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Posted

But doesn't Whirlpool have the Richard Schickle (sp?) commentary? Or should I say "non-commentary"?

Schickel's commentary is basically unlistenable, lots of gaps, lots of just describing what we're seeing onscreen, and he makes a major mistake in the first few minutes, calling Preminger's Angel Face one of the "Fox Five," when actually it was made for RKO. An Embarrassment.

The movie, on the other hand, is quite worthwhile.

Posted

But doesn't Whirlpool have the Richard Schickle (sp?) commentary? Or should I say "non-commentary"?

Schickel's commentary is basically unlistenable, lots of gaps, lots of just describing what we're seeing onscreen, and he makes a major mistake in the first few minutes, calling Preminger's Angel Face one of the "Fox Five," when actually it was made for RKO. An Embarrassment.

The movie, on the other hand, is quite worthwhile.

I'll have to see it sometime.

Just watched Somewhere In the Night. It was one of the earliest "amnesia" noirs (GI doesn't remember who he is, tries to find out on his own, gets deeper and deeper into Nefarious Plot.) It was made before that became a laughable cliche, and directed by Joe Mankiewicz, one of his early forays into directing, when he was just starting to learn what to do with the camera. Not the finest noir ever made, but there are enough good scenes and interesting performances to make it worth a look. And a commentary by Eddie Muller doesn't hurt, either.

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Posted (edited)

Criterion is bringing out their redone versions of Playtime, Seven Samurai, and Amarcord this fall. Here's the link to Playtime:

http://www.criterionco.com/asp/release.asp?id=112

Seven Samurai will become a big 3 disc edition:

http://www.criterionco.com/asp/release.asp?id=2

I also read that they are redoing their 3 disc Brazil edition. It seems almost ridiculous.

Edited by Adam
Posted (edited)

Picked up a new DVD reissue of a film that I have fond memories of watching with my father when I was a boy:

Emperor of the North

Incredibly violent but compelling Depression-era train tale made in the early 1970s, with Lee Marvin as a superlative bum, Ernest Borgnine as a sadistic railroad employee, and Keith Carradine as a hobo-wannabe just bordering on punk (in the prison sense of the term).

Edited by ghost of miles
Posted

Picked up a new DVD reissue of a film that I have fond memories of watching with my father when I was a boy:

Emperor of the North

Incredibly violent but compelling Depression-era train tale made in the early 1970s, with Lee Marvin as a superlative bum, Ernest Borgnine as a sadistic railroad employee, and Keith Carradine as a hobo-wannabe just bordering on punk (in the prison sense of the term).

Ernie was a great badass in this one.

borgnine22.jpg

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Posted (edited)

B00005JN8Q.01._SS500_SCLZZZZZZZ_V53850857_.jpg

Man, didn't hear anything about this coming out!(Or if I did, I forgot about it- I probably mentioned it back 20 pages ago :blush: ) Comes out today. Did anyone watch this when it came out?? Surely some here did. Granted, every show was not gold, but when it was good, it was very good. Ones that stick out were shows like a very funny one where a guy is playing a mummy in a film shooting at night, when he hears his wife has gone into labor. So, he rushes to be with her, still all mummified. Much funnier than I can describe with people freaking out when they see him gas up, etc....Another show has a perfect asshole get his comeuppance when a meteor strike turns him into a human magnet. There were serious shows as well...they just haven't stuck in my mind like the humorous ones. At least they were trying to do an entertaining, intelligent anthology show, when there was little worth watching on TV. Checking the reviews, it looks like one of the more famous shows, The animated The Family Dog, was the first show on the second season. Can't wait to see the series again, to see how well it holds up 20+ years later.

Edited by BERIGAN
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

More on Mr. Moto:

In the mid-1930’s, 20th Century Fox seemed to be building up a stable of what were once called Oriental sleuths. The Charlie Chan series, which entered the talkie era in 1929 with Irving Cummings’s “Behind That Curtain” (featuring the forgotten E. L. Park as Chan), had run through all of Earl Derr Biggers’s original novels by 1934, though the series, with the charismatic Warner Oland in the lead, continued with newly commissioned screenplays based on Biggers’s characters. Perhaps worried about running out of material, Fox purchased the popular Mr. Moto stories that the novelist John P. Marquand (“The Late George Apley”) published in The Saturday Evening Post, beginning in 1935.

