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The Black Windmill

by Glenn Erickson

Secret agent Michael Caine must take on both the kidnappers of his son and his own suspect Army Intelligence colleagues in Don Siegel’s efficiently filmed, curiously tame suspense thriller. Delphine Seyrig is enticing and Donald Pleasance an unlikeable security bureaucrat, while the capable Janet Suzman and John Vernon fill out a top-flight cast that performs…

CineSavant 2018 Favored Disc Roundup

by Glenn Erickson

CineSavant 2018 Favored Disc Roundup Savant picks The Most Impressive Blu-rays and DVDs of 2018   Welcome again to the most self-indulgent list of 2018, accompanied by personal photos of limited interest!  *  The CineSavant brain trust once again convenes to peruse a year’s worth of Blu-ray releases, searching for the wisdom to cull out…

Anne of the Thousand Days

by Glenn Erickson

A movie for people who don’t normally like costume dramas about kings and queens, this adaptation of Maxwell Anderson’s play is great entertainment from head to toe. Richard Burton gives one of his better late-career performances, and Geneviève Bujold is a dynamo in a tiny package. It’s an impressive portrait of male power run amuck….

Notorious

by Glenn Erickson

Alfred Hitchcock’s nearly perfect romantic spy thriller teams Cary Grant with Ingrid Bergman to yield just what audiences wanted in 1946, an adult drama with menacing political themes… and an unusually adult approach to a perverse sex relationship! Notorious Blu-ray The Criterion Collection 137 1946 / B&W / 1:37 flat Academy / 101 min. /…

Dracula: Prince of Darkness

by Glenn Erickson

How to shake up a mid-sixties slump at Hammer Films? It’s back to basics time, with Christopher Lee returning in a most unusual way, because there wasn’t much left of him at the finish of his first outing as the number one supernatural public enemy. Terence Fisher is also back, enlivening the third film in…

Disney Classics on Blu ray

by Charlie Largent

Though long embraced by parents as family-friendly safe zones, Disney’s live action films were just as often called out for their squeaky clean posturing and regressive world views. Fair enough – but as Noah Cross growled, “Politicians, ugly buildings and whores all get respectable if they last long enough” – and a good number of those mild-mannered…

The True Story of Jesse James

by Glenn Erickson

Nicholas Ray’s CinemaScope detour into outlaw Americana is yet another sincere artistic effort muffled by studio interference. Ray sought to examine a legend in terms of folklore and celebrity. Fox just wanted a cheap remake of its 1939 hit and undermined the director all the way. It’s a potentially great film marred by clumsy reshoots…

The Sea Hawk

by Glenn Erickson

Grand action entertainment bursts forth on the high seas, showing us how much production value Golden Hollywood could lavish on an exciting, artful swashbuckler. Errol Flynn is at his glorious best, backed by greats like Flora Robson, Henry Daniell and Claude Rains in fine form. The special effects and full-sized ship sets impress in ways…

The Magnificent Ambersons

by Glenn Erickson

Hollywood’s most tragic ‘mangled masterpiece’ gets a new lease on life with this special edition of what could have been Orson Welles’ greatest film, had RKO not intentionally destroyed it to sully the stature of the unlucky Boy Genius. The movie can’t be reconstructed but its reputation can be restored — the story of the…

True Stories

by Charlie Largent

True Stories Blu ray Criterion 1986 / 1.85:1 / 89 Min. / Street Date – November 27, 2018 Starring David Byrne, John Goodman, Swoosie Kurtz, Pops Staples Cinematography by Ed Lachman Directed by David Byrne A concert film filmed over four nights at the Pantages Theater in 1983, Jonathan Demme’s Stop Making Sense has the…

The Atomic Cafe

by Glenn Erickson

Duck and Cover!  And while you’re down there, enjoy a Flaming Atomic Cocktail!  Loader, Rafferty & Rafferty’s influential documentary-satire uses authentic ’50s films and songs to illuminate the lies and myths about Cold War civil defense. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll be like children in the face of a horror being characterized as an inconvenience…

Dark of the Sun

by Glenn Erickson

It’s tendon-biting combat, with guns, trains, planes, chainsaws, and an indestructible all-terrain vehicle (that still couldn’t stand the potholes in the street of Los Angeles)!  Rod Taylor, Jim Brown and Yvette Mimieux blast their way through one of the roughest of the ’60s action spectacles, as mercenaries on a mission of mercy that’s really a…

De Niro & De Palma The Early Films

by Glenn Erickson

No 1960s film student had more on the ball than Brian De Palma, who enlisted a smart group of collaborators to pull together his voyeuristic student-filmmaking, Alfred Hitchcock-worshiping early experimental pictures. In these three early features we can feel the director being influenced in multiple directions — do ensemble comedy and Godard-esque minimalism have a…

