Cafe Society
(2016/Amazon/Lionsgate Blu-ray w/DVD)/The
Marx Brothers Silver Screen Collection
(1929 - 1933 with The
Cocoanuts,
Animal
Crackers,
Monkey
Business,
Horse
Feathers
& Duck
Soup/Paramount/Universal
Blu-ray Set)/9
To 5
(1980 aka Nine
To Five/Fox/Twilight
Time Limited Edition Blu-ray)/Short
Cuts
(1993/Altman/Fine Line/New Line/Warner Bros./Criterion Blu-ray Set)
Picture:
B (C+: DVD) Sound: B & C+/B-/B-/B Extras: C/B/B/B
Films: B/B+/B/B
PLEASE
NOTE:
The 9
To 5
Blu-ray is now only available from our friends at Twilight Time, is
limited to only 3,000 copies and can be ordered while supplies last
at the links below.
The
following comedy releases cover almost 90 years of the genre in the
sound film era and include six classics, an underrated gem and a new,
easy to underestimate work from the most prolific comedy writer in
all of cinema history...
That
writer is Woody Allen and his new film Cafe
Society
(2016) is a love letter to old Hollywood, which his films constantly
show through the decades that he loves as a great era and not just
with films that happen to take place in New York City. This film is
interested in many of Allen's themes, but what makes it a bit
different is its obsession with doppelgangers in its characters and
contrasting the East Coast/New York City with the West
Coast/Hollywood. Jesse Eisenberg plays a young man from NYC who goes
out to Hollywood to find a job and a fun new life. It is rough at
first, even in trying to get an appointment with a relative (Steve
Carell) who is becoming a major force in the growing feature film
business.
This
leads to meets his uncle's assistant (Kristen Stewart in yet another
effective pairing with Eisenberg) whom he is shown the town by and
starts to really like. She says she has a boyfriend, but he hopes
they'll breakup so he can get involved. Then some amusing twists and
turns ensue, plus a few that do not, but the period is evoked
effectively, as are both locales and though many might miss it, this
is one of Allen's better films of late. Amazon
actually picked this one up wisely and Lionsgate is releasing it on
Blu-ray and DVD here.
Allen
also does the voiceover, but it is sometimes a bit off, yet it works
well enough as does much of his script. The opposite of Stardust
Memories
as this is when the 'stardust' was happening, he loves old Hollywood
the way he loves old Jazz and his latest proves that is as strong as
ever. Uncompromising in its intelligence, the things that work best
might be missed by most audiences and apparently some critics, but it
is a love letter to love, film and a great time in danger of being
forgotten somewhat. In all this, it is worth a good look. Parker
Posey, Blake Lively, Corey Stoll and Ken Stott also star.
Extras
include Digital HD Ultraviolet Copy for PC, PC portable and other
cyber iTunes capable devices, while the discs add a Photo Gallery and
brief Making Of featurette called On The
Red Carpet.
Among
those old Hollywood comedy Allen loves and has even featured clips of
in his films...
The
Marx Brothers Silver Screen Collection
collects their first five hilarious feature films made at Paramount
Pictures when they were a quartet that included Zeppo along with
Chico, Harpo and Groucho. Before Abbott & Costello or Martin &
Lewis arrived with hit feature films, when Laurel & Hardy, Our
Gang/The Little Rascals and The Three Stooges would become legends on
brilliant series of film comedy shorts, this fantastic four floored
audiences with this series of hit films that immediately took
advantage of the arrival of sound.
This
set has been issued by Universal (owners of most of the older
pre-1948 Paramount films) as 'Restored' (more on that later), this
Blu-ray set proves the team helped establish screwball comedy as well
as finishing
the foundation for all feature film comedies in sound as the silent
stars were not making the transition fully as one would have wished
and one (Chaplin) stuck to silent cinema as long as he could. But
never feature, the greatest comedic brothers of all time were on the
way.
A hit right off the
bat, Robert
Forey's
The
Cocoanuts
(1929) is
the first of their two films that were both filmed entirely in New
York and based on highly successful stage plays, written by George S.
Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind, they have vague narrative plottings that
allow their gags, jokes and routines to hang onto. But they are all
so funny, even all these decades later, the laughs plow over any
flaws in logic. Here, Groucho is a hotel owner in trouble trying to
save and keep his business going, but it won't be easy when so many
people are out for themselves and up to their own little ideas of
getting ahead. The guests are either thieves or if they have money,
targets and Chico & Harpo play strangers also targeting Groucho's
imperiled owner.
I
always thought it was just funny that they would pretend not to know
each other (Zeppo included) before the film even kicked in, but
however practiced and tested, the comic timing, content and even
subversion of their humor (class division is brushed on here, oddly
just in time as the Great Depression arrived in real life) is
remarkable and the film instantly established them as a force to be
reckoned with. It is one of the few early sound classics anyone
still talks about.
