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The Jazz Singer 80th Anniversary
On Oct. 16, Warner Home Video will debut the DVD of the studio’s 1927 landmark movie The Jazz Singer, which was the first feature-length film to have synchronized dialog and musical sequences.
The Al Jolson-starring title will be issued in a three-disc 80th Anniversary Collector’s Edition that contains, among other things, a restored and remastered version of the film featuring a refurbished soundtrack, a collection of period cartoons, shorts and rare Vitaphone comedy and music pieces, a handful of early sound era shorts and the newly produced feature-length documentary The Dawn of Sound: How Movies Learned to Talk. The package will carry a list price of $39.98. The Jazz Singer “is going to be one of the landmark releases for 2007,” said WHV’s senior VP of theatrical catalog marketing George Feltenstein, who’s particularly proud of the new documentary. |
Is Neil Diamond THAT old?
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We all know that Warners usually likes to go for the original poster-art for their classic releases. But methinks this poster might by their ONLY option.
http://artfiles.art.com/images/-/The...C10128613.jpeg |
Can't wait.
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Dollars to donuts, a single disc edition arrives six months down the line.
Personally I'm intrested in the film itself, not the extras for this one and don't wish to pay $30 for it. |
I, on the other hand, am more interested in the special features than I am in the film itself.
In my opinion, the film just isn't all that great - but it's still something I want in my home DVD library due to its importance in film history. Anyways, it looks like Warner has put together another excellent set. :thumbsup: |
Mammy!
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Originally Posted by Boba Fett
Dollars to donuts, a single disc edition arrives six months down the line.
Personally I'm intrested in the film itself, not the extras for this one and don't wish to pay $30 for it. The great stuff from my perspective will be the documentaries and other historical pieces to put this in context. That makes it a must-buy. |
Holy Crap!!! Finally! Now the last AFI film will be African Queen. This is a must pick up for me.
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DVD Special Features:
Disc 1 – The Movie All new feature digital transfer and immaculately refurbished soundtrack from restored picture elements and original Vitaphone-Sound-on-Disc recordings Commentary by film historians Ron Hutchinson and Vince Giordano Collection of rare cartoons and shorts: I Love to Sing-a classic 1936 WB parody cartoon directed by Tex Avery Hollywood Handicap classic M-G-M short with Al Jolson appearance A Day at Santa Anita classic Technicolor Warner Bros. short with Al Jolson & Ruby Keeler cameo appearance “Al Jolson in ‘A Plantation Act’ “1926 Vitaphone short made a year prior to The Jazz Singer An Intimate Dinner in Celebration of Warner Bros. Silver Jubilee 1947 Lux Radio Theater Broadcast starring Al Jolson (audio only) Al Jolson Trailer Gallery Disc 2 – The Early Sound Era All-new feature-length documentary The Dawn of Sound: How Movies Learned to Talk Two rarely-seen Technicolor excerpts from Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929 WB film, most of which is considered lost) Studio shorts celebrating the early sound era: Finding His Voice (1929 Western Electric animated promotional short, produced by Max Fleischer) The Voice That Thrilled The World - Warner Bros. short about sound Okay for Sound 1946 WB short celebrating the 20th anniversary of Vitaphone When Talkies Were Young 1955 WB short looking back at the early talkies The Voice from the Screen 1926 WB ‘demonstration’ film explores the Vitaphone technology and, looks at the making of a Vitaphone short. Disc 3 – VITAPHONE SHORTS In Warner Bros. began producing a series of short films which utilized the Vitaphone process. These films ran the gamut from musical theater legends and vaudeville acts, to dramatic vignettes and classical music performances from the most prestigious artists of the era. Most of these were shorts considered lost for decades, until a consortium of archivists and historians joined forces with a goal to restore these magnificent time capsules of entertainment history. Up until now, contemporary audiences have only been able to see these shorts via rare retrospective showings in a few large cities, or through the limited release of a restored handful of the earliest subjects, which were part of a 1996 laserdisc set. This new collection will finally make these amazing rarities available to the thousands