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Classic
Reviews Roundup #25 - February 2006
This latest edition of the Classic
Coming Attractions column is bracketed with new release
information, firstly Warner Bros.' extensive 2006 plans and then the
latest new announcements from all the studios - hence the New
Announcements Plus part of the column title. In between,
I offer reviews for 15 recent or forthcoming releases.
Warner Plans for 2006
As revealed recently in one of Bill Hunt's daily updates on The
Bits, Warner Bros. has ambitious plans for classic
releases in 2006. If you missed it, you can read Bill's complete
report
here.
I have, however, extracted the news of direct interest to classic
fans and it's summarized below. There's no information on specific
titles, content, or timing available beyond what's indicated.
As a follow-up to Bill's report, I queried Warner Bros. on a number
of other specific titles of continuing interest to myself
particularly and classic enthusiasts in general. As one might
expect, Warners was not willing to release specific information at
this time, but they did indicate that virtually all of the following
titles are in the hopper, either under active consideration or in
production: King's Row
(Reagan, Sheridan), The Magnificent
Ambersons, Journey into Fear
(both Welles), Black Legion
(Bogart), They Won't Forget
(Rains), Manhattan Melodrama,
The Secret Six, San
Francisco (all Gable), Gentleman
Jim, Virginia City,
Silver River, Edge
of Darkness (all Flynn), The
Mortal Storm (Stewart), Confessions
of a Nazi Spy (Robinson), Mission
to Moscow (Huston), and Bowery
Boys, Charlie Chan
(the Monograms), and Andy Hardy
series. It's all still vague information, I know, but promising
nonetheless.
Now here's the summary of Bill's recent report on Warners' 2006
plans.
Two-disc Special Editions:
A Clockwork Orange (1971),
The Dirty Dozen (1967), Forbidden
Planet (1956, new feature-length documentary), Grand
Prix (1967), The Maltese
Falcon (1941, packaged with The
Maltese Falcon [1931] and Satan
Met a Lady [1936]), Mutiny on
the Bounty (1962, new feature-length documentary and
audio commentaries), and 2001: A Space
Odyssey (1968).
Box Sets:
Astaire and Rogers Collection, Volume 2
[Flying Down to Rio (1933),
The Gay Divorcee (1934), Roberta
(1935), Carefree (1938), and
The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle
(1939)]. [This is understood to be an August release.]
Bette Davis Collection, Volume 2
[a new Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?:
Two-Disc Special Edition (1962, with new and vintage
documentaries and never-before-seen footage), Jezebel
(1938), Old Acquaintance
(1943), Marked Woman (1937),
and The Man Who Came to Dinner
(1942)].
Forbidden Hollywood Collection: Volume
One. The first release (from TCM Archives) will include
Baby Face (1933), Red
Headed Woman (1932) and Waterloo
Bridge (1931, unseen since its original theatrical
release) along with a new feature-length TCM documentary.
John Ford Collection [The
Lost Patrol (1934), The
Informer (1935), Cheyenne
Autumn (1964), Mary of
Scotland (1936) and Sergeant
Rutledge (1960)]
John Wayne/John Ford Collection
[The Searchers: 50th Anniversary Two-Disc
Special Edition (1956), Stagecoach:
Two-Disc Special Edition (1939), Fort
Apache (1948), The Long Voyage
Home (1940), The Wings of
Eagles (1957), She Wore a
Yellow Ribbon (1949), They
Were Expendable (1945) and 3
Godfathers (1948)]
Marlon Brando Signature Collection
[Julius Caesar (1953), Reflections
in a Golden Eye (1967), and The
Formula (1980)]
Warner Tough Guys Collection [G-Men
(1935), Bullets or Ballots
(1936), San Quentin (1937),
A Slight Case of Murder
(1938), Each Dawn I Die
(1939), and City for Conquest
(1940)]
Other Box Sets (film information
incomplete at present):
Clark Gable [Mogambo
(1953), Dancing Lady (1933),
Boom Town (1940)], Film
Noir [Lady in the Lake
(1947)], Gary Cooper [Sergeant
York (1941), The Hanging Tree
(1959)], Humphrey Bogart [Passage
to Marseille (1944), Action in
the North Atlantic (1943), Across
the Pacific (1942)], James
Stewart [The Spirit of St.
