Classic Musicals From The Dream Factory – Volume
Three (Hit The Deck/Deep In My
Heart/Kismet/Nancy Goes To Rio/Two Weeks In Love/Broadway
Melody Of 1936/Broadway Melody Of
1938/Born To Dance/Lady Be Good; Warner Bros.)
Picture: C+ Sound: C (Mono)/C+ (Stereo/5.1 mixes) Extras/Film
As a
great companion to the three That’s Entertainment
films (reviewed on HD-DVD elsewhere on this site) and just for fans who want
more, Warner continues to issue key musicals from their catalog and Classic Musicals From The Dream Factory –
Volume Three continues with seven more gems that are among those sampled in
those famous documentaries:
Hit The Deck (1955) C+/C+
This comic wartime farce directed by Ray Rowland has the great trio of
Jane Powell, Debbie Reynolds and Ann Miller going at it with Tony Martin,
Walter Pidgeon, Vic Damone, Gene Raymond and Russ Tamblyn in an attempt to
capitalize on the success of On The Town. Though it is not as good or memorable, it
does have its moments and the money is on screen. Audio-only bonuses are among the extras.
Deep In My Heart (1954) C+/B-
Stanley Donen tries his Singing In
The Rain approach with a biographical drama and comes up with some interesting
moments as Jose Ferrer (in an impressive performance) plays a music writer
going after that next hit that does not seem to materialize. Merle Oberon, Paul Henreid, Rosemary Clooney,
Walter Pidgeon, Cyd Charisse, Howard Keel, Gene & Fred Kelly plus Jane
Powell, Tony Martin, Walter Pidgeon, Vic Damone and Ann Miller co-star in one
of the biggest surprises on this set and a film worth rediscovery for Donen’s intelligent
approach to the material. Audio-only and
two outtakes are among the extras.
Kismet (1955) C+/C+ “Stay In Baghdad, Stay In Baghdad” goes
one of the many amusing numbers in the musical remake of the 1944 hit drama that
treats the now-war torn country like an exotic otherworld. Directed by the great Vincente Minnelli, it
is obviously an unintentional howler of a film, but outside of its ironic
context to what is going on now, it is an ambitious big money production from
MGM and without Minnelli at the helm, might have been a disaster. Howard keel, Ann Blyth, Dolores Gray, Vic
Damone, Charles Lederer and Sebastian Cabot lead the big cast. Audio-only outtake song, a filmed outtake,
samples from the MGM Parade TV series and the trailer for the 1944 original
film are among the extras.
Nancy Goes To Rio (1950) C/B-
The best of the narrative block style films here, as an actress (Jane
Powell) and her mother (Ann Southern) to the title city and find excitement and
a new life. Amusingly done, it is a good
film, but what puts it over the top is one of the most elaborate of musical
numbers featuring Carmen Miranda that shows us why the color format on this
film was rightly named Glorious Technicolor.
Two Weeks In Love (1950) C/C+
Jane Powell and Ricardo Montalban in his early leading man glory find
romance in this decent comedy/drama in the Catskills of the 1900s and when you
add Busby Berkeley musical numbers in the middle of Roy Rowland’s directing,
you get a Musical worth looking into. A Reel Memories/Private Screenings from the TCM network with Robert Osbourne
interviewing Powell is among the extras.
Broadway Melody Of 1936/Broadway Melody Of 1938 C/B-
These two often spoofed classics (see several cartoon shorts from the
time if you do not believe me) are legendary all-star musical parties as the characters
have cute meets and any excuse for interaction, showing off MGM’s latest acting
talent and launching into expensive production numbers. Jack Benny, Eleanor Powell, Robert Taylor,
Buddy Ebsen and Frances Langford are among the big names in the 1936 fest, while Powell, Taylor and
Ebsen return for the 1938 blast and
are joined by Sophie Tucker and Judy Garland among others. You can even see why the less-known names
were here, because the studio rightly believed in their talents. No wonder they could boast about having more
stars than the heavens! Audio only
bonuses are included in the extras for both films.
Born To Dance (1936) C/C+ Eleanor
Powell and a very young and instantly big screen star Jimmy Stewart co star in
this backstage musical that offers understudy Powell falling for this unusual
young man who might just change her life.
Another pleasant surprise and classy film at that, audio-only bonuses
are among the extras.
Lady Be Good (1941) C/C+ Two
struggling songwriters (Robert Young, Ann Southern) might find each other with
the help of an outsider (Eleanor Powell) in this well-liked comedy/drama/Musical
co-starring Lionel Barrymore, John Carroll, Red Skelton and Virginia
O’Brien. Audio-only bonuses are among the
extras.
The anamorphically
enhanced 2.35 X 1 CinemaScope transfers on the first three films have their
moments, but can also be softer than they should be and the two-lens
CinemaScope system is sometimes the culprit.
The 1.33 X 1 color images usually look good, while the 1.33 X 1 black
and white images can look good and sometimes grainy. For DVD, the older films fare a bit better than
the Scope ones. The Dolby Digital 1.0
Mono is adequate-at-best where applicable, while the Dolby 5.1 and 5.0 mixes
recreate the magnetic stereo intended for behind the screen playback through
four speakers. Hopefully, the Blu-ray
versions will upgrade to Dolby TrueHD, PCM or DTS. Besides where other extras are noted above, a
Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodie cartoon, live action short and trailer are included
in all cases.
- Nicholas Sheffo