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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by Doctorossi
(Post 11509834)
Here're my hopes:
Eraserhead The Friends of Eddie Coyle Ikiru The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp The Shining (Dare we dream of accurately-colored tennis balls?)
Originally Posted by GenPion
(Post 11508347)
As for all of this talk about The Shining, I thought I was completely done with purchasing Kubrick films... Yet I would absolutely purchase a Blu-ray release containing the European cut of The Shining and the Room 237 documentary in one final Criterion package.
(Of course, I would also consider a Criterion re-release of Spartacus.) |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
They're up!
Badlands Ministry of Fear Life and Death of Colonel Blimp A Man Escaped Monsieur Verdoux |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
http://s3.amazonaws.com/criterion-pr...jpg?1355767148 http://s3.amazonaws.com/criterion-pr...jpg?1355768740
http://s3.amazonaws.com/criterion-pr...jpg?1355779650 http://s3.amazonaws.com/criterion-pr...jpg?1355769938 http://s3.amazonaws.com/criterion-pr...jpg?1355771117 the cover for Badlands could've been SO much better...I get what they were trying to do, but this is kind of terrible. |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
These are in Something Awful's Criterion thread and they look legit to me...
http://s3.amazonaws.com/criterion-pr...jpg?1355779650 649: http://i.imgur.com/nyfvt.jpg 650: http://i.imgur.com/7XDET.jpg 651: http://i.imgur.com/d2OCC.jpg 652: http://i.imgur.com/8NSIs.jpg |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Holy crap! This may be the awesometasticest month ever. If it weren't for that meddling The Blob, this would be the first month I'd say, "Give me ALL OF THEM!"
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Disappointed at the lack of extras on most of these, but I'll still be picking them up all - including, maybe, The Blob.
I'm also kind of missing the Eclipse sets - this is the fourth announcement in a row without a new one. |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by Sondheim
(Post 11510231)
I'm also kind of missing the Eclipse sets
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Maybe the best announcement ever?
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I've decided that I don't like that Badlands cover. It doesn't work for me.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by Doctorossi
(Post 11510232)
I'd miss them, too, if they were Blu-ray discs.
Though maybe the delay between releases is because they're planning to start releasing everything, including the Eclipse sets, simultaneously on DVD and BD...? A delay isn't really evidence of that, but one can hope/pretend. |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by PopcornTreeCt
(Post 11510235)
I've decided that I don't like that Badlands cover. It doesn't work for me.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Looking forward to seeing Badlands - had been planning to track down the old DVD. Does that complete the Malick filmography on Blu?
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Yep.
He did make one short film before Badlands, but he apparently doesn't want anybody to see it (possibly because he actually acts in it.) |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I'm undecided about upgrading The Blob but I will certainly be buying the rest. I almost bought the UK version of Colonel Blimp from Amazon UK recently; I'm glad I waited.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
what a great month. Badlands and Weekend were always my two most wanted, now they both are. I guess McCabe and Mrs Miller is all I'm waiting for now.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by riotinmyskull
(Post 11509653)
today's announcement wishlist:
BRUTE FORCE THE BLOB ERASERHEAD FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE BADLANDS i'll take all 6 of 'em! |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by bunkaroo
(Post 11510258)
Looking forward to seeing Badlands - had been planning to track down the old DVD. Does that complete the Malick filmography on Blu?
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Those is some good releases!
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I've followed Criterion on Facebook for a little over a year, maybe 1.5 at this point, and, every month, they post up a notice, "MONTH release list due X date ... what do you hope is on it?"
Every month, I write, "Fritz Lang's Ministry of Fear." So ... well, holy shit. Oh, and "yay." |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Getting all of them.