Louis (1957), The Naked Spur
(1953)], Paul Newman Taylor & Burton
[a new two-disc edition of Who's Afraid
of Virginia Woolf? (1966) is expected to highlight this
box]
News on Single Releases:
Knute Rockne: All American
(1940) in 2006 [perhaps a Ronald Reagan box set, as King's
Row and Storm Warning
are also believed to be in the works?], Quo
Vadis (1951) is being considered for future DVD release,
but the Technicolor classic is going to require Ultra-Resolution
restoration. Given the film's length, that's going to take
significant time and be VERY expensive. Cool
Hand Luke: Special Edition (1967) is tentatively being
planned for 2007.
Warner is also going to launch a new series of Ultimate
Collector's Editions, patterned after last year's deluxe
version of King Kong. These
will include tons of bonus features, books and booklets, production
art cards, soundtrack CDs, souvenir programs and more. The first of
these will be John Wayne and John Ford's The
Searchers (already mentioned above).
Reviews
The reviews this time out provide coverage of releases from Fox (Week-end
in Havana, Island in the Sun),
Sony (The Cary Grant Box Set),
Universal (Shadow of a Doubt,
The Man Who Knew Too Much,
Marnie, Torn
Curtain, Family Plot),
and Warner Bros. (The Champ,
Captains Courageous, Kitty
Foyle), as well as Grapevine Video (The
Girl from Calgary/Girl O' My Dreams), Mackinac Media (Industrial
Strength Keaton, Stooges: The
Men Behind the Mayhem), and VCI (Beyond
All Limits). The reviews are presented chronologically by
year of original theatrical release.
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Industrial
Strength Keaton (1917-1965)
(released on DVD by Mackinac Media on January 17th, 2006)
Film Rating: A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): B/B/A
Laughsmith Entertainment, which in 2005 gave us the fine DVD
presentations of Stooges: The Men
Behind the Mayhem (reviewed later in this column) and
The Forgotten Films of Roscoe "Fatty"
Arbuckle (to be reviewed in my next column), kicks
off 2006 with another winner in its two-disc compendium of
Buster Keaton efforts, Industrial
Strength Keaton. The Laughsmith work is released
through Mackinac Media.
Beyond the well-documented silent and early sound years in
Hollywood, Buster Keaton kept very busy making all sorts of film
and television appearances, particularly during the 1950s and
early 1960s, right up until his death in May 1966. Many of these
appearances were for commercial and industrial interests and are
unknown to most casual Keaton fans. This new DVD release goes
far to remedy that situation.
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Disc
One sets the stage by presenting a reconstructed version of the 1921
short, The Playhouse, followed
by the recently discovered short in which Keaton has a cameo, Character
Studies, and the full-length 1931 MGM feature Parlor,
Bedroom and Bath. A 17-minute documentary - 1
Parlor, 5 Bedrooms and 6 Baths - provides some background
on Keaton's mansion, The Italian Villa, before the disc is rounded
out with several promotional films - Seeing
Stars (~1922, an early appearance with Charlie Chaplin
and Jackie Coogan), The Voice of
Hollywood #10 (1929), Hollywood
on Parade #A-6 (1932), and the independent feature, An
Old Spanish Custom (1935).
Disc Two contains the television, commercial and industrial work.
The television shows illustrate the development of the "Can of
Molasses" sketch from its original version on 1917's The
Butcher Boy through The Ed
Wynn Show (1949), The Ken
Murray Show (1952), and You
Asked for It (1957). Also included are appearances on a
1956 edition of The Martha Raye Show
and the 1956 variety series, Circus Time.
The commercials include various spots for Alka Seltzer, Country Club
Malt Liquor, Northwest Orient Airlines, Simon Pure Beer, Shamrock
Oil, Jeep, Milky Way candy bars, Ford Econoline vans, and Pure Oil.
Finally, the industrial films include The
Devil to Pay (1960, for the National Association of
Wholesalers), The Home Owner
(1961, for commercial housing in Phoenix), and The
Triumph of Lester Snapwell (1963, for Kodak's Instamatic
Camera).