Sawdust and Tinsel

by Glenn Erickson

Ingmar Bergman’s ‘sad comedy’ finds desperation and adultery in his favorite milieu, the theater. He also gets to contrast the self-important thespians with those dubious circus nomads, even as both groups are shunned by civilian society.   Sawdust and Tinsel Blu-ray The Criterion Collection 412 1953 / B&W / 1:37 Academy / 92 min. /…

Sunshine

by Glenn Erickson

Before TV movies were dissed with the phrase ‘disease of the month,’ this 1973 film surprised and moved audiences with the realistic story of a young mother facing a fatal illness. It’s directed by the great Joseph Sargent and graced with the music of John Denver, but its impact rests upon the remarkable, affecting performance…

Mamie Van Doren Film Noir Collection

by Charlie Largent

Mamie Van Doren Film Noir Collection Blu ray KL Studio Classics 1957 – 1959 / 1.75:1, 1.85:1, / 216 Min. / Street Date – November 20, 2018 Starring Mamie Van Doren, Anne Bancroft, Lee Van Cleef, Lex Barker Cinematography by Stanley Cortez, William Margulies Directed by Howard Koch, Edward Cahn Mamie Van Doren, née Joan…

Horror of Dracula

by Glenn Erickson

The best of all Hammer horror pictures finally comes to Region A Blu-ray, with a bright transfer made to look like original Technicolor prints. This is where Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing came into their own as international stars, as the undead Count Dracula and the no-nonsense vampire killer Van Helsing. It’s the bridge between…

The Thing From Another World

by Glenn Erickson

Intrepid soldiers and scientists battle a bloodsucking alien invader at the top of the world!  The Warner Archive Collection releases Howard Hawks’ incomparable Science Fiction thriller, a long-desired favorite. Long handicapped by missing scenes, this RKO classic is intact once again, complete with its nerve-rattling bombastic Dimitri Tiomkin music score. The Thing from Another World…

The Outer Limits, Season Two

by Glenn Erickson

It’s here, the second half of the science fiction TV series from the 1960s, restored and remastered. It’s really only half a season and the creative team has been swapped out, but several gems are every bit as good as episodes from year one. Plus acting disc producer David J. Schow ladles on the extras…

The Puppet Masters

by Glenn Erickson

Robert Heinlein’s frighteningly brilliant sci-fi horror concept spawned an entire generation of biological invasions from outer space. Stuart Orme’s faithful, authorized adaptation has a lot going for it, including sensationally good, gloppy special makeup effects, and a commanding performance from a dour, authoritative Donald Sutherland. The Puppet Masters Blu-ray KL Studio Classics 1994 / Color…

A Coffin for the Sheriff & Blood at Sundown

by Lee Broughton

Guest reviewer Lee Broughton returns with more vintage Spaghetti Westerns. Prolific Italo western star Anthony Steffen shoots first in Alberto Cardone’s gothic vengeance drama Blood at Sundown, and plays the revenge game straight up in Mario Caiano’s A Coffin for the Sheriff. The double bill disc also features appearances by genre stalwarts Gianni Garko, Erika…

Hallelujah the Hills

by Glenn Erickson

Adolfas Mekas made his mark in American independent filmmaking with this avant-garde comedy that shook up film festivals circa 1963. Although it is said to have inspired Andy Warhol, it’s its own animal entirely, eighty minutes of cinematic frivolity that’s too sincere to be a parody of the filmic conventions it so happily celebrates. Hallelujah…

Gosford Park

by Glenn Erickson

At least twenty fine actors and stars make Robert Altman’s period piece about a party in a big English country house into a gala occasion. The show is also a fascinating entree into a classed world of masters and servants. The drama of manners could also be described as a mystery who-dunnit. Either way, we’re…

Age of Consent

by Glenn Erickson

A dreamy tropic idyll … or a dirty old man’s movie? Our verdict chooses the first option for Michael Powell’s retelling of the old tale of the artist’s innocent yet sensual creative adventure with his young model. Producer James Mason eases nicely into the part, but then-newcomer Helen Mirren takes the prize as the most…

A Man Alone

by Glenn Erickson

Ray Milland directs a fine western drama, strong on character and tension; it garnered enough praise to set him on a second, minor career behind the camera. Milland also stars as a gunman in the wrong place at the wrong time — framed for a mass murder in an unforgiving frontier town. Who ya gonna…

Clouzot The Early Works

by Glenn Erickson

A master of suspense admired even by Hitchcock, Henri-Georges Clouzot is famous for acid-tinged thrillers about cold-blooded murder and ugly politics, whether in a French town or a Latin American oil field. But his early writing career was quite different: he provided the scenarios and dialogue for ten years’ worth of clever farces and affecting…