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For two or three weeks in late '02 I ran some lists of the coolest
movies that hadn't, at the time, been released on DVD. Some were
my own choices, others were reader-submitted. The final wish-list
tally when I stopped this series (keeping it up proved too exhausting)
was around 138. That was 19 or 20 months ago.
About half of these titles have since appeared (DVD distribs either
listened or planned to move on their own...fine), and about half
are still MIA.
If reps from all the big DVD distributors were to ask me which
of the missing crème de la crème titles -- twenty, let's say, instead
of the usual ten -- I'd most want to see issued as part of a deluxe
"special edition" package (an obligatory fresh digital transfer,
voice-over commentaries and one or two tasty, comprehensive retrospective
docs), I'd choose the following. Actually, I'd print out this column
and make copies...right?
With one exception they're all from the '50s, '60s and '70s, and
I don't know what that means. Actually I do know what this
means: they're less likely to be worked on and released because
the Adam Sandler fans couldn't care less.
I chose them anyway because they're mostly great or near-great
films, although two or three aren't. I guess it boils down to my
simply missing them the most. They've all been absent since DVDs
came into their own in '97 and '98, which was about the time my
Pioneer tin-lizzy laser disc player died and went to heaven. (I
shouldn't need to point this out, but like any half-civilized movie
lover I refuse to watch a film on VHS.)
I've also felt that some of these films never looked sufficiently
vibrant or detailed before, and even looked a bit muddy or anemic
in some cases, and could stand a DVD upgrade.
Few if any of these titles has a prayer of selling as well as
50 FIRST DATES did last June. They should and would in a more cultivated
world. As Jose Ferrer said to Peter O'Toole in LAWRENCE OF ARABIA,
"I am surrounded by cattle." But then I'm sure you could find
someone to deplore my taste in movies just as much. Standards are relative
and we love what we love.
Alphabetically then...
1. Gillo Pontecorvo's THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS (1967). A three-disc
set from Criterion is hitting the stores next month, and about time.
Famed for it newsreel-like, caught-on-the-fly shooting style (which
was actually used first by Stanley Kubrick during the attack-on-Burpleson
sequence in DR. STRANGELOVE), Pontecorvo's film is a riveting account
of the Algerian struggle to win independence from France in the
mid 1950s. A new high-def transfer, five documentaries, and
two killer round-table discussions -- one between filmmakers Steven
Soderbergh, Spike Lee, Oliver Stone, Julian Schnabel and Mira Nair,
and another about the parallels to Iraq featuring former White House
security chief Richard Clarke and two other authorities.
2. Peter Glenville's BECKET (1964), with Peter O'Toole, Richard
Burton, John Gielgud, Donald Wolfit. This 40 year-old film speaks
louder and more clearly today than it did when it first opened.
A movie like BECKET would be nearly impossible to make under
current Hollywood management, but
if it happened regardless and the new version had the same high-calibre
acting, it would lay waste. MPI Home Video, lately in possession
of a nicely restored print paid for by the Academy of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences, will release a loaded BECKET DVD (which will
include a long interview with O'Toole that was video-taped about
seven or eight months ago in London) sometime next year....maybe.
MPI's vp of development and special projects Greg Newman told me
a couple of months ago that he hopes to do this. "We're still doing
quite a lot of the technical work for the DVD and everything else,"
he explained, "and we're going to have a hell of an extras package,
and these releases take time."
3. David Jones' BETRAYAL (1983), with Ben Kingsley, Jeremy Irons,
Patricia Hodges. The tightest, sharpest and best acted film version
of a Harold Pinter play, ever...and it's been sitting around on
a faded videotape since the mid '80s, and nobody else has tried
to goad Fox Home Video into releasing it
on DVD already. I'm assuming they still own the rights; 20th Century Fox
released the film theatrically, and CBS Fox Video put out the VHS.
Pinter's strategy of running the story backwards (starting with
the end of an affair between a literary agent and the wife of his
best friend, and ending with the first touch of the lovers' hands)
becomes an endlessly fascinating chess game. The film constantly
asks, "Who knows and doesn't know what, and when did they first
get wise?" Easily among Kingsley and Iron's best performances. Hodges
seems right and true in every respect except one (which is the film's
only failing): she doesn't seem remotely interested in having sex
with anyone or anything.
4. Howard Hawks' BRINGING UP BABY (1938), with Cary Grant, Katharine
Hepburn, Charlie Ruggles, May Robson, Walter Catlett, Barry Fitzgerald.
Not just one of the two or three greatest screwball comedies ever
made, but one that requires repeat viewings to fully appreciate.
(The timing involved in Grant's slipping on a grape tossed by Hepburn
onto a shiny wax floor at precisely the right moment, and with Kate
not even trying to aim where she's throwing, is just dazzling.)
And yet I'm hearing there's some kind of rights hassle keeping it
off DVD. BABY has been viewable on tape and laser disc for years,
but to see it all spruced up and special-editioned would be awesome.
An IMDB guy wrote that "a group of teenagers who recently watched
[BABY] were literally rolling on the floor laughing at it." A good
story, even if it's hooey.