Everyone will have his or her own favorites from amongst the five
and a half hours of material presented here. Personally, I enjoyed
the live television (particularly the Ed Wynn and Martha Raye
appearances) and the two later industrial films best, but the
commercials offered moments of interest as well. The image quality
of these various items ranges from acceptable to good. The version
of the familiar Parlor, Bedroom and Bath
is also a pleasure of mine and the version on offer here is quite a
decent-looking one that surpasses somewhat the various public domain
releases already available. An Old
Spanish Custom is quite tedious and looks rather dark and
debris-ridden, although it is watchable. The new documentary on the
Italian Villa is very interesting, providing among other things some
information on the rediscovery and preservation of Keaton's silent
features. In addition to all the Keaton content, there are half a
dozen audio commentaries on selected items, several video
reproductions of promotional booklets, a photo gallery, and a nice
20-page disc insert booklet that provides considerable guidance on
the disc content. One of the essays therein notes that there is
still significant other material to be accounted for and opines that
an encore collection to this one may be possible. Highly
recommended.
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The
Champ (1931)
(released on DVD by Warner Bros. on January 31st)
Film Rating: A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): A-/B+/B
Originally shot in the late summer of 1931 and released in mid
November by MGM, The Champ
represented the initial teaming of Jackie Cooper and Wallace
Beery. Beery played an ex-champion boxer and Cooper was his
young son, Dink. Idolized by Dink, the champ aspires to a
comeback that will put him back on top. Complicating things are
the champ's propensity to drink and gamble, both of which lead
to the champ's decision to allow his ex-wife to assume custody
of Dink. When this arrangement doesn't work out, Dink and his
father reunite just in time for Dink to act in his father's
corner at the comeback fight - one for which the champ seems
ill-prepared.
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The
Champ was the young Cooper's first film at MGM and
signaled the beginning of a successful career there as a child
actor. Beery, conversely, was at the height of his popularity and
won a Best Actor Oscar for his efforts (he tied with Fredric March,
who received his statue for Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde). Although Jackie Cooper reportedly never
cared much for Beery, the two's work together in The
Champ was successful and popular enough to warrant being
re-teamed three times over the next four years in The
Bowery (1933), Treasure Island
(1934), and O'Shaughnessy's Boy
(1935).
The story portrayed in The Champ
is a sentimental one that has defied the passage of time. It's still
an affecting tale because of the excellent work of its two leads.
The role of the faded champ is particularly suited to Beery's
blustery style while Cooper manages to keep the sentimental aspects
of the story from compromising the inner strength of his character
and overpowering his performance. Director King Vidor's work in
guiding Cooper and thus striking the right balance here must be
acknowledged. The fight scenes, if not too realistic compared to
more modern stagings, are quite energetic and develop sufficient
rapport with the audience to make the film's resolution satisfying.
Look for the familiar faces of Rosco Ates and Edward Brophy in
supporting roles and nice work from both Irene Rich and Hamilton
Hale as Dink's mother and step-father.
Warner Bros.' DVD presentation is highly appealing. For a film
that's now 75 years old, the image is exceptionally sharp and well
detailed. Source material defects are not significant and modest
film grain combined with good contrast makes for a nice film-like
experience. The mono sound has some minor hiss, but is otherwise
clear and unmuffled. English, French, and Spanish subtitles are also
provided. The supplements consist of the bizarre though entertaining
vintage short Crazy House (in
colour), a Lux Radio Theatre production of the film with Beery from
1939, and the theatrical trailer. Recommended.
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The
Girl from Calgary (1932)
Girl
O' My Dreams (1934)
(released on DVD-R by Grapevine Video in January 2006)
Film Rating (Calgary): C-
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): C/C/E
Film Rating (Dreams): B
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): B/B-/E
This is one of two discs of early sound films on Grapevine
Video's slate of January releases. (The other double feature is
Sinful Cargo/Captain Calamity,
which will be reviewed in my next column. Interested readers
should note that these are DVD-R releases, available only
through Grapevine Video's on-line site at grapevinevideo.com.) I
hope to be able to include reviews of such lesser-known product
in my column more frequently in future. The disc reviewed here
includes The Girl from Calgary
and Girl O' My Dreams -
both low budget Monogram films made in the early 1930s.
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Girl
O' My Dreams is all about a big upcoming track meet with
the complications of college romance mixed in to throw a monkey
wrench into Rawley College's chances against Stanton College. It's a
completely predictable college musical comedy, but it features a
host of up-and-coming young players that are so enthusiastic that
the results provide pleasing entertainment. Prominent are Arthur
Lake as the school pole vaulter (who always seems to be doing a
version of Dagwood Bumstead no matter what he's in), Sterling
Holloway as the editor of the college paper, and Lon Chaney Jr.