BTW, that cover for Badlands is absolutely putrid. |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
and here's all the extras and stuff:
THE BLOB – Blu-ray Edition A cult classic of gooey greatness, The Blob follows the havoc wreaked on a small town by an outer-space monster with neither soul nor vertebrae, with Steve McQueen (The Great Escape) playing the rebel teen who tries to warn the residents about the jellylike invader. Strong performances and ingenious special effects help The Blob transcend the schlock sci-fi and youth delinquency genres from which it originates. Made outside of Hollywood by a maverick film distributor and a crew whose credits mostly comprised religious and educational shorts, The Blob helped launch the careers of McQueen and composer Burt Bacharach, whose bouncy title song is just one of this film’s many unexpected pleasures. 1958 • 82 minutes • Color • Monaural • 1.66:1 aspect ratio BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES • New high-definition digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack • Two audio commentaries: one by producer Jack H. Harris and film historian Bruce Eder and the other by director Irvin S. Yeaworth Jr. and actor Robert Fields • Trailer • Blobabilia!, a gallery of collector Wes Shank’s rare trove of stills, posters, props (including the blob itself!), and other ephemera • PLUS: An essay by critic Kim Newman TITLE: The Blob (BLU-RAY EDITION) CAT. NO: CC2235BD UPC: 7-15515-10331-2 ISBN: 978-1-60465-699-2 SRP: $39.95 STREET: 3/12/13 ~~ MINISTRY OF FEAR – Blu-ray Suffused with dread and paranoia, this Fritz Lang (M) adaptation of a novel by Graham Greene (The Third Man) is a plunge into the eerie shadows of a world turned upside down by war. En route to London after being released from a mental institution, Stephen Neale (The Lost Weekend’s Ray Milland) stops at a seemingly innocent village fair, after which he finds himself caught in the web of a sinister underworld with possible Nazi connections. Lang was among the most illustrious of the European émigré filmmakers working in Hollywood during World War II, and Ministry of Fear is one of his finest American productions, an unpredictable thriller with style to spare. 1944 • 87 minutes • Black & White • Monaural • 1.37:1 aspect ratio SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES • New 2K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray edition • New interview with Fritz Lang scholar Joe McElhaney • Trailer • PLUS: An essay by critic Glenn Kenny TITLE: Ministry of Fear (BLU-RAY EDITION) CAT. NO: CC2236BD UPC: 7-15515-10341-1 ISBN: 978-1-60465-700-5 SRP: $29.95 STREET: 3/12/13 ~~ BADLANDS – Blu-ray Badlands announced the arrival of a major talent: Terrence Malick (Days of Heaven). His impressionistic take on the notorious Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate killing spree of the late 1950s uses a serial-killer narrative as a springboard for an oblique teenage romance, lovingly and idiosyncratically enacted by Martin Sheen (Apocalypse Now) and Sissy Spacek (Carrie). The film also introduced many of the elements that would earn Malick his passionate following: the enigmatic approach to narrative and character, the unusual use of voice-over, the juxtaposition of human violence with natural beauty, the poetic investigation of American dreams and nightmares. This debut has spawned countless imitations, but none have equaled its strange sublimity. 1973 • 94 minutes • Color • Monaural • 1.78:1 aspect ratio DIRECTOR-APPROVED SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES • New 4K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray edition • Making “Badlands,” a new documentary featuring actors Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek and production designer Jack Fisk • New interview with editor Billy Weber about director Terrence Malick’s unique approach to editing • New interview with producer Edward Pressman • Trailer • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by filmmaker Michael Almereyda TITLE: Badlands (BLU-RAY EDITION) CAT. NO: CC2244BD UPC: 7-15515-10421-0 ISBN: 978-1-60465-708-1 SRP: $39.95 STREET: 3/19/13 ~~ THE LIFE AND DEATH OF COLONEL BLIMP – Blu-ray Considered by many to be the finest British film ever made, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger (The Red Shoes), is a stirring masterpiece like no other. Roger Livesey dynamically embodies outmoded English militarism as the indelible General Clive Candy, who barely survives four decades of tumultuous British history (1902 to 1942) only to see the world change irrevocably before his eyes. Anton Walbrook (The Red Shoes) and Deborah Kerr (Black Narcissus) provide unforgettable support, he as a German enemy turned lifelong friend of Blimp’s and she as young women of three consecutive generations—a socially committed governess, a sweet-souled war nurse, and a modern-thinking army driver—who inspire him. Colonel Blimp is both moving and slyly satirical, an incomparable film about war, love, aging, and obsolescence shot in gorgeous Technicolor. 1943 • 163 minutes • Color • Monaural • 1.37:1 aspect ratio SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES • New 4K digital master from the 2012 Film Foundation restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray edition • Audio commentary featuring director Michael Powell and filmmaker Martin Scorsese • Video introduction by Scorsese • A Profile of “The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp” • Restoration demonstration, hosted by Scorsese • Interview with editor Thelma Schoonmaker Powell, Michael Powell’s widow • Gallery featuring rare behind-the-scenes production stills • Gallery tracing the history of David Low’s original Colonel Blimp cartoons • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by critic Molly Haskell TITLE: The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (BLU-RAY EDITION) CAT. NO: CC2238BD UPC: 7-15515-10361-9 ISBN: 978-1-60465-702-9 SRP: $39.95 PREBOOK: 2/19/13 STREET: 3/19/13 ~~ A MAN ESCAPED – Blu-ray With the simplest of concepts and sparest of techniques, Robert Bresson (Au hasard Balthazar) made one of the most suspenseful jailbreak films of all time in A Man Escaped. Based on the memoirs of an imprisoned French resistance leader, this unbelievably taut and methodical marvel follows the fictional Fontaine’s single-minded pursuit of freedom, detailing the planning and carrying out of his escape with gripping precision. But Bresson’s film is not merely process-minded—it’s a work of intense spirituality and humanity. 