real rarities.
Last edited by Aclea; 08-05-2020 at 11:14 AM. |
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#2891 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#2892 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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![]() Last edited by Sifox211; 08-05-2020 at 01:17 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Aclea (08-05-2020) |
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#2895 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#2896 |
Special Member
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#2897 |
Blu-ray Baron
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I see Network are offering Konga and Catacombs in HD on Prime, so two titles for October perhaps? The former already has a US release, but Catacombs would be a world premiere.
Slayground may be another possibility. Last edited by BarnDoor; 08-14-2020 at 02:05 PM. |
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#2898 | |
Blu-ray Baron
Sep 2013
Midlands, UK
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Was hoping a label in the States would do a release of Assault, as apparently the version on Network's Blu-ray release is cut by four minutes. Likely going to get Station Six-Sahara, unless a States release is announced with exclusive extras (giving me a good dilemna), and the upcoming release of Who Done It? |
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#2899 |
Banned
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![]() ![]() Far superior to that very much forced effort with the Potter guy. What with the camera in that adaption hard focusing on anything someone might find a modicum of creepy in. Bollocks. No the 1989 TV version has real atmosphere, tension and psychology. One of those flicks that uses it's limitation to bring out innovation. It's similar I'd say to The Wicker Man where on the surface everything seems prosaic, staid, an unnerving normality, that slowly unravels. Definitely an experience. A fine hidden gem. |
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Thanks given by: | Blatttman (08-13-2020), daycity (08-13-2020), drterror666 (08-13-2020), drush9999 (08-13-2020), edmoney (08-13-2020), nitin (08-13-2020), Richard A (08-13-2020), Si Parallel Universe (08-13-2020), Steedeel (08-13-2020), whatmusictheymake (08-13-2020) |
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#2900 |
Senior Member
Jun 2015
UK
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That's a title I would love to see on Blu-ray. I only saw it for the first time a short while ago on TalkingPicturesTV and immediately searched online to see if there was an HD release of it. Make it happen, Network.
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