(here billed as Creighton Chaney) as the shot put and discus man.
Mary Carlisle is the female lead with the Crane Sisters playing twin
college coeds named Nip and Tuck. The film has three songs, the best
of which is the melodic "Lucky Star". One of the other
songs, "Thou Art My Baby" (with lyrics about a bimbo and
being in limbo), actually features Lon Chaney Jr. singing and you
know, he's not bad. At a brisk 63 minutes, it all whistles by
effortlessly and leaves one feeling upbeat. Better yet, Grapevine's
transfer is surprisingly good. Apparently taken from a print
intended for television release (the opening Monogram credit has
been replaced by a "Motion Pictures for Television"
heading, although the closing Monogram logo is intact), the image
looks bright and reasonably crisp with very nice contrast and shadow
detail. There are numerous scratches and speckles and a few rough
jump cuts, but they don't affect one's enjoyment. The mono sound is
quite legible although there is at least one instance of a couple of
seconds of missing dialogue.
The Girl from Calgary is much
less successful. One gets the impression Monogram managed to get its
hands on some actual footage of the parade and events of the Calgary
Stampede and figured it might as well use it as the starting point
for a film. The story proceeds to tell how a local Calgary girl
(Fifi D'Orsay) becomes a Broadway celebrity through the help of a
local promoter (Paul Kelly) who eventually, surprise, falls for her.
Once Fifi leaves Calgary, there isn't another mention of the city
and she might as well be the girl from Timbuktoo for all the
difference her origin makes to the plot. There are some
complications provided by a sleazy promoter. The latter is played by
familiar face Edwin Maxwell, who is the most memorable player in the
cast by the way. Leads Fifi D'Orsay and Paul Kelly are not up to the
task and the film stumbles to a very weak ending. Grapevine's DVD
presentation is not as strong as for Girl
O' My Dreams. The image is merely watchable, but
characterized by frequent softness and frequent speckles and
scratches that seem more intrusive, perhaps because the film itself
doesn't hold the same degree of interest that the other did. The
mono sound is workable. Interested purchasers should note that the
63-minute feature is entirely in black and white although the title
and opening sequences were reportedly in colour when originally
released.
This double feature release from Grapevine has no other features on
it other than the two films. I would reiterate that this is a DVD-R
disc, which may pose problems for some players, but I encountered no
difficulties on the Sony, Pioneer, and DVD-ROM players I tested it
on. For those with an interest in early B titles in general and
specifically the output of Monogram Pictures, Girl
O' My Dreams alone makes the release worth a try.
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Captains
Courageous (1937)
(released on DVD by Warner Bros. on January 31st, 2006)
Film Rating: A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): B+/B+/B-
Spencer Tracy won his first Best Actor Academy Award for his
role as the Portuguese fisherman Manuel in Captains
Courageous. Manuel is part of the crew of the fishing
schooner "We're Here", which has sailed out of
Gloucester, Massachusetts looking for cod off the Grand Banks.
He saves 10-year-old Harvey Cheyne who has fallen off an ocean
liner and under his guidance, Harvey is transformed from an
obnoxious spoiled brat into a thoughtful young man.
Captains Courageous is
based on the Rudyard Kipling novel of the same title published
in 1897, and was one of the final films scheduled for production
by MGM production chief Irving Thalberg. Thalberg's death in
September 1936 actually delayed the beginning of principal
photography for several days, but once begun, the shoot lasted
with some breaks until February 1937 - a somewhat lengthier
period than normal for films of the time.
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Exterior
and background photography was done in Newfoundland, Nova Scotia,
and Massachusetts while location work by the second unit occurred in
the Florida Keys and off the coast of Mexico. The cast for the film
utilized the impressive MGM contract roster of the time and as well
as Spencer Tracy, included Lionel Barrymore, Freddie Bartholomew
(the 19-year-old Harvey of Kipling's novel was changed to a
10-year-old boy to more closely fit Batholomew's age), and Mickey
Rooney. Melvyn Douglas was borrowed from Columbia to play Harvey's
father. The resulting film is high adventure, combining a
warm-hearted story of the bonding between a man and a young boy with
well-executed and exciting action sequences. It is uniformly
well-acted by the whole cast (with Tracy fully deserving of his
Oscar), but also tightly directed by Victor Fleming who successfully
walks a fine line between sentiment and realism. The film's ending
is handled with sensitivity and remains effective some 70 years
later.