of film fans awaiting their DVD debut. Over 3 1/2 hours worth of rare, historic Vitaphone comedy and music shorts Elsie Janis in a Vaudeville Act: “Behind the Lines” Bernado Depace: “Wizard of the Mandolin” Van and Schneck: “The Pennant Winning Battery of Songland” Blossom Seeley and Benny Fields Hazel Green and Company The Night Court The Police Quartette Ray Mayer & Edith Evans: “When East Meets West” Adele Rowland: “Stories in Song” Stoll, Flynn and Company: “The Jazzmania Quintet” The Ingenues in “The Band Beautiful” The Foy Family in “Chips off the Old Block” Dick Rich and His Melodious Monarchs Gus Arnheim and His Ambassadors [ Shaw and Lee: “The Beau Brummels” Larry Ceballos’ Roof Garden Revue Trixie Friganza in “My Bag O’ Tricks” Green’s Twentieth Century Faydetts Sol Violinsky: “The Eccentric Entertainer” Ethel Sinclair and Marge La Marr in “At the Seashore” Paul Tremaine and His Aristocrats Baby Rose Marie: “The Child Wonder” Burns & Allen in “Lambchops “ Joe Frisco in “The Happy Hottentots” Outstanding Collector’s Edition Bonuses: Rarely seen behind-the-scenes Photo cards Original release Lobby card reproductions Original release Souvenir Program book reproduction Booklet with vintage document reproductions and DVD features guide Reproduction of post-premiere telegram from Al Jolson to Jack L. Warner I think $40 is a steal for all this |
No 5.1 surround sound, no sale!
Kidding. This looks like a must-have for classic-film fans. |
Originally Posted by me12321
I, on the other hand, am more interested in the special features than I am in the film itself.
In my opinion, the film just isn't all that great - but it's still something I want in my home DVD library due to its importance in film history. Anyways, it looks like Warner has put together another excellent set. :thumbsup: |
Originally Posted by Kerborus
Holy Crap!!! Finally! Now the last AFI film will be African Queen. This is a must pick up for me.
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Originally Posted by Dane Marvin
now it's off the list
A very mediocre movie, when all is said and done. |
Originally Posted by Ambassador
As it should be.
A very mediocre movie, when all is said and done. |
WOW, this looks like one hell of a package. Gotta love Warner and their treatment of classic movies.
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Originally Posted by Kerborus
Yeah that whole first talking movie thing is very overated.
Sure, The Jazz Singer was an influential film, and as a landmark, it deserves to be seen once by every true film buff. But let's face it. It's a lousy, cliched movie. (Even Sam Raphaelson, the author of the original play, disliked this movie intensely.) |
Is this the true cover art (it's what Amazon has up now) even though they do not have the DVD for order:
http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/...yL._SS500_.jpg |
Two things make The Jazz Singer worth owning. 1) Al Jolson's brilliant musical talent and 2) the heartfelt portrayal of Jewish faith, a rarely explored theme in Jewish led Hollywood.
p.s. The cover art is excellent. |
Originally Posted by Kerborus
Yeah that whole first talking movie thing is very overated.
Come on, if The Jazz Singer is "great" only for that, why isn't Becky Sharp on any lists since it was the first 3-strip Technicolor feature? Or Toll of the Sea, for that matter (first cemented positive 2-strip Technicolor feature). I forgot which it is, but what about the first of the 1929-1930 65mm widescreen films? First doesn't mean great. |
Originally Posted by PatrickMcCart
It wasn't the first of anything. It's a silent film with song sequences and a handful of dialogue adlibs. There's complete sound films from the turn of the century, with sync sound. There's plenty of other shorts from before 1927 too.
Come on, if The Jazz Singer is "great" only for that, why isn't Becky Sharp on any lists since it was the first 3-strip Technicolor feature? Or Toll of the Sea, for that matter (first cemented positive 2-strip Technicolor feature). I forgot which it is, but what about the first of the 1929-1930 65mm widescreen films? First doesn't mean great. |
I'm in day 1 on this...awesome news
for posterity http://forum.dvdtalk.com/showthread....ht=jazz+singer |
DVD Times has the picture of the packaging for this release and it looks great.
http://www.dvdtimes.co.uk/content.php?contentid=65286 |
Originally Posted by LorenzoL
DVD Times has the picture of the packaging for this release and it looks great.
http://www.dvdtimes.co.uk/content.php?contentid=65286 |
I like the cover art. Though I much prefer the inside box cover art.
This set astonishes me, how much they've put on it. |
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