Big
Boss
(1971 aka Chinese
Connection
aka Iron
Fist
aka Fists
Of Fury/two
versions/Umbrella Region Free Import Blu-ray)/Flag
Of Iron
(1980/MVD/88 Films Blu-ray)/Shadow
Of The Thin Man
(1941)/Thin
Man Goes Home
(1944)/Song
Of The Thin Man
(1947/all MGM/all Warner Archive Blu-rays)/Spine
Of Night 4K
(2021/RLJ 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: B+ Picture: B/B+/B+/B Sound: C+/B+/B/B+
Extras: B/B/B/C+ Films: B-/B/B C+ C+/C
PLEASE
NOTE:
The Big
Boss
Import Blu-ray is now only available from our friends at Umbrella
Entertainment in Australia and can play on all 4K and Blu-ray
players, while The
Thin Man
films now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner
Archive series. All can be ordered from the links below.
Now
for some martial arts, mystery and animation action...
First
we start with the first major feature film lead role for Bruce Lee.
Lo Wei's The
Big Boss
(1971 aka Chinese
Connection
aka Iron
Fist
aka Fists
Of Fury)
which we covered in a truly awful DVD version (one of many issued
over the years, including bad VHS and Beta copies) and had this to
say about it at the time with slight updates:
''Considered
one of Bruce Lee's best films, The
Chinese Connection
(1972) is also one of Lee's most graphic, but it is also the film of
his bouncing around in public domain for reasons that make no sense.
You will find more copies of this film, even in both letterboxed and
pan & scan editions, than almost any other well-known video title
on the market. National General distributed this film at the time
(the dubbed version in 1973,) but that does not automatically make
anything they released public domain, especially considering it was
made in Hong Kong. The tale of a student (Lee) avenging the murder
of his teacher in early 1900s Shanghai, done very convincingly and is
a true highlight of his too-short career.''
Lee's
first film lets him let lose as he eventually has to get revenge
against some very evil people, but he tries to be a pacifist and let
things go. Too bad for them that does not last long. Turns out the
boss of the ice factory he works at is a drug kingpin and major
gangster, a secret that has led to some employees (et al)
'mysteriously disappear' and worse, so things can only get worse.
One of the most important Golden Harvest Studio films ever made, it
holds up very well and some of it is like never seeing the film
before in this solid restoration. The U.S. version was made with a
brand new soundtrack and became as iconic as the original version
with its native score. Nice to have both here in great shape.
The
film was shot on 35mm color negative with anamorphic Dyaliscope
lenses and has a great look to it from a lens that was popular at the
time, if not always the best. Technicolor apparently did the lab
work, but no dye-transfer, three-strip Technicolor prints were issued
in the U.S. at least. Still,
especially after bouncing around in some very awful video copies, the
1080p
2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer might show the age of
the materials used, but this is far superior a transfer to all
previous releases of the film on video and in some other bad or
played-out prints out there from over the decades.
Director
of Photography Ching-Chu Chen knows how to use a scope frame and not
only lensed more of Lee's films, but also key films for Jackie Chan
and Jimmy Wang-Yu, so he is one of the originators and innovators of
filming martial arts in widescreen so memorably and deserves more
credit than he gets. The restoration here is very welcome and has
some great shots to it too.
The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless English and
Mandarin/Cantonese mixes all have dubbing in them and show their age,
the theatrical mono releases they were, but these have been fixed and
cleaned up as much as possible and will likely never sound better.
The different music scores fare very well in each case too.
Extras
include a Collector's Card, while the disc adds an Alternate Opening,
Stills Gallery, Trailers, Alternate Ending, rare scene extension,
featurette Bruce
Lee vs. Peter Thomas
and feature length documentary Bruce
Lee: The Man, The Legend.
Another
Shaw Brothers classic gets a HD restoration courtesy of 88 Films, The
Flag of Iron
(1980) directed by Chan Cheh (The
One-Armed Swordsman,
Five
Venoms),
this Kung-Fu flick is pretty impressive even by today's standards and
has many of the classic tropes and characteristics that fans come to
love in the Shaw Brother's library of films. If you're unfamiliar
but a big fan of Tarantino's Kill
Bill
series, then you can see that he got some creative inspiration a bit
from some of these films, especially with some of the sound effects
used during the fight sequences. The money is on the screen here and
its nice to see a film like this that would be predominantly digital
if done today more than likely.
The
film stars Phillip Chung-Fung Kwok, Sheng Chiang, Li Wang, Feng Lu,
Tien Hsiang Lung, Shen Chan.
The
Five Venoms
actors star in a clan of good vs a clan of evil mashup where fists
fly!
The
Flag of Iron
is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with an MPEG-4
AVC codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 2.35:1, and lossless audio
mixes in English and Mandarin DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono with
English subtitles. The restoration is clean and overall the film
really does look pretty nice in this edition.
