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Category:    Home > Reviews > Musical > Comedy > Drama > WWII > The Alice Faye Collection (On The Avenue/Lillian Russell/That Night In Rio/The Gang's All Here/20th Century Fox)

The Alice Faye Collection (20th Century Fox)

 

Picture: C+     Sound: C+     Extras: C+ (B- for Here)     Film: B

 

 

When it comes to great movie stars of the past, it is easy to loose sight of why some were so big and their names can outlive the films and success.  Alice Faye is one such star.  You may have heard of her, but odds are high that you have not seen her films or know why she was a big star.  Fox has issued four of her best films in The Alice Faye Collection and one look at any of them will instantly reveal why she was one of the biggest and best in the business.

 

The four films are all-star Musicals and though it is MGM who often gets the credit for having the best in the genre, the other majors came up with some great Musicals themselves and before their run of Rogers & Hammerstein feature hits, Fox was making some very impressive, extravagant films that hold up surprisingly well all these years later.

 

On The Avenue (1937) has Faye on the rise in a Dick Powell/Madeline Carroll vehicle, but the twist is the entire score is written especially for the screen by none other than Irving Berlin!  For those only used to his later work in film (There’s No Business Like Show Business), this is a surprise with a fun storyline and some great music.  The Gene Markey/William Conselman screenplay is still clever, mature, witty and entertaining as Faye plays the star of the Broadway show within the film.  Comedian Joan Davis and the famous The Ritz Brothers also star.  The 1.33 X 1 black and white image is nicely restored here and features Lucien N. Androit’s smooth cinematography, the kind that will make those who only want color think again.  Extras include a terrific feature length audio commentary by Mile Kreuger, deleted “Plumbers” Musical number with The Ritz Brothers and new Alice Faye: A Life On Screen featurette.

 

Lillian Russell (1940) is another one of the kind of upbeat biopics Darryl F. Zanuck loved to greenlight, this time staring Faye in the title role.  Though the tale of the 1890s singer turned activist and feminist figure is true and a Musical here, it has some biopic trappings, but Faye’s performance helps to overcome those limits and holds up well.  Also starring Don Ameche, Henry Fonda, Edward Arnold, Ernest Truex and Nigel Bruce, Irving Cummings directed from William Anthony McGuire’s screenplay and John F. Palmer supplied the music.  Leon Shamroy’s cinematography is top notch and for a cinematographer known for his widescreen and color work, this black and white 1.33 X 1 film proves he was always that good, especially restored as it is here.  Extras include the original theatrical trailer and A Woman Like No Other: The Real Lillian Russell featurette.

 

That Night In Rio (1941) shows that Faye was as great in Technicolor as she was in monochrome, offering a huge, lavish production, co-starring Don Ameche, Carmen Miranda, J. Carrol Naish and Lillian Porter.  Faye and Ameche are royals going to South America and find escape and their love for each other, but this is not as corny as you would think and is an excellent color production.  Cumming’s once again directs and Fox went all out in a way that makes this an underrated gem.  Mack Gordon & Harry Warren wrote the really good music that especially makes Miranda look good, along with her trademark fruit hat and some expensive clothes and sets.  The restoration here shows off the Ray Rennahan/Leon Shamroy Technicolor cinematography and the vibrancy shows both the color and the money on the screen.  Very impressive and the 1.33 X 1 image here very much looks like three-strip dye-transfer Technicolor.  All film fans should see this just for the transfer.  Extras include the original theatrical trailer, Alice Faye: A Life Off Screen featurette and deleted Faye/Ameche “The Chicka Chicka Boom Chick” Musical number.

 

The Gang’s All Here (1943) also stars Carmen Miranda, Benny Goodman, Eugene Pallette, Edward Everett Horton, Sheila Ryan and The Benny Goodman Orchestra, but this clever Technicolor Musical extravaganza also has a big star in director Busby Berkeley making his first-ever color film and delivering a classic in the genre.  Though this addresses WWII directly, it is still very escapist with its boy-meets-girl storyline and is clever throughout.  The Nestor Arnaral & S.K. Russell music is also a plus.  The 1.33 X 1 image shows off Edward Cronjager’s cinematography nicely, though the Technicolor is not as vibrant here as in That Night In Rio.  However, it is nice and clean, but I would have to see some three-strip dye-transfer footage to see how accurate this clean transfer really is.  Extras are the best for this DVD, including the original theatrical trailer, “$64 Question” deleted scene, two audio-only network radio excerpts that are very entertaining, another outstanding feature length audio commentary track by film scholar Drew Casper, Busby Berkeley: A Journey With A Star featurette and “We Are Here” – the last film Alice Faye ever made.  It is a very good short promo film for a major pharmaceutical company where she reminisces about her career.  It is the last thing you should see from this set, ending it with grace the sponsor could have never expected.

 

All the restored films are in Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo and Mono, while most of the supplements are Dolby Stereo, leaving trailers and “We Still Are” in Dolby Mono.  Each disc also has stills and a restoration comparison on all four films.  The featurettes are top notch as well and all worth seeing, even if you land up not liking the film.

 

The Alice Faye Collection is a long-overdue, historical, archival set that belongs in all serious film collections.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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