1956 • 101 minutes • Black & White • Monaural • In French with English subtitles • 1.33:1 aspect ratio SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES • New high-definition digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray edition • Bresson: Without a Trace, a 1965 episode of the television program Cinéastes de notre temps in which the director gives his first on-camera interview • The Essence of Forms, a forty-five-minute documentary from 2010 in which some of Bresson’s collaborators and admirers, including actor François Leterrier and director Bruno Dumont, share their thoughts about the director and his work • New visual essay with text by film scholars David Bordwell and Kristin Thompson • Trailer • New English subtitle translation • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by film scholar Tony Pipolo TITLE: A Man Escaped (BLU-RAY EDITION) CAT. NO: CC2242BD UPC: 7-15515-10401-2 ISBN: 978-1-60465-706-7 SRP: $39.95 STREET: 3/26/13 ~~ MONSIEUR VERDOUX – Blu-ray Charlie Chaplin plays shockingly against type in his most controversial film, a brilliant and bleak black comedy about money, marriage, and murder. Chaplin is a twentieth-century Bluebeard, an enigmatic family man who goes to extreme lengths to support his wife and child, attempting to bump off a series of wealthy widows (including one played by the indefatigable Martha Raye, in a hilarious performance). This deeply philosophical and wildly entertaining film is a work of true sophistication, both for the moral questions it dares to ask and the way it deconstructs its megastar’s loveable on-screen persona. 1947 • 124 minutes • Black & White • Monaural • 1.33:1 aspect ratio SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES • New 2K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray edition • Chaplin Today: “Monsieur Verdoux,” a 2003 program on the film’s production and release, featuring filmmaker Claude Chabrol and actor Norman Lloyd • Charlie Chaplin and the American Press, a new documentary featuring Chaplin specialist Kate Guyonvarch and author Charles Maland • New video essay featuring an audio interview with actress Marilyn Nash • Radio advertisements and trailers • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by critic Ignatiy Vishnevetsky and reprinted pieces by Chaplin and critic André Bazin TITLE: Monsieur Verdoux (BLU-RAY EDITION) CAT. NO: CC2240BD UPC: 7-15515-10381-7 ISBN: 978-1-60465-704-3 SRP: $39.95 STREET: 3/26/13 |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
definitely one of their best months in recent times.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
A great month and I will be buying all of them.
And I agree, that cover for Badlands is disappointing. |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I actually like the Badlands cover. :shrug: I'm getting that and Colonel Blimp.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
While I appreciate the artist's talents, I hate that Badlands cover. Maybe it's just the font of the logo that's throwing me? It's totally wrong for the film. Perfect for, say, Flash Gordon, but not my beloved Badlands!
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
i have no issues with the BADLANDS cover. looks like a postcard from the 50's....which makes perfect sense to me. :shrug:
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I've never seen Monsieur Verdoux, but I may have to get it for the coverart alone.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
In for Badlands, possibly The Blob, too. Not sure if I need to upgrade that one or not.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by PopcornTreeCt
(Post 11510315)
The New World theatrical edition is missing from Blu-ray. I like the extended version but I prefer the original version.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
In for Badlands.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I like Terrence Malick's more contemplative/heady movies - Tree of Life, Thin Red Line, The New World - am I going to like Badlands?
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by Giles
(Post 11511379)
I like Terrence Malick's more contemplative/heady movies - Tree of Life, Thin Red Line, The New World - am I going to like Badlands?
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
just got the America Lost and Found: The BBS Story set. can't wait to get into it. only saw Easy Rider from it and everything else is a blind buy. hope i like 'em as much as ER.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I picked up a used copy of The Rules of the Game today on DVD because I thought it was The Most Dangerous Game....
:doh: |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by milo bloom
(Post 11511674)
I picked up a used copy of The Rules of the Game today on DVD because I thought it was The Most Dangerous Game....
:doh: |
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by Coral
(Post 11511509)
It's more of a straight forward narrative... the most straight-forward film he's made (haven't seen his latest "To the Wonder" yet). However, it still feels like a Malick film and really is great - and The Thin Red Line is one of my favorites.
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Likely in for Badlands (despite the hideous cover art).
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Via Twitter:
"Michael Cimino@Cimino1939 I have now decided to add the gunshot sound to the Spoiler:
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Originally Posted by scott1598
(Post 11511566)
just got the America Lost and Found: The BBS Story set. can't wait to get into it. only saw Easy Rider from it and everything else is a blind buy. hope i like 'em as much as ER.
Be prepared to dislike Drive, He Said and A Safe Place. I had never seen either of them, and even though I kind of knew what to expect they didn't exactly knock my socks off. Still, they are interesting failures and have a lot of merit as snapshots of the zeitgeist of the early 70's. Head is surreal fun if you can get into the spirit of it. The rest of the set (The Last Picture Show, Five Easy Pieces, The King Of Marvin Gardens and Easy Rider) is aces. |
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