Victor
Heerman's Animal
Crackers
(1930) proved commercially and critically that the first film was no
fluke as Groucho plays explorer Captain Spaulding, back from a trip
to Africa and into 'cafe society' joining up with a wealthy Margaret
Dumont, but a valuable painting goes missing and all are suspects,
including Zeppo, Harpo and Chico as opposing characters, plus some
female interests and other suspects are in the mix. I should add how
we get musical numbers out of nowhere, but that does not make any of
these films musicals, though it adds immensely to their entertainment
value.
Norman
Z. McLeod's Monkey
Business
(1931) was a more polished film made in Hollywood, with the
improvements noticeable and sound equipment getting relatively
better, the quartet are in this romp as four stowaways on a fancy
ship that will lead to more chases, romances and comedy with great
twists in what is their first non-stage screenplay. It works and we
get the likes of Thelma Todd and Ruth Hall in the prominent female
roles. The Marxes stay as subversive as ever and the result is
another winner.
Norman
Z. McLeod returns to helm Horse
Feathers
(1932) has Groucho as Professor Quincy Adams Wagstaff in this send up
of sports and particularly college football and college (read higher
education) itself. The college is in trouble, so he gets his son
(Zeppo!) to secretly load the team with pros and hope no one notices.
Chico and Harpo land up enrolling and throwing the ball, while so
much con artistry is afoot (the Prohibition angle may be dated, but
they're blatant readiness to defy it is pure Marx Brothers) and it
leas to a hilarious climax. Hard to believe, but they were on a role
like few others in the history of big screen movie comedy.
By
the time they made their next film, Leo McCarey's Duck
Soup
(1933),
they had become too advanced for their audience, the film did not do
well and it was their last film for Paramount, but this turned out to
be their masterpiece about the madness of politics, conformity, war,
how nations interact and adults acting like children. Note this was
released just as Hitler was about to take power in Germany, but
created just before that real-life evil began. Groucho is Rufus T.
Firefly, who may become the President of the nation of Freedonia, but
there will be no money for the nation unless that happens because a
rich woman (Margaret Dumont again) has the money bags. From there,
the film just gets wackier, wittier and more brilliant until its
climax. Now recognized as one of the greatest comedy films of all
time, it would not be the Marx Brothers last cinematic triumph
(though Zeppo was about to bow out to become a highly prolific talent
agent, to say the least), but it was their peak and what a peak it is
and remains. That makes this collection one of the all-time
must-haves of comedy!
Extras
in this decent slipcase packaging include a well-illustrated booklet
on the films including informative text and an excellent essay by
film & Marx Brothers Scholar Robert S. Bader, while the Blu-ray
discs add feature length audio commentary tracks on each film
(Anthony Slide on
The
Cocoanuts,
Jeffrey Vance on
Animal
Crackers,
Bader and Harpo Marx's son Bill on Monkey
Business,
F.X. Feeney on Horse
Feathers
and Bader & Leonard Maltin on
Duck
Soup),
Documentary The
Marx Brothers: Hollywood's Kings Of Chaos
and Inside
The NBC Vault: The Today Show Interviews,
with the trio on camera.
The
films of The Marx Brothers left a permanent high watermark on comedy
and on all comedy teams to follow, especially when they were more
than duos. A wave of comedies in the 1970s (particularly thanks to
the huge box office success and critical acclaim of Peter
Bogdanovich's What's
Up Doc?
(1972)) led to what is still an underrated wave of comedy classics
that lasted into the early 1980s that were also subversive, hilarious
and remarkable.
Colin
Higgins' 9
To 5
(1980) remains one of the biggest hit comedies of all time, a claim
some early Marx Brothers film could likely make, but a massive
success that left no stone unturned in taking on women in society,
women liberated and (as relevant as ever) the exploitation, underpaid
hard work and neglect of working women. Far bolder than Mike
Nichols' Working
Girl,
Jane Fonda is a new employee at a big company that seems to be a big
break for her, especially since she is suffering from a broken
marriage, but the job comes with some ominous signs in the odd way
people behave there.
Showing
her around is a longtime employee played by the brilliant Lily Tomlin
who warns Judy (Fonda) about who is worth dealing with and who you
need to look out for. This includes their boss Mr. Franklin Hart
(Dabney Coleman giving the perfect performance as a sexist, bigoted
goof stealing others ideas and making life miserable for all) who has
stolen ideas from Tomlin. Then there is Hart's new secretary (Dolly
Parton, a riot and huge surprise in her big screen debut, handling
comedy as well as she handles music, which says something) who the
married Hart wants to get in bed with, but she is naïve and clueless
to this at first. He also makes sure she looks like a willing bimbo,
instantly creating scorn against her.