Warner Bros.' DVD presentation of Captains
Courageous is very good. The film generally looks sharp
and nicely detailed, with deep blacks and clean whites. There are
some speckles and the odd vertical line, but these never intrude.
Some film grain is in evidence, as one should expect. The mono sound
has some low-grade hiss at times, but otherwise offers a good
account of itself particularly during the storm sequences. A French
track as well as English, French, and Spanish subtitles are
provided. Supplements include the rather disappointing vintage short
The Little Maestro, the
cartoon Little Buck Cheeser, a
"Leo Is on the Air" radio promo for the film, and two
reissue theatrical trailers. Recommended.
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The
Cary Grant Box Set
The
Awful Truth (1937)
Holiday
(1938)
Only
Angels Have Wings (1939)
His
Girl Friday (1940)
The
Talk of the Town (1942)
(released on DVD by Sony on February 7th, 2006)
Sony has given us some of the real cream from Cary Grant's
career in this new five-disc compilation, packaged as a fold-out
digipak. For veteran Cary Grant fans, the chief attraction of
this box set is the inclusion of Holiday,
a title previously unavailable on DVD. (At this time, it is not
available separately.) New also to this set are short background
featurettes on four of the titles, new transfers for the four
titles previously released, and a set of ten 5x7 postcards
containing B&W production stills or colour poster art.
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His
Girl Friday is the best film in the set, though only
marginally ahead of The Awful Truth.
In it, Grant is a New York newspaper editor who tries to get his ace
reporter and former wife (Rosalind Russell) to cover the escape of a
convicted killer, but she'd rather retire to Albany and the simple
pleasures of marriage to Ralph Bellamy. The film, directed by Howard
Hawks at the height of his career, is famous for the staccato,
overlapping dialogue spoken by the principals. All three principal
actors are perfectly in sync and supported by a wealth of fine
character performers (Gene Lockhart, Porter Hall, Roscoe Karns, John
Qualen, Billy Gilbert, etc.), the film is a riot throughout. His
Girl Friday is a public domain title for which numerous
poor PD transfers abound, but Columbia did the right thing in
issuing a superb DVD version of its own five years ago. That effort
included an excellent image transfer that appears to be virtually
identical in this new edition. Todd McCarthy's audio commentary and
the four background featurettes are also included as is the vintage
advertising and the film's trailer. Dropped from the new edition are
some talent files, the short production notes included as an insert
with the original disc, and some of the subtitling (only English and
French are now included).
Film Rating (His Girl Friday): A+
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): A/B+/A-
The Awful Truth is the
earliest of the quintessential Grant comedy films. He's matched with
Irene Dunne (one of the great 1930s actresses, later sadly much
forgotten) in a screwball comedy of supposed marital infidelity that
leads to divorce, with both parties developing new relationships.
Dunne's is with good old Ralph Bellamy. Grant and Dunne remain in
constant contact, however, due to the visiting rights that Grant has
with their dog Mr. Smith (Asta). Inevitably, the two realize that
they're meant for each other, but it may be too late. As with His
Girl Friday, this film is high entertainment throughout,
though not quite as frenetic. Both Grant and Dunne shine equally.
The sequences involving Grant's acquaintance Dixie doing her "wind"
dance and Dunne's later parody of it are side-splitting for the
facial reactions alone. The Awful Truth
was previously released on DVD by Columbia three years ago in a
disappointing transfer. This new transfer is welcome in that it
reduces somewhat the excessive grain that plagued the older release
and also cleans up the worst of the scratches. There's still room
for more improvement, however. The original release offered several
bonus trailers, but these are missing from the new edition as are
some of the subtitles (only English and French now appear). One new
supplement is a seven-minute featurette that purports to be about
The Awful Truth, but is mainly
focused on Grant himself and provides some background on how Grant
came to Hollywood bolstered by comments from various film critics
and historians. It's a pretty weak effort. Also present (it appears
on most of the discs in the set) is a DVD trailer for a forthcoming
box set of Frank Capra films that will include It
Happened One Night, Mr. Deeds
Goes to Town, You Can't Take
It with You, Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington, Platinum Blonde,
and the new-to-DVD American Madness
(1932, with Walter Huston).
