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#4421 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Why is there a ? after "Un film de Joseph H. Lewis"?
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#4422 |
Blu-ray Count
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Watched Murder, My Sweet yesterday. Great Philip Marlowe flick with excellent dialogue.
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#4423 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#4424 |
Special Member
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Just a heads up for those who are still interested in Film Noir on DVD that is not available on Blu-ray (yet):
all of the RKO/Vértice noir box sets are super cheap now on amazon ES: Richard Fleischer Noir https://www.amazon.es/gp/product/B00PZYGDOI/ George Raft Noir https://www.amazon.es/gp/product/B00W6UAR1E/ Robert Wise Noir https://www.amazon.es/gp/product/B0127AQPBI Lawrence Tierney Noir https://www.amazon.es/gp/product/B00V3QL0WW/ Victor Mature Noir https://www.amazon.es/gp/product/B01DKRSAB0/ Robert Ryan Noir https://www.amazon.es/Pack-Robert-Ry...dp/B018ZDQENU/ + some other interesting sets like Joan Fontaine, Irene Dunne, RKO Pre-Code, Val Lewton, Nicholas Ray,.... some reviews say that on most movies spanish subs are not removable, but i think there has to be some kind of workaround to get rid of them on my PC. approx. €10 for 5 movies each, the alternative is warner archives dvd-r's (1 movie for the same price). |
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#4425 |
Banned
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For any fans of neo-noir, I picked this up this blu-ray of Hammett from Amazon Spain this past week and watched it tonight. What an enjoyable little mystery film with a beautiful score by John Barry. The concept is that it's a detective film with Dashiel Hammett becoming involved in the real life mystery of a missing Chinese girl in San Francisco.
The disc is from Divisa Films which is about the only indy label from Spain that I trust not to be a bootleg. The film was licenced from StudioCanal and gives official copyright credit to American Zoetrope. I'm no techie, but I didn't notice any issues with the PQ on this one. The film is playable on Region A players, unfortunately the English track contains forced Spanish subtitles (thankfully my player has subtitle shift so this was not a problem for me). ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | mja345 (11-28-2017), The Great Owl (11-28-2017) |
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#4426 |
Blu-ray Count
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Indicator have teased I Wake up Screaming for March:
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#4428 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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My region-free Arrow UK set of Four Film Noir Classics (The Big Combo, Force of Evil, Secret Beyond the Door, The Dark Mirror) arrived in the mail today.
![]() The box set and overall packaging is superb. A hardcover book is encased in the box, and each Blu-ray has a reversible image of the old poster art. I popped The Big Combo into my Region A player for a short while to double-check, and I can verify that it plays beautifully. Finally... I have subtitles for these four movies at long last. *swoon* My Olive Blu-rays of these respective movies are going to be sold to the used store down the street in the near future. |
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Thanks given by: | *PREACHER* (12-01-2017), bruce holecheck (12-04-2017), dpf37 (12-01-2017), Jaymole (12-01-2017), MifuneFan (11-30-2017), oildude (12-07-2017) |
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#4429 |
Expert Member
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#4431 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#4432 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#4434 | ||
Blu-ray Emperor
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I was drawn in by the cover art to this one, and looking into it, it seems many sites (including this one) label it as a neo-noir. Looks very good. The Blu-ray will be released by Well Go on January 9th.
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#4435 |
Blu-ray Count
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In the film (whose original title was The Hot Spot), 'The Hot Spot' refers to the electric chair, not a nightclub. It seems random/unlikely that they would focus on such a specific set of words for the teaser hint if it weren't a clue for the film's title, rather than an arbitrary, otherwise unidentifiable shot from the unannounced film itself. We know that Indicator has an as-yet-unrevealed deal with another studio, which could very well be Fox. Are there any eagle-eyed viewers who know which film the actual screenshot originates from? If we knew that, we would potentially be able to discount the film itself as a possibility, since we'd be able to then identify the studio.
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#4436 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#4437 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I wonder if I speak for others who have seen a couple of hundred classic-era film noir titles when I say that the little details tend to run together. This screenshot could probably be from one of my favorites, but I'm blanking out on it right now.
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#4438 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Same here, I’m sure I’ve seen this before and not a long time ago either. Is the consensus that it has to be a Columbia title, unless it’s a teaser for a Fox title in a yet-to-be-announced studio deal?
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#4439 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Aug 2013
Yorkshire, UK
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I'm drawing a blank...although it looks like a shot from a noir, there's no guarantee that it is.
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#4440 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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![]() ![]() Bad girls are on the loose. Four female high school students are alleviating their boredom by turning to crime. During the evening hours, they rampage around town in a carefree way by robbing gas stations, vandalizing school property, and raping men. Paula, the leader of the gang, is given free reign by her wealthy parents, and she exploits investigative information given to her by her father, who is the local newspaper editor with an inside line on the actions taken by the police. This female crime wave escalates in an intense way when they engage in a fierce shootout with the police and kill an officer. The 1956 film noir crime thriller, The Violent Years, was written by none other than the legendary Ed Wood (Plan 9 from Outer Space), and his trademark ineptness at dialogue is all too evident, but the scrappy effort simply adds to this movie's retro charms. The four teenage girls are all played by women who are obviously in their 20s, and this aspect of the production also enhances its appeal. Jean Moorhead, who plays Paula, was a Playboy Playmate in 1955, and she also appeared in a few late 1950s sci-fi B-movies. This film, which rockets by with a 56-minute run time, opens with a spoken word narrative and a courtroom sequence before relaying the main story, noir style, in flashback. An obnoxiously heavy-handed monologue by a court judge during the final minutes will elicit laughter from most present-day viewers, but, once again, it's just part of the overall offbeat awesomeness. As I watched this movie for the first time tonight, I was all smiles when I recognized a particular line, "You have had all that money can give you, but that wasn't enough. You became a thrill seeker...", from a song, “So What”, that appears on the 1990 album, The Mind is a Terrible Thing to Taste, from the industrial band, Ministry. I used to listen to that Ministry album all of the time when it was released during my senior year of high school, and I have revisited it fairly often since then, so the sampled quote jumped out at me. Several subsequent lines from the film are also sampled in that song, and, in fact, the line, “So what?”, appears a few times late in the film. The Violent Years is a bad movie, even by the standards of the juvenile delinquent offshoot of the noir genre during the 1950s, but it's insanely entertaining in a time capsule sense, and I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it. The voiceover spoken word intro makes it clear that this story was directly inspired by real-life newspaper headlines, because this sort of thing was apparently occurring with increasing frequency during the 1950s and beyond. I, for one, am counting my lucky stars that I was never held at gunpoint in a “man attack” by four pretty women. The 4K scan of The Violent Years that appears on this AGFA Blu-ray looks and sounds great, especially when compared to the available YouTube showings of the film. The commentary track by Frank Henenlotter and an Ed Wood historian is truly fun-spirited. I'm still making my way through the rest of the extras, and I'm planning to watch the bonus film, Anatomy of a Psycho, tomorrow night. Last edited by The Great Owl; 12-07-2017 at 03:58 AM. |
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