5. Robert Altman's CALIFORNIA SPLIT (1973), with Elliott Gould
and George Segal. One of the all-time hippest and coolest gambling
movies ever made. Love that finale in Reno when Segal tells Gould
to get lost because he's "got the heat" and he doesn't want Gould
messing things up. And that bit with the two of them in a bar trying
to name the Seven Dwarfs. (At one point Gould gives up and says
"Snoopy?" and then Segal grims up and says, "Okay, like a gatling
gun...Sleepy, Grumpy, Doc," and then runs dry.) And Gwen Welles
going to bed in her pink bunny-girl pajamas, and those live-wire
scenes at the track in Pomona, and that sudden robbery in the parking
lot outside the poker club in Gardena. And back to Reno with that
great poker-game finale with Amarillo Slim and the others, and that
heavy-set woman playing piano nearby and crooning, "Look down, look
down, look down...your fly is open."
6. Don Siegel's CHARLEY VARRICK (1973), with Walter Matthau, Joe
Don Baker, John Vernon, Andrew Robinson, Sheree North, Woodrow Parfrey,
Norman Fell. One of the best second-tier, no-big-deal crime flicks
ever made. Admired for its low-key tone and character-driven action,
for the crackling tension from Siegel's shooting and cutting of
the opening bank-robbery sequence, and for Matthau's easy-going
turn as a wise, cagey, seen-it-all indie felon. But it's Baker and
Vernon who give the tastiest performances -- the former as a suave,
southern-fried, pipe-smoking assassin in a cowboy hat and cream-colored
suit, and the latter as a Reno exec fronting for organized crime.
The dialogue in Vernon's heart-to-heart scene with Parfrey, playing
a wimpy Las Cruces bank manager to perfection, is so good that Quentin
Tarantino ripped it off. "You know what kind of men they are," Vernon
informs Parfrey, whom he suspects may have colluded with guys who
made off with $300,000 in mob loot. "They'll strip you, tie you
down and go to work on you with a blowtorch and a pair of pliers."
7. Bernardo Bertolucci's THE CONFORMIST (1970), with Jean-Louis
Trintingant, Stefania Sandrelli, Dominque Sanda, Enzo Tarascio.
Bertolucci's best ever, and of course it's unavailable. If there's
a deserving candidate for a Criterion double-disc, this is it. Set
in late 1930s Italy, it's about a haunted, petty-minded kiss-ass
named Marcello (Trintignant) who agrees to murder an enemy of the
Italian fascists during his Paris honeymoon. All the Bertolucci
obsessions (the tensions between decadent sexuality and politics,
beautiful sets and clothes, etc.) along with the usual drop-dead
photography by Vittorio Storaro are here. That killing scene in
the forest is a classic in and of itself. Sanda desperately screaming
at Trintignant through the backseat car window....wow.
8. Elia Kazan's EAST OF EDEN (1955), with James Dean, Raymond
Massey, Jo Van Fleet, Julie Harris, Burl Ives. Dean's first and
finest big-screen performance is soul of this convulsive, deeply
felt family love story, adapted from a portion
of John Steinbeck's original novel. Dean's big scene with Van Fleet,
his tough- as-nails, whore-house-madame mom, is superbly played.
Love Kazan's tilted camera angles! Leonard Rosenman's score feels
a bit turbulent at times, but is also sublime when it chooses to
be. A Warner Home Video laser disc was sold in the mid '90s, but
a rights issue has delayed the DVD. The laser disc presented the
original's 2.55 to 1 widescreen version, plus the rousing overture.
A "making of/looking back" doc would be essential, although the
only principal cast members who haven't died or suffered strokes
are costars Lois Smith and Richard Davalos. The 79 year-old Rosenman
is still around.
9. George Stevens' GUNGA DIN (1939), with Victor McLachlan, Cary
Grant, Sam Jaffe, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Joan Fontaine. Probably too creaky
for the under-25s, and as loathsome as a film could get from a third-world,
anti-colonialist point of view (i.e., soldiers repping the British
oppressors are the lovable good guys), but it's still a lot of fun.
The last 15 minutes of this archly comic film resorts to rote
sentimentality about bravery and self-sacrifice, yes...but there's
probably something wrong with you if it leaves you entirely unmoved.
Image Entertainment put out a great "special collector's edition"
nine or ten years ago (or was it earlier?), complete with color
home-movie footage of the Long Pine location shoot, audio commentary
from Rudy Behlmer, production and scene stills, and audio commentary
from screenwriter William Goldman about the emotional impact the
film had on guys of his generation. So the package is there. It
just has to be paid for and the film digitally remastered.
10. William Wellman's THE HIGH AND THE MIGHTY (1954), with John
Wayne, Claire Trevor, Robert Stack, Jan Sterling, Robert Newton,
Laraine Day, Regis Toomey. Yes, it's just a passengers-in-peril
soap opera, and only a pretty good one. It's somewhat better than
AIRPORT, but that's not saying too much. I saw it on TV when I was
a kid, and it's probably one of those things you should never see
again as an adult. Probably...but then I've never seen it in color,
or in the 2.55 to 1 Scope aspect ratio it was shot in. And it has
one of those Dimitri Tiomkin scores that both serenades and carpet-bombs.