However,
events start taking a few interesting turns and the three gals start
to get wise to the bigger picture, bonding together and ready to take
revenge.. if they can figure out just how exactly how to do this.
The result is very, very funny, the trio have incredible chemistry
and now more than ever, it is apparent that this was not just a
blockbuster and a comedy classic. So how did it get so lost in the
shuffle that Fox allowed this to become another exception Twilight
Time Limited Edition Blu-ray?
Simple,
Nancy Reagan successfully targeted the film (think a near
blacklisting) bashing a scene where the trip uses 'pot' resulting in
each having a surprising fantasy sequence on what they would like to
do to Hart. It also sets up more gags and jokes later. Knowing now
about what was really going on with The Reagan Administration and
drug kingpins (think Contras), we know the 'Just Say No' campaign was
not on the up and up, but Mrs. Reagan's shaming of the film was
really because her husband's rollback politics did not want to see
women getting equal pay or equal rights when their agenda was to roll
back pay, rights and unions. Mrs. Reagan may have even been
(semi-)sincere about the drugs, but the film (like the Bee Gees disco
music, as they could not go after gay, female and other music acts of
color) was scapegoated for political reasons and we know Jane Fonda
would never be that administrations favorite actress.
Now
looking back, with the gains women have made, are about to make as we
post this review and have yet to make (though more is imminent soon),
the film was a political, ideological and personal success no matter
what the Reagan Era was (and still is) about as strong women still
entered the picture (and not just in fiction) while the popularity of
the cast just grew over the years (Fonda had more hits and is still
with us, Higgins directed Parton in the bigger-than-you-remembered
Best
Little Whorehouse In Texas,
Tomlin's legendary career continued, Coleman finally became as star
and other involved found success) and the film was more
groundbreaking in its time (pot notwithstanding) and a TV series
version was launched (Dolly's sister got her role, while Jeffrey
Tambor and Peter Bonerz both played Hart at different times as Fox
and ABC tampered with and botched the show) that sadly did not last.
9
To 5
is a one-time comedy event film and an important one, so it is nice
to see it finally come out in such a great blu-ray edition.
Extras
include an illustrated paper foldout on the film including
informative text and an excellent essay by the great film scholar
Julie Kirgo, while the Blu-ray adds two feature length audio
commentary tracks, a fun past track that reunites Producer Bruce
Gilbert with Fonda (her one-time husband), Dolly and Tomlin, then a
fine new one with Kirgo, scholar Nick Redman and the film's
screenwriter, Patricia Resnick. We also get a robust Isolated Music
Score, Deleted Scenes, Animation Reel, Gag Reel, Original Theatrical
Trailer, Singing 9 To 5 Karaoke and three other older pieces in
Remembering
Colin Higgins,
Nine @
25: Revisiting A Comedy Classic
and an on-camera Lilly & Dolly interview.
All
these comedies add up to what became a key component of the
counterculture that finally arrived in the 1960s and that included
all kinds of comedies. However, there is one filmmaker that shares a
unique and important place in that history and helped make it
possible: Robert Altman. After some TV work and trying out a few
feature films, Altman hit it big with M*A*S*H
in 1970, a unexpected comedy blockbuster (reviewed elsewhere on this
site) that inspired a very different kind of hit comedy TV series
classic he had nothing to do with, but established him a brutally
honest filmmaker who had rare total control of his work and fate
until the 1980s arrived and he retreated into independent production
(after Popeye
with Robin Williams bombed). In the early 1990s, he was back with a
vengeance with The
Player
and he wasn't compromising one bit.
Instead
of playing it safe, Altman created one of his most ambitious films
ever with Short
Cuts
(1993) based on the writings of Raymond Carver, it takes a dark look
at Los Angeles (and Hollywood by association) juggling an incredible
cast and telling several well-defined separate stories without
pulling back from the darkness of anger, hate, mental illness,
self-destruction, joy sat times, dysfunctional behavior much of the
time and the unpredictability of human nature.
It
also reminds us of Altman's unique form of comedy, honest, not
intentionally dark comedy (or wallowing in anything like so many
films do now), but still fused with his smart ass sense of life, not
that everything here is intended to be funny. The opening visually
references M*A*S*H
with TV talk of war and shots of flying helicopters and we arte about
to see some mini-wars, but the area is being sprayed for bugs
(Medflys) so people are not sickened by an epidemic. If only their
(usually suburban) lives were not hiding all kinds of issues and
cruelties to begin with.
To
handle a cast that includes
Altman alumni Lily Tomlin, Tim Robbins, Julianne Moore, Robert Downey
Jr., Jack Lemmon, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tom Waits, Andie MacDowell,
Matthew Modine, Bruce Davison, Anne Archer, Fred Ward, Chris Penn,
Madeleine Stowe, Peter Gallagher, Lyle Lovett, Frances McDormand,
Lori Singer, Annie Ross, Robert DoQui, Buck Henry and Huey Lewis, it
takes over three hours. Add how it uses Jazz music and ideas of Jazz
in how the film itself is assembled and you have a challenging
masterwork that works more often than not.