Film Rating (The Awful Truth): A+
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): B/B+/C-
Only Angels Have Wings is the
anomaly in the set, a drama focusing on the lives of flyers working
for an air freight company operating in the Andes Mountains. Grant,
as the head of the company, finds himself the object of the
affections of two women played by Jean Arthur and Rita Hayworth. The
film is beautifully shot and directed by Howard Hawks who claimed it
to be based on a true story. It was a typically Hawksian film with
its emphasis on male bonding and on strong female characters. Grant
proved to be equally as effective in more serious roles as in his
traditional comedy ones, perhaps presaging his later success with
Hitchcock. For Hayworth, it was the breakthrough film that brought
her a long-term contract with Columbia. The film benefited from
another fine supporting cast including Richard Barthelmess, Thomas
Mitchell, Sig Rumann, Allyn Joslyn, and Noah Berry Jr. Columbia
first issued Only Angels Have Wings
on DVD seven years ago with an excellent image transfer. This new
release looks virtually identical to the earlier one. The new
edition drops the vintage advertising, talent files, production
notes (disc insert), some subtitles (only English and French now
appear), and bonus trailers from the original release, but adds a
new seven-minute featurette on the film. It's still a modest
supplement, but is more focused on the film itself than was the one
on The Awful Truth disc.
Film Rating (Only Angels Have Wings): A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): A/B+/C-
Holiday is based on the Philip
Barry play of the same title and finds Grant preparing to marry into
a wealthy family. His plan is to work only until he has enough money
to finance an extended holiday that will allow him to experience
life, but this runs contrary to the expectations of his wife-to-be
and her parents. His fiancee's sister (Katherine Hepburn) is more in
tune with Grant's view of life, and the two begin to form a
relationship that may jeopardize the planned wedding. The film is
stylishly directed by George Cukor who draws excellent performances
from Grant and Hepburn. Not as funny a film as either His
Girl Friday or The Awful Truth,
Holiday is still a witty
outing that offers plenty of entertainment value. Edward Everett
Horton and Jean Dixon offer excellent support to Grant and Hepburn
as Grant's friends, The Potters. Also present is the typically
impressive Columbia supporting cast - this time including the likes
of Lew Ayres, Henry Daniell, Binnie Barnes, and Henry Kolker. The
film has been restored by the UCLA Film and Television Archive in
conjunction with Columbia and looks fairly good on DVD. The image is
quite sharp on the whole, but there are a few soft sections and
excessive grain is evident at times. Speckles and some scratches are
in evidence. Holiday looks
better than did The Awful Truth
in its original DVD release, but on balance is now the weakest
looking of the five films in the new box set. The mono sound is
clear and free of distortion although there is some mild hiss at
times. English, French, Portuguese, Korean, and Spanish subtitles
are provided. Supplements include several trailers (not one for Holiday)
and a new seven-minute featurette on Cary Grant at Columbia which
does provide some background on Holiday's
production but also deals with other films as well. It has the same
mix of stills and interviews as the other new featurettes in the box
set. There is a short two-minute featurette showing various still
photographs taken during the shooting of a winter sequence of Grant
and his fiancée set in Lake Placid. This was intended to be
included at the start of the film, but was later deleted as Cukor
was never convinced of its merits.
Film Rating (Holiday): A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): B-/B/C
The Talk of the Town was a
finely balanced blend of comedy and social significance, reuniting
Grant and director George Stevens after their success with Penny
Serenade. See my review of the original DVD release
here.
The film's new transfer is an improvement over that of the previous
release by way of increased consistency and reduced speckles and
scratches. Shadow detail is still a problem at times, but there is
increased sharpness overall. As with The
Awful Truth, however, there is still room for further
improvement. The new disc drops some of the subtitles (only English
and French are now included) and the bonus trailers present on the
original release, but adds a five-minute featurette that has George
Stevens Jr. talking about his father working on The
Talk of the Town. Despite its brevity, it's the best of
the new featurettes that Sony has included in the box set.
Film Rating (The Talk of the Town): A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): B/B+/C
The Cary Grant Box Set with
the inclusion of Holiday is a
bargain at under $40 on-line compared to the price of the original
other four releases (currently about $80 in total on-line). With new
transfers, most of the significant supplements from the original
discs ported over, some modest new features, and a nice set of
postcards with vintage photography, this set is highly recommended. |
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