Breathless
(1959/Criterion Blu-ray w/DVD Set)/Cold
Comes The Night
(2013/Sony Blu-ray)/Foreign
Correspondent
(1940/Hitchcock/Criterion Blu-ray w/DVD Set)/Man
In The Dark 3D
(1953/Columbia/Sony/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray 3D
w/2D)/Oldboy
(2013 Remake/Film District/Sony Blu-ray)
3D
Picture: B Picture: B+ & C+/B-/B & B-/B/B Sound: B- &
C+/B/B- & C+/B-/B- Extras: B+/C-/B/C/C Films:
B+/C+/B/C+/B-
PLEASE
NOTE:
The
Man In The Dark 3D
Blu-ray 3D (which includes Blu-ray 2D) is from our friends at
Twilight Time limited to a 3,000 copies pressing and is now only
available from Screen Archives and can be ordered from the link
below.
Here
are a group of darker dramas with Noir orientation as well as other
aspects you should know about coming your way on Blu-ray...
Jean-Luc
Godard's Breathless
(1959) is making the rounds on Blu-ray worldwide and we just covered
its debut in Australia, but now, we get the new Criterion Blu-ray
edition (w/DVDs) and it is even more loaded than the import. We
reviewed it as part of a great set of foreign films at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/12563/Breathless+(1959/Godard)/The+Bicycle+Thieves+(
Finding
the room between a documentary style and breaking down of the
narrative form (via Film Noir in this case), it is always interesting
to see it again, even within weeks of two different Blu-ray versions.
The film
that helped launch The French New Wave gets more expanded extras
here. It shares the 80-minutes-long Hotel
De Suede
film (here called Chambre
12, Hotel De Suede,
on the Umbrella Blu-ray called Room
12, Hotel De Suede)
and Original French Trailer, but does not include two other clips
that Blu-ray had. Criterion adds a DVD set with all the same extras
as their Blu-ray, a terrific booklet (all inside a slipcase that has
the discs) with cast/crew text info., vintage interviews, two essays
and stills, while the discs add Godard's 1959 short film Charlotte
et son Jules
starring Jean-Paul Belmondo from Breathless,
2007 interviews with Director of Photography Raoul Coutard (who
approved the transfer here), Assistant Director Pierre Rissient &
filmmaker D. A. Pennebaker, archival interviews with Godard, Jean
Seberg, Belmondo & Jean-Pierre Melville and two video essays on
the film and Godard: Mark Rappaport's Jean
Seberg
and Jonathan Rosenbaum's Breathless
As Criticism.
A great set of extras for a key work in all of world film history.
Tze
Chun's Cold
Comes The Night
(2013) has Alice Eve (ATM)
as a single mother working at a motel trying to raise her daughter
while protecting her from the sometimes sleazy happenings there. She
seems a good mom, but a mysterious man (Bryan Cranston of Breaking
Bad)
and an assistant have checked into separate rooms and when the
younger helper gets into unexpected trouble, he approaches the mother
as a quick replacement to deliver a valuable package of some sort.
Things are not going as planned and that trend continues throughout.
This
may not be a great thriller, but it has some suspense and when that
does not work, something unintentionally funny seems to come in and
save the script's limits from itself. Cranston is doing some kind of
Russian accent and the cast is always interesting. A few scenes are
just over the top, yet I would recommend anyone who likes thrillers
or needs a good laugh ought to give this one a look.
Deleted
Scenes that should have stayed in the final cut are the only extras.
Alfred
Hitchcock's Foreign
Correspondent
(1940) was a thriller with a difference as the Master of Suspense
teamed up with the visual genius William Cameron Menzies to create a
thriller that also served as anti-Axis Powers propaganda while being
sly about it. This meant that Hitch surrendered some aspects of his
signature look and feel to make other points in this tale of a
reporter (Joel McCrea) going to Europe to get a story and uncovering
something much more ugly and evil than he could have imagined.
The
propaganda aspect also gives it a pace that is slowed unlike any
other Hitchcock film, but the special circumstances cannot hold back
what does work here and it does become a sort of active time capsule
as much as anything. McCrea gives a decent performance with Laraine
Day, George Sanders, Herbert Marshall and Edmund Gwenn also in fine
form. No, this is not one of Hitchcock's outright murder thrillers
nor is it meant to be, but it is enough of one of his own films that
it becomes a one-of-a-kind that can be more appreciated in this new
transfer than ever before.
Extras
include a booklet that offers technical information, cast/crew text
info., stills and film scholar James Naremore's fine essay The
Windmills Of War,
while the Blu-ray and DVDs both add a Trailer, Hitchcock interviewed
on a 1972 episode of The
Dick Cavett Show,
a 1946 radio version with Joseph Cotten, 1942 Life Magazine piece
Have
You Heard? The Story Of Wartime Rumors,
Mark Harris on Hollywood
Propaganda & World War II
and Craig Barron with a brand new featurette on the visual effects
for the film.
