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#144 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Maybe they just learned something that Warner already knows? |
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#145 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I do not think they have given up on these, or at least I hope not. They still need to release Two for the Road and they have not released any Shirley Temple yet. It seems like the classics they are releasing are from last year's Poll on Fox Connect. So I would think eventually we may get most of what is on that list.
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#146 | |
Blu-ray Count
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#147 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#148 |
Blu-ray Count
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At this point I could live with them both being licensed to Twilight Time, as long as we can get them on BD. I don't expect any extras beyond the minimal ones they had on DVD, which would get ported over to a TT disc.
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#149 |
Senior Member
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I'm hoping we get The Return of Frank James (to complement Jesse James), The Bravados, and Captain From Castile.
Maybe the studio is taking a break for May since it's a month that seems to be pretty cluttered with other releases. That way nothing would get lost in the shuffle. |
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#150 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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1930
Jesse James Call of the Wild The Little Princess Steamboat Round the Bend Swanee River 1940 The Return of Frank James That Night in Rio Pin Up Girl The Black Swan The Ghost and Mrs. Muir My Gal Sal Kiss of Death To the Shores of Tripoli Captain From Castile My Friend Flicka The Blue Bird Crash Drive A Letter to Three Wives Hello, Frisco, Hello 1950 Don’t Bother to Knock Cheaper by the Dozen Carmen Jones On the Riviera Anastasia Black Widow Broken Lance The True Story of Jesse James Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? The Tall Men Desk Set The Best of Everything The River’s Edge The Bravados The Inn of the Sixth Happiness 1960 From the Terrace Morituri Two for the Road North to Alaska The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Bandolero! Let’s Make Love Do Not Disturb The Agony and the Ecstasy Back Door to Hell How to Steal a Million Bedazzled (1968) The Undefeated The 300 Spartans The most recent update of what has been released. |
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#152 |
Blu-ray Baron
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That's interesting. I thought the only classic Titanic movie was A Night to Remember. I'll have to look into picking this up.
Anyone that has seen the two, how does it compare to Remember? Last edited by Scarface32; 04-17-2014 at 03:46 AM. |
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#153 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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It's good, but not as painstakingly researched and accurate as A Night to Remember...which is still, and probably always will be, the definitive Titanic film. Titanic is more dramatized...though not to the extent of the 1997 film.
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#154 |
Blu-ray Baron
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#155 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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No problem. Think of it this way...A Night to Remember is straight docudrama, where relating the story as truthfully as possible is the number one concern. Titanic was more of a Hollywood version of the story, with big name actors like Barbara Stanwyck as the main selling point. A little less docudrama, a bit more melodrama. Still, a good film, and worth a look.
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#156 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#157 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#158 | |
Blu-ray Count
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The love story in the 1997 film is fictional, but everything else is scrupulously accurate. Probably 1/3 to half of the 1997 film is concerned not with the fictional lovers but the historical figures, who are rendered as accurately as possible. In addition, the gargantuan sets and stunning props were all reproduced from the original designs. The 1953 film is just a big sudsy romantic 50s melodrama that happens to take place on the Titanic, in which the true story plays a miniscule role. It's worth watching, but almost nothing, from the way the historical incidents and characters are portrayed, to the sets, is very accurate at all. |
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#159 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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![]() I like all 3 of these Titanic films. I do not own the '53 movie but as a big Barbara Stanwyck fan I will eventually add it to my collection. ![]() |
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#160 |
Blu-ray Count
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It's worth adding, however, that the 1953 film can't really be blamed for being wildly inaccurate. Until the 1955 book "A Night to Remember" came out and was a monstrous critical and commercial hit, the Titanic wasn't the pop culture phenomenon it is now, and there wasn't the vast library of books that screenwriters could turn to. Walter Lord did groundbreaking work interviewing all the survivors he could find and reading all the contemporary accounts to piece together a gripping, minute-by-minute dramatic narrative of the sinking. In 1953, when the Stanwyck film was made, it would have been enormously difficult to make an accurate film about the disaster, the material wasn't out there yet.
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