Marquand’s Moto was a strikingly different figure from Biggers’s Chan: Japanese, not Chinese, and not a professional detective, though exactly what he was went through several changes. In “Thank You, Mr. Moto” (1937), he was described as “an adventurer, explorer, soldier of fortune — one of the Orient’s mysteries.” Though he appeared to be operating on his own, running down smugglers who threatened his San Francisco import-export business, subsequent films in the series inducted him into a mysterious “international police force.”

On film, Mr. Moto acquired the distinctly non-Asian features of Peter Lorre, the brilliant Hungarian-born Jew who fled Hitler’s Europe after his star-making appearance in Fritz Lang’s “M.” After playing a heavy in Alfred Hitchcock’s 1934 British film “The Man Who Knew Too Much,” he arrived in Hollywood in 1935 for much-ballyhooed performances in a pair of ambitious projects: as a demented surgeon in Karl Freund’s “Mad Love” and as Raskolnikov in Josef von Sternberg’s “Crime and Punishment.” But it was as Mr. Moto, fitted out with gold-rimmed glasses, taped-back eyelids and what appears to be a set of buck teeth, that Lorre first caught on with the American public. The role preserved his soft-spoken, sardonic personality, but now he was ostensibly on the side of law and order, though his methods involved elaborate disguises, heartless deception and, in at least one case, something approaching outright murder.

Fox Home Video has released a box set of the first four Mr. Moto films, as a handy companion piece to the Chan films it released a few weeks ago. The Moto movies depart considerably from the Chan formulas: these are not whodunits, with the principal suspects gathered in the drawing room of a country estate for last-reel revelations, but action-adventures set in parts of the world that most Americans, in the days before jumbo jets, considered unimaginably exotic. Moto is not a detached intellectual like Chan, but a calculating man of action whose judo skills (or rather, those of his stunt double) got him out of many scrapes involving foreign spies, evil potentates and international criminal organizations.

The Mr. Moto series is unusual because it is largely the work of one filmmaker, Norman Foster, who directed six of the eight films in the series and contributed to the screenplays of several. Foster, whose rich and fascinating life story is recounted by a documentary by John Cork included in the box set, was a world traveler turned Broadway actor who came to Hollywood with his wife, Claudette Colbert, and worked as an actor for several years. (The documentary includes tantalizing clips of his work in John Ford’s “Pilgrimage” and Henry King’s “State Fair,” which one hopes are on the Fox future release schedule.) He became a director after a severe beating left him feeling too disfigured for front-of-the-camera work. As a visual stylist, he liked crowded, busy frames, full of décor details and animated by the constant crossing of background extras. If he isn’t always able to lift the stock characters into more fully developed human figures, he is able to negotiate his way through complicated, occasionally illogical intrigues while maintaining a quick rhythm and a clear line of action.

The four titles in the first Fox set all look extraordinarily good (perhaps because the original material has not been as overprinted and abused as the Chan films) and show off Foster’s flair for exotic atmosphere mined from the Fox back lot. Two (“Thank You, Mr. Moto,” 1937, and “Mysterious Mr. Moto,” 1938) are terrifically entertaining; one, “Think Fast, Mr. Moto” (1937), is fun, if not terribly coherent; and only “Mr. Moto Takes a Chance” (1938) feels like a B-movie, compromised by tacky jungle sets and stock film. Waiting for Volume 2 are “Mr. Moto’s Gamble,” a 1938 film by James Tinling that went into production as “Charlie Chan at the Ringside” but became a Moto film when Warner Oland died; Foster’s “Mr. Moto’s Last Warning” (1939, currently available only in appalling public domain prints); Herbert I. Leeds’s “Mr. Moto in Danger Island” (1939); and Foster’s farewell to the series, “Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation” (1939).

Foster’s place in movie history was secured later, when Orson Welles hired him (reportedly because he spoke Spanish) to direct the Mexican sequences of his doomed Latin America project, “It’s All True,” and to direct Welles and the rest of the Mercury Players in the 1943 thriller “Journey Into Fear” — based, appropriately enough, on an Eric Ambler novel. After seeing the Moto films, “Journey” looks much less like an exception in Foster’s filmography than the movie he was preparing to make all those years. Whether Welles knew it or not, he had chosen the right man for the job. Fox Home Video, $59.98; not rated.

Matthew--note Eric Ambler reference!

Posted

GoM: Thanks for the heads up. I know "Journey Into Fear" came out in VHS form but it doesn't seem to have been done DVD. Waiting for that to happen. Supposedly Orson Wells was the "real" director for JIF.

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