Lew
Lander's Man
In The Dark 3D
(1953) was Columbia Pictures getting the first name studio 3D film
out of the gate after United Artists (both were considered smaller
little
sisters
to the major studios) in a short 70-minutes of a Film Noir that is
unintentionally funny too often and adding the 3D effects (even
obvious in 2D), even more funny. The serious side cast aside too
soon is a criminal Steve (Edmond O'Brien) having brain surgery to get
rid of his evil, criminal side, but this makes him forget where he
hid $130,000 in stolen money (that is $1.9 Million adjusted as of
this posting upon this disc's release) though his criminal friends do
not believe it at first. They grab him from the most poorly
protected asylum hospital in any major film I can remember.
The
supporting cast is also a riot without trying including Audrey Totter
as Steve's girlfriend trying to make him remember the money and more,
plus those other crooks (including perennial baddie actor Ted de
Corsia) and we get setting that range from an old post office to a
carnival. We are only seeing classic 3D films finally hitting the
Blu-ray 3D format, but this little gem out of the Sony catalog is the
first time any major 3D film has been produced as a Limited Edition.
However, Twilight Time has it and if you like this kind of film, you
should get it while you can.
Extras
include an isolated music score track and a trailer that served as a
semi-trailer since this was one of the first 3D movies.
Last
but not least is an English-language remake of Chan-woo Park's 2003
worldwide hit Oldboy,
which we reviewed the original version of at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/6218/Oldboy+(Blu-ray/Tartan
Remade
10 years later by Spike Lee with a very strong Josh Brolin in the
title role of a well-off man suddenly in a surreal situation that
seems to have revenge tied into it. Here clocking in at 104 minutes,
production company Film District had a falling out with Spike Lee and
lead star Josh Brolin, cutting an our out of this remake film. As a
result, it bombed and both Lee & Brolin announced publicly how
unhappy they were. It is serious subject matter, but the company
knew that when they greenlit and funded it. Brolin is really good
here, Lee goes all out behind the camera and the supporting cast
(including Sharto Copley and a surprisingly good Elizabeth Olsen)
make what seemed like an impossible remake almost possible. For the
version we get here, it has some good moments, but watching it feels
truncated as any scenes or ideas that start to build up feel like
they have been cut off in odd ways. It is still worth a look just to
see what does work in this cut (I was not as big a fan of the
original as some), but Lee proves as he had on Inside Man that he can
do solid commercially sound work without selling out.
Extras
include the Transformation
and Making
Of
featurettes, but the Blu-ray exclusives added include the actual
Workout Video we see in the film, Talking
Heads
and Alternate & Extended Scenes from the film that begins to give
us an idea of how much was really cut out and should have been left
alone.
The
1080p 1.33 X 1 black and white MVC-encoded 3-D - Full Resolution
digital High Definition image on Man is fun, has some
hilarious moments and is a must-own for serious 3D fans, but even the
2D version looks really good, well shot, with nice detail and depth
that even offers a few demo shots. The 1080p 1.33 X 1 black and
white 2D digital High Definition image on Correspondent is an
older film, but also shocks with its share of demo shots and is
remarkably sharp and clear for its age (a 2K scan from the original
camera negative), though some shots are soft here too. The 1080p
1.33 X 1 black and white 2D digital High Definition image on
Breathless might be from the same HD transfer as the
Australian Blu-ray we just covered, but as DP Coutard
approved of this one, the differences are in line with how the film
should look. This is a little warmer, richer & slightly darker,
but sometimes detail is a little affected in ways I was not happy
with despite being the best transfer on the list. Still, this is not
as severe as the color differences between the Coutard/Criterion
Pierrot Le Fou
(now out of print!) and other HD transfers worldwide, but even the
differences here will be debated. The 1.33 X 1 Correspondent
and Breathless DVDs are not bad for standard definition, but
no match for their Blu-ray versions by any means.
The
1080p 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Night
is a digital shoot and has limits as a result, but for what the
makers go for as a look, this is visually consistent and composition
is always good. That leaves the 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High
Definition image transfer on the Oldboy
remake, which is an impressive enough presentation that is an
all-film shoot. Primarily a 35mm shoot using 2 versions of Super
35mm (two perf/Techniscope and three-perf for special shots) with
Super 16mm and some Super 8mm filming that mesh very well. Color is
consistent and there is a style here that is always here and works.
As
for sound, the DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mixes on both
Night
and Oldboy
should be in a tie for first place, but it is Night
that turns out to be the sonic champ here with a consistent
soundfield, consistent recording and good sound editing. Since Spike
Lee did not get his cut of the film, who knows how that may have
affected the mix in this shortened version, but there are spots that
seem flat, compressed and too monophonic in the dialogue for their
own good. When the mix works, it is just fine.
The
rest of the releases are monophonic optical theatrical releases, led
by DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 1.0 lossless mix on Dark well recorded
and pretty clean and clear for its age, tied with the PCM 2.0 Mono on
Breathless
(which was DTS-MA Mono on the Australian/Umbrella Blu-ray) sounding
as good as the other Blu-ray of the film we covered.
That
leaves the PCM 2.0 Mono on Correspondent
also sounding as good as it can, but showing its age a bit more than
the rest while still surprising in what we can now hear. The DVD
versions of that and Breathless
sport lossy
Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono mixes that are passable, but not as good as
their Blu-ray counterparts.
You
can order the
Man
In The Dark 3D
limited edition Blu-ray 3D edition while supplies last at this link:
www.screenarchives.com
-
Nicholas Sheffo