The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
#7501
DVD Talk Legend
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
The end credits sequence of the movie openly mocks scenes from Lynch's other films, and reveals that the whole thing is nothing more than a cruel practical joke he's playing on his fans. Inland Empire is a student film quality, YouTube parody of his career that he tricked people into sitting through for three hours and treating seriously as if it were a real movie.
#7502
DVD Talk Legend
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Has anyone else sent any bad discs in to be replaced? I haven't gotten around to it but I have about 8 or 9 that I need to send in. Some are on the list and a few others are still not on the list.
#7503
Moderator
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
#7506
DVD Talk Special Edition
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
The MGM disc is pretty stacked. I don't know what else Criterion can add that would be worth the double dip. I'm surprised they haven't gone after Straw Dogs again since MGM owns the rights this time. That needs a special edition .
#7507
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
talk about good timing, I have the Dressed to Kill Blu Ray sitting in my Amazon cart as we speak. Glad I didn't pull the trigger yet.
#7508
DVD Talk Legend
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Well that's a fine looking lass but what's the tl;dr on the movie?
tks
tks
#7509
Moderator
#7510
Banned by request
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
#7511
DVD Talk Hero
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Yeah, there's SO MANY more MGM titles that could use a Criterion blu over Dressed to Kill, which already has a pretty good one.
#7513
DVD Talk Legend
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
With all the titles that desperately need the Criterion Blu treatment, they decide on Dressed to Kill?
I will definitely be skipping this release, the MGM Blu is very good.
I will definitely be skipping this release, the MGM Blu is very good.
#7514
Banned by request
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I guess Criterion takes what they can get sometimes. Dressed To Kill certainly isn't worth owning, though.
#7515
DVD Talk Legend
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I'd prefer the rest of De Palma's earlier work, like Obsession and *especially* Fury. I doubt they could do much better than Shout Factory's Phantom of the Paradise (although I'd love to see them succeed).
#7516
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
I'm a fan of De Palma's and like Dressed to Kill, but like others have said I would have preferred a different MGM title.
Last edited by inri222; 05-08-15 at 07:59 PM.
#7517
Moderator
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
we knew they were coming since the whole Janus restoration / theatrical release of the restored are happening now, - and Amazon has the preorder page up for the Apu Trilogy - no word on supplements or actual street date has been announced, but could be up for later today's posting of upcoming releases.
#7519
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
..i wish criterion would release the following on blu-ray:
matewan by john sayles and germinal by claude berri
matewan by john sayles and germinal by claude berri
#7520
DVD Talk Legend
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
^ Speaking of John Sayles, "Lone Star" still doesn't have a BD release... I'd love for Criterion to get their hands on that.
As for Claude Berri, I was previously hoping Criterion would release Jean de Florette/Manon of the Spring - but Shout Factory released both movies in a package with excellent picture quality and dirt cheap. So now I hope Criterion doesn't waste their time/resources on a release.
As for Claude Berri, I was previously hoping Criterion would release Jean de Florette/Manon of the Spring - but Shout Factory released both movies in a package with excellent picture quality and dirt cheap. So now I hope Criterion doesn't waste their time/resources on a release.
#7521
DVD Talk Gold Edition
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re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Here's August's titles:
768: The French Lieutenant's Woman
An astounding array of talent came together for the big-screen adaptation of John Fowles’s novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, a postmodern masterpiece that had been considered unfilmable. With an ingenious script by the Nobel Prize–winning playwright Harold Pinter, British New Wave trailblazer Karel Reisz transforms Fowles’s tale of scandalous romance into an arresting, hugely entertaining movie about cinema. In Pinter’s reimagining, Jeremy Irons and Meryl Streep star in parallel narratives, as a Victorian-era gentleman and the social outcast he risks everything to love, and as the contemporary actors cast in those roles and immersed in their own forbidden affair. The French Lieutenant’s Woman, shot by the consummate cinematographer Freddie Francis and scored by the venerated composer and conductor Carl Davis, is a beguiling, intellectually nimble feat of filmmaking, starring a pair of legendary actors in early leading roles.