You
have to have serious patience with it, but if you do, Short
Cuts
pays off, even if it is not always comfortable... its worth it.
Extras
are presented over two Blu-ray discs and include an illustrated paper
foldout on the film including informative text and an excellent essay
by Michael Wilmington.
We also get the 'alternate' 5.1 soundtrack mix, an isolated music
score track, Conversation between Altman and actor Tim Robbins from
2004, Luck,
Trust & Ketchup: Robert Altman in Carver Country,
a 1993 feature-length documentary on the making of Short
Cuts,
To Write and Keep Kind, a 1992 PBS documentary on the life of author
Raymond Carver, a one-hour 1983 audio interview with Carver,
conducted for the American Audio Prose Library, an original demo
recordings of the film's Doc Pomus-Mac Rebennack songs, performed by
Dr. John, Deleted Scenes and a look inside the marketing of Short
Cuts
that shows the remarkable, ambitious poster designs like we rarely
see anymore.
Each
release offers films shot in very different ways, but eventually all
evening out as particularly good and sometimes impressive, even with
a few demo shots each. None constantly wowed me either, but all
offer a good look these works.
The
1080p 2.00 X 1 digital High Definition image on the Cafe
Blu-ray is an all-digital shoot by legendary Director
of Photography Vittorio Storaro, A.I.C., A.S.C., resulting in one of
the few standout HD shoots that will really hold up decades from now.
Slightly sepia at times without being cliché, it is one of the
smoothest HD shoots also to date and when the color is in full range,
it is better than expected. The anamorphically enhanced DVD that
comes with it is much softer and you loose what Storaro and Allen
really pulled off here.
The
1080p 1.33 X 1 black & white digital High Definition image
transfers on all five Marx
Brothers
Blu-rays can obviously show the age of the materials used, as
expected for their age despite claims they have been restored.
Though superior to previous transfers and releases of these films,
more work will need done, especially on the first two films. Some
footage almost looks like 16mm, but Universal will need find what
they can as these masters were made before 4K and HDR were thought
of. Otherwise, you get some nice shots in each case and when you can
see the quartet doing their jokes and gags this much more clearly,
you laugh more. Some footage seems to have been shot in the older
1.2 X 1 silent frame, but its hard to tell where.
The
1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on 9
To 5
can in a few places show the age of the materials used, but this is
far superior a transfer to the decent DVD issued a few years ago and
much of this holds up better than you would think for a film even its
age. The mock Disney animation shows its age more (trying to do that
style on the cheap was a combination of limited budget and in-joke),
but other shots are really nice and the opening sequence is among the
best.
Finally,
the 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Cuts
rarely can show the age of the materials used, was hot in the Super
35mm format and is superior to any older video transfers of the film
as well. Color is extremely correct and grain is what you would
expect when shooting in this format (or the likes of Techniscope),
but the biggest thing the film has going for it is that is was shot
on 35mm Agfacolor
film negative. That gives it a rare, distinct look makes it even
more interesting to watch in a different way than if it were shot on
Kodak or Fuji film due to their unique color range and capacity,
especially in a new 4K scan from the original negative with Criterion
and Director of Photography Walt Lloyd involved. For all this, it is
reference material for the format and film stock.
As
for sound, this is one of the few times Woody Allen is not offering a
monophonic film, but one in a DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless
mix on Cafe,
resulting in one of his best-sounding films, yet the sound is still
smart, not overdone or uneven. The lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on the
DVD is not as good, though. Cuts
is also well mixed and presented, also here in a DTS-HD MA (Master
Audio) 5.1 lossless mix (it has 6-track multi-channel stereo sound in
70mm blow-up prints) and like the Allen film, despite being dialogue
and joke-based, keeps a consistent soundfield throughout. All five
Marx
Brothers
films were theatrical mono, some of the earliest ever, but the DTS-HD
MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono on all five films are about as good as we
could expect for their age, though some cleaning and slight upgrades
would make a difference. The jokes are audible for the most part.
9
To 5
offers DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) in both 2.0 Stereo and Mono versions,
but the film originally was issued at its best in Magnetic Stereo
sound. These upgrades are odd, with the Stereo sounding good with
the theme song (which could still sound better if the multi-channel
master was used), then lans up sounding dull versus the Mono that
sounds like it has more depth and is more natural-sounding
throughout. You can compare yourself to hear, though the isolated
music score sounds fine.
To
order 9
To 5
limited edition Blu-ray, buy it and other great exclusives while
supplies last at these links:
www.screenarchives.com
and
http://www.twilighttimemovies.com/
-
Nicholas Sheffo