Special
Features:
Audio
Commentary with Asian Film Experts
Slipcase
with brand-new artwork from R.P. "Kung Fu Bob" O'Brien
Double-Sided
A3 Foldout Poster
and
an Extensive Insert Booklet Notes "Red
and Black Attack Unfurling the Fury of Cheh Chang's Gloriously
Inventive Martial Arts Masterwork, The Flag of Iron (1980)"
by Andrew Graves
Next
up are three sequels in what some consider the best mystery movie
series of the Classical Hollywood period. Shadow
Of The Thin Man
(1941)/Thin
Man Goes Home
(1944)/Song
Of The Thin Man
(1947) mark three more of the 14 Thin Man movies have made their way
from the 1940s and onto Blu-ray disc courtesy of Warner Archive. The
films feature William Powell and Myrna Loy as the leads in various
situations and storylines that are comedic at times and a bit more
serious in others. The films are fun to watch and look back on and
remind us of a simpler time in American cinema.
Shadow
of the Thin Man
(1941) - Nick Charles (Powell) and his wife Nora (Loy) reluctantly
come out of retirement to solve the murder of a race jockey.
The
Thin Man Goes Home
(1944) - Full of murder, intrigue and espionage, Nick and his Nora go
up against Edgar Drauqe (Leon Ames)!
Song
of the Thin Man
(1947) - Whilst on a gambling boat, a murder takes place whilst the
two culprits end up asking the Detective and Nora, who are also on
board, for help. Things get even wilder from there!
All
three of the films are presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray
discs with MPEG-4 AVC codecs, black and white clear transfers, and
full frame aspect ratio of 1.37:1 with lossless, English DTS-HD MA
(Master Audio) 2.0 Mono (48kHz, 24-bit) lossless sound on each disc.
These are pretty sharp looking transfers and I'm guessing likely the
best these films have seen on disc. I'm surprised a box set wasn't
planned and Warner Archive is just releasing these films
sporadically.
Special
Features add Original Theatrical Trailers in all three cases, then
the individual films add:
Shadow
of the Thin Man:
Vintage
Short: The
Tell-Tale Heart
Classic
Cartoon: The
Goose Goes South
The
Thin Man Goes Home:
Robert
Benchley Comedy Short: Why
Daddy?
Classic
Cartoon: Screwball
Squirrel
Song
of the Thin Man:
Passing
Parade Short: A
Really Important Person
and
Classic Cartoon: Slap
Happy Lion
All
three of these films are available exclusively from Warner Archive
and are worth hunting down if you are a fan and want to teleport
yourself into the past. I'm surprised that this franchise hasn't
been resurrected in some way as of yet, though a TV series attempt a
long tie ago was tried and did not work out. Needless to say many TV
shows and feature films have tried to imitate them since, but few
have worked.
Finally,
The
Spine Of Night 4K
(2021) is an animated film that I hadn't heard of until this new
steel book edition came my way. The film overall is interesting and
reminded me a little bit of the old Heavy
Metal
movie series or Fire
and Ice
in terms of its subject, tone, and overall style. The film has
beautifully painted backgrounds throughout, but the characters
themselves are in an animated style that is a bit lacking. They
almost look like characters you would see on Beavis
and Butthead
put up against beautifully hand painted scenic backdrops. This
leaves the viewer with a kind of mixed feeling - the animation is
intriguing yet lackluster at the same time. The story of the film
itself is interesting, but I see it appealing mainly to those who are
fans of medieval or folklore type films or stories.
The
film features the voice talents of Richard E. Grant, Lucy Lawless,
Patton Oswalt, and Joe Manganiello.
The
story starts with a nude witch who has the power of supernatural
witchcraft at her side and a sacred plant that grants her special
powers. A young man steals the plant from her and turns evil while
showing the lesser qualities of mankind through his actions. Other
characters intertwine in this medieval fantasy that sports familiar
subtext to such a tale.
The
Spine of Night
is presented in 2160p 4K with an HEVC/H.265 codec, a widescreen
aspect ratio of 1.78:1 (without any kind of HDR), and a lossless,
English DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 mix (48kHz, 24-bit). The
animation is crisp and clear with more detail in the 4K version
obviously. There's also a lesser quality 1080p Blu-ray version which
features identical specs in lesser quality. As mentioned, the
animation is a mixed bag, with beautiful background that look hand
painted in some instances, but lesser detailed, kind of generic
looking humans. Had the animation been more even and the humans
looking a bit more detailed or realistic, the film could have been a
bit more easy on the eye.
Extras:
The Making of Featurette and Exordium and Mongrel Short Films.
The
Spine of Night
is an interestingly animated film set in medieval times, but its
backgrounds and a bit more beautiful than the ugly looking characters
themselves.
To
order the
Big
Boss
Umbrella import Blu-ray, go to this link:
http://www.umbrellaent.com.au/
...and
to order any of the Warner Archive Thin
Man
Blu-ray discs, go to this link for them and many more great
web-exclusive
releases at:
https://www.amazon.com/stores/page/ED270804-095F-449B-9B69-6CEE46A0B2BF?ingress=0&visitId=6171710b-08c8-4829-803d-d8b922581c55&tag=blurayforum-20
-
Nicholas Sheffo (Boss)
and James Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/