Disc Features
-New 2K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
-New introduction by film scholar Ian Christie
-New interviews with actors Jeremy Irons and Meryl Streep, editor John Bloom, and composer Carl Davis
-Episode of The South Bank Show from 1981 featuring director Karel Reisz, novelist John Fowles, and screenwriter Harold Pinter
-Trailer
PLUS: An essay by film scholar Lucy Bolton
769: Day For Night
This loving farce from François Truffaut about the joys and turbulence of moviemaking is one of his most beloved films. Truffaut himself appears as the harried director of a frivolous melodrama, the shooting of which is plagued by the whims of a neurotic actor (Jean-Pierre Léaud); an aging but still forceful Italian diva (Valentina Cortese); and a British ingenue haunted by personal scandal (Jacqueline Bisset). An irreverent paean to the prosaic craft of cinema as well as a delightful human comedy about the pitfalls of love and sex, Day for Night is buoyed by robust performances and a sparkling score by the legendary Georges Delerue.
Disc Features
-New 2K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
-New visual essay by filmmaker :: kogonada
-New interview with cinematographer Pierre-William Glenn
-New interview with film scholar Dudley Andrew
-Documentary on the film from 2003, featuring film scholar Annette Insdorf
-Archival interviews with director François Truffaut; editor Yann Dedet; and actors Jean-Pierre Aumont, Nathalie Baye, Jacqueline Bisset, Dani, and Bernard Menez
-Television footage of Truffaut on the film’s set in 1972
-Trailer
-New English subtitle translation
PLUS: An essay by critic David Cairns
770: Dressed To Kill
Brian De Palma ascended to the highest ranks of American suspense filmmaking with this virtuoso, explicit erotic thriller. At once tongue-in-cheek and scary as hell, Dressed to Kill revolves around the grisly murder of a woman in Manhattan, and what happens when her psychiatrist, her brainiac teenage son, and the prostitute who witnessed the crime try to piece together what happened while the killer remains at large. With its masterfully executed scenes of horror, voluptuous camera work, and passionate score, Dressed to Kill is a veritable symphony of terror, enhanced by vivid performances by Angie Dickinson, Michael Caine, and Nancy Allen.
Disc Features
-New, restored 4K digital transfer of director Brian De Palma’s preferred unrated version, approved by the director, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
-New interviews with actor Nancy Allen, producer George Litto, composer Pino Donaggio, shower-scene body double Victoria Lynn Johnson, and poster photographic art director Stephen Sayadian
-New profile of cinematographer Ralf Bode, featuring filmmaker Michael Apted
-The Making of “Dressed to Kill,” a 2001 documentary featuring De Palma
-Interview with actor-director Keith Gordon from 2001
-Video pieces from 2001 about the different versions of the film and the cuts made to avoid an X rating
-Gallery of storyboards by De Palma
-Trailer
PLUS: An essay by critic Michael Koresky
771: Two Days, One Night
Oscar winner Marion Cotillard received another nomination for her searing, deeply felt performance as a working-class woman desperate to hold on to her factory job, in this gripping film from master Belgian directors Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne. Cotillard is Sandra, a wife and mother who suffers from depression and discovers that, while she was home on sick leave, a majority of her coworkers voted in favor of her being fired rather than give up their annual bonuses. She then spends a Saturday and Sunday visiting them each in turn, to try to convince them to change their minds. From this simple premise, the Dardennes render a powerful, humanist drama about the importance of community in an increasingly impersonal world.
Disc Features
-New 2K digital transfer, approved by directors Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, with DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack on the Blu-ray
-New interviews with the Dardennes and actors Marion Cotillard and Fabrizio Rongione
-When Léon M.’s Boat Went Down the Meuse for the First Time (1979), a forty-five minute documentary by the Dardennes, featuring a new introduction by the directors
-New tour of the film’s key locations with the directors
-Trailer
PLUS: An essay by critic Girish Shambu
In addition, Night and the City will get a Blu-Ray upgrade.
And on DVD, they announced Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California.
768: The French Lieutenant's Woman
An astounding array of talent came together for the big-screen adaptation of John Fowles’s novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman, a postmodern masterpiece that had been considered unfilmable. With an ingenious script by the Nobel Prize–winning playwright Harold Pinter, British New Wave trailblazer Karel Reisz transforms Fowles’s tale of scandalous romance into an arresting, hugely entertaining movie about cinema. In Pinter’s reimagining, Jeremy Irons and Meryl Streep star in parallel narratives, as a Victorian-era gentleman and the social outcast he risks everything to love, and as the contemporary actors cast in those roles and immersed in their own forbidden affair. The French Lieutenant’s Woman, shot by the consummate cinematographer Freddie Francis and scored by the venerated composer and conductor Carl Davis, is a beguiling, intellectually nimble feat of filmmaking, starring a pair of legendary actors in early leading roles.
