Fulvue Drive-In.com
Current Reviews
In Stores Soon
 
In Stores Now
 
DVD Reviews, SACD Reviews Essays Interviews Contact Us Meet the Staff
An Explanation of Our Rating System Search  
Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Crime > Prison > The South > Cool Hand Luke (1967/Warner Blu-ray)

Cool Hand Luke (1967/Warner Blu-ray)

 

Picture: B     Sound: C+     Extras: B     Film: B

 

 

When Paul Newman recently passed away, he had retired from acting after changing it forever by showing (along with Marlon Brando and a small handful of other actors) that the school of method acting was no fluke, changing the art of acting and cinema forever and it took a long time for most to take Newman seriously as one since he was such a big star and even sex symbol.  To understand how great he was, you can look towards his very best work and it will speak volumes to this.  One of his greatest performances and films is Stuart Rosenberg’s Cool Hand Luke (1967) now available on Blu-ray from Warner.

 

It defines a great moment early in his career where he was a great figure of the counterculture making cutting-edge films that hold up decades later in performances that are unmatched.  With films like this, Newman was a new kind of star with a certain sense of natural joy that had something behind it, from his smile to his attitude.  It offered so much that he could only be a big screen star and the result was one of the greatest careers in cinema history.

 

Here, he is the title character, a former soldier bored with his life, drifting around, not finding anything and when he decides to cut off the top of parking meters, lands up in jail and the road work detail.  It is a tough Southern institution and has all kinds of rules, but Luke could care less and is about to give that institution a ride it will not forget.

 

While giving one of the greatest performances of his career, Newman is backed by one of the best casts a film ever had in one of the greatest films he’d ever make and definitely one of Hollywood best films of the 1960s.  That cast includes George Kennedy, J.D. Cannon, Strother Martin, Lou Antonio, Jo Van Fleet, Clifton James, Dennis Hopper, Harry Dean Stanton, Wayne Rogers, Ralph Waite, Anthony Zerbe and an uncredited Joe Don Baker.  Add the lesser-know performers and the result is so rich that at the time, most were unknowns and are totally convincing as men trapped in this hellish situation.

 

The Donn Pearce/Frank Pierson screenplay (based on Pearce’s book) is amazing in never wasting a moment, expecting the audience to pay attention and get involved, is loaded with classic dialogue and classic moments and is a joy to watch from beginning to end.  When “movies were still movies” and had the freedom and range to deliver, they were great, big and meant something more than toy tie-ins and bad jokes.  They were about people, living and subtler truths with healthy cynicism and substance.  Cool Hand Luke is one of the great must-see Hollywood classics from the last Golden Age of filmmaking and one that deserves serious rediscovery.  This Blu-ray should help that cause.

 

 

The 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image was shot in real anamorphic 35mm Panavision by the great Conrad L. Hall, A.S.C., who shot several of Newman’s Westerns and other great films like Fat City, Electra Glide In Blue and Road To Perdition and was a master of the scope frame.  Note the wide use of compositions, use of the telephoto lens (like nothing until Stanley Kubrick’s 1975 epic Barry Lyndon) and the way he uses the very edges of the frame.  Then he is able to make the most intimate of shots work.  Though this is the best this has ever looked outside of a film print, that print is grainy and this transfer is a bit soft, indicating it is an older HD master.  In addition, the film was originally issued in three-strip dye-transfer Technicolor prints and this is not one of those prints, but is clean for what is a lesser EastmanColor copy.  The Dolby Digital 1.0 Mono is fine for what it is, but especially with a Lalo Schifrin score, even a simple stereo upgrade would have been nice, but who knows where all the sound elements are despite the case’s claim they have them.  Otherwise, this plays well enough for being a variant for the original monophonic sound.

 

Extras include the originals theatrical trailer, feature length audio commentary by Historian/Newman biographer Eric Lax and a new documentary entitled A Natural-Born World-Shaker: Making Cool Hand Luke.  Except for the absence of any poster art, promo stills, press material and lobby cards as a stills section, that is a strong set of extras.  Hope Warner continues such solid back catalog work.

 

For more on Newman’s career, try these links:

 

The Hustler (1961)/The Color Of Money (1986)

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/5851/The+Hustler+++The+Verdict+–+Col

 

Hud (1963)

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/550/Hud

 

Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid (1969) Blu-ray

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/6956/Butch+Cassidy+&+The+Sundance+Kid

DVD

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4144/Butch+Cassidy+&+The+Sundance+Kid

 

The Sting (1973) DVD

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/2791/The+Sting+-+Legacy+Series

HD-DVD

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4858/The+Sting+(1973/HD-DVD)

 

Fat Man & Little Boy (1989)

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/1002/Fat+Man+&+Little+Boy+(Widescreen)

 

Road To Perdition (2002)

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/618/Road+To+Perdition+(DTS+Widescreen)

 

Cars (2006) Blu-ray

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/6186/Cars+(Blu-ray/Disney+-+Pixar)

DVD

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4582/Cars+(Disney/Pixar+DVD-Video+set

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


Marketplace


 
 Copyright © MMIII through MMX fulvuedrive-in.com