Disc Features
-New 2K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
-New introduction by film scholar Ian Christie
-New interviews with actors Jeremy Irons and Meryl Streep, editor John Bloom, and composer Carl Davis
-Episode of The South Bank Show from 1981 featuring director Karel Reisz, novelist John Fowles, and screenwriter Harold Pinter
-Trailer
PLUS: An essay by film scholar Lucy Bolton
769: Day For Night
This loving farce from François Truffaut about the joys and turbulence of moviemaking is one of his most beloved films. Truffaut himself appears as the harried director of a frivolous melodrama, the shooting of which is plagued by the whims of a neurotic actor (Jean-Pierre Léaud); an aging but still forceful Italian diva (Valentina Cortese); and a British ingenue haunted by personal scandal (Jacqueline Bisset). An irreverent paean to the prosaic craft of cinema as well as a delightful human comedy about the pitfalls of love and sex, Day for Night is buoyed by robust performances and a sparkling score by the legendary Georges Delerue.
Disc Features
-New 2K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
-New visual essay by filmmaker :: kogonada
-New interview with cinematographer Pierre-William Glenn
-New interview with film scholar Dudley Andrew
-Documentary on the film from 2003, featuring film scholar Annette Insdorf
-Archival interviews with director François Truffaut; editor Yann Dedet; and actors Jean-Pierre Aumont, Nathalie Baye, Jacqueline Bisset, Dani, and Bernard Menez
-Television footage of Truffaut on the film’s set in 1972
-Trailer
-New English subtitle translation
PLUS: An essay by critic David Cairns
770: Dressed To Kill
Brian De Palma ascended to the highest ranks of American suspense filmmaking with this virtuoso, explicit erotic thriller. At once tongue-in-cheek and scary as hell, Dressed to Kill revolves around the grisly murder of a woman in Manhattan, and what happens when her psychiatrist, her brainiac teenage son, and the prostitute who witnessed the crime try to piece together what happened while the killer remains at large. With its masterfully executed scenes of horror, voluptuous camera work, and passionate score, Dressed to Kill is a veritable symphony of terror, enhanced by vivid performances by Angie Dickinson, Michael Caine, and Nancy Allen.
Disc Features
-New, restored 4K digital transfer of director Brian De Palma’s preferred unrated version, approved by the director, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
-New interviews with actor Nancy Allen, producer George Litto, composer Pino Donaggio, shower-scene body double Victoria Lynn Johnson, and poster photographic art director Stephen Sayadian
-New profile of cinematographer Ralf Bode, featuring filmmaker Michael Apted
-The Making of “Dressed to Kill,” a 2001 documentary featuring De Palma
-Interview with actor-director Keith Gordon from 2001
-Video pieces from 2001 about the different versions of the film and the cuts made to avoid an X rating
-Gallery of storyboards by De Palma
-Trailer
PLUS: An essay by critic Michael Koresky
771: Two Days, One Night
Oscar winner Marion Cotillard received another nomination for her searing, deeply felt performance as a working-class woman desperate to hold on to her factory job, in this gripping film from master Belgian directors Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne. Cotillard is Sandra, a wife and mother who suffers from depression and discovers that, while she was home on sick leave, a majority of her coworkers voted in favor of her being fired rather than give up their annual bonuses. She then spends a Saturday and Sunday visiting them each in turn, to try to convince them to change their minds. From this simple premise, the Dardennes render a powerful, humanist drama about the importance of community in an increasingly impersonal world.
Disc Features
-New 2K digital transfer, approved by directors Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, with DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack on the Blu-ray
-New interviews with the Dardennes and actors Marion Cotillard and Fabrizio Rongione
-When Léon M.’s Boat Went Down the Meuse for the First Time (1979), a forty-five minute documentary by the Dardennes, featuring a new introduction by the directors
-New tour of the film’s key locations with the directors
-Trailer
PLUS: An essay by critic Girish Shambu
In addition, Night and the City will get a Blu-Ray upgrade.
And on DVD, they announced Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California.
#7523
DVD Talk Special Edition
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#7524
DVD Talk Legend
re: The Criterion Collection 4K/Blu-ray Discussion and Release Thread
Really liking the "Day for Night" and the "Night and the City" covers.
Since I'm being VERY picky with what I purchase, I won't be biting on any of these titles.
Since I'm being VERY picky with what I purchase, I won't be biting on any of these titles.