And it has one of the most shamelessly sentimental finales in the
annals of disaster movies, which is that from-the-cockpit POV shot
of the landing lights at San Francisco airport forming an image
of a crucifix. (Actually, I've been in a cockpit during a night
landing and this is pretty much how they appear.) And there's that
final scene with Wayne and Toomey on the tarmac. I won't describe
it; see it someday. One of Wayne's sons has been trying to get it
restored, but it's taken forever. Paramount Home Video apparently
has the rights and planning a release sometime in '05.
11. Lindsay Anderson's IF
(1968), with Malcolm McDowell,
David Wood, Richard Warwick, Christine Noonan, Robert Swann, Peter
Jeffrey. That look in McDowell's eye as he and his friends fire
their automatic weapons from a rooftop at their public-school enemies
.that's
the whole '60s up-against-the-wall mania in a nutshell. An altogether
brilliant capturing of a social eruption in poetic fantasy terms,
IF
begins as a relatively straightforward story of a few malcontents
-- McDowell's Mick Travis being the ringleader -- coping with the
routine humiliations imposed upon students by a military-minded
British private school. But the film (based on a script called "Crusaders,"
by David Sherwin and John Howlett) gradually becomes more and more
surreal, and not just in a political vein. Stanley Kubrick hired
McDowell to portray "Alex" in A CLOCKWORK ORANGE because
of how sensational he was as Travis. It's time to pay tribute to
this great seminal film, which may have been the first to mix color
and black-and-white footage in an impressionist vein. (Does anyone
know for sure?) IF
was theatrically re-released in England
in March '02. A looking-back doc with McDowell as the main source
and speaker (he's been talking about this film as part of a recent
lecture or speaking tour) would be required on the DVD, naturally.
Your move, Paramount Home Video.
12. Joseph L. Mankiewicz's JULIUS CAESAR (1953), with James Mason,
Marlon Brando, Louis Calhern, John Gielgud, Edmond O'Brien, John
Hoyt, Deborah Kerr, Greer Garson. A sturdy, pro-level, handsomely
shot adaptation of Shakespeare's play
although it's mainly
about the acting. Mason's, Gielgud's, Calhern's
even established
character actor Lawrence Dobkin, reveling in the juice of playing
a "citizen of Rome." But Brando's Marc Antony is the big
draw, and especially his "cry havoc and let slip the dogs of
war" speech. Shakespeare and barely-suppressed fury have rarely
mated to such an effect. MGM/UA put out a nicely mastered laser
disc in the mid '90s, and you'd think they'd be dusting off the
masters in the wake of Brando's death. Maybe they are.
13. Alfred Hitchcock's LIFEBOAT (1944), with Tallulah Bankhead,
John Hodiak, Hume Cronyn, Walter Slezak, William Bendix, Henry Hull.
The only U.S.-produced Hitchcock film that hasn't been made to look
good on video, much less gotten a DVD release. CBS Fox Video put
out a laser disc in the late '80s or early '90s that looked like
it was taken from a poor-quality print. Show some respect, guys.
The lensing by Glen MacWilliams was immaculately composed and finely
detailed, and deserves to be savored by the best rendering possible.
The film itself is one of Hitchcock's technical challenges, like
ROPE (shooting a reel at a time without cutting) or DIAL M FOR MURDER
(shooting an entire feature in a single London apartment). This
was even tougher - i.e., keeping audiences enthralled despite the
entire film unfolding in a lifeboat floating on the North Atlantic
-- but Hitch nailed it like a champ. Why does this modestly-priced
film, shot in a studio tank and using rear projection, convey more
of the robust excitement of the high seas than anything in WATERWORLD?
The script (by John Steinbeck, Jo Swerling and Ben Hecht) is whip-smart,
and everyone gives on-target performances. Bankhead especially rules
as a hard-nosed journalist in love with Hodiak's Chicago palooka.
Love that insert shot of Slezak's stolen compass (which has been
kept hidden from the others, which of course triggers rage) followed
by Hodiak's hand unfolding a pocket knife
. perfect. And that
Reduco ad! Hitchcock movies are a brand unto themselves. Why keep
one of his best on the shelf?
14. Tony Richardson's THE LONELINESS OF THE LONG-DISTANCE RUNNER
(1962), with Tom Courtenay, Michael Redgrave, Alec McGowen, James
Bolam. Courtenay plays a working-class teen named Colin, sent to
a boy's "Borstal" prison for theft, in a kitchen-sink
drama that still feels as rude and phlegm-y as ever. A restored
print was shown at last May's Cannes Film Festival, so somebody
must be thinking of putting out a DVD version. It's a disjointed
memory piece (i.e., Colin reviewing his life from the Borstal) composed
of flashes and scattered chapters, and in so doing creates a believable
young-man's despair. It finishes with a cross-country race between
Colin's track team and boys from a private school, and ends on a
note that sums up the nihilism in Colin with one blunt move. RUNNER
is one of those films that's about more than the sum of its parts.
15. Lewis Milestone's MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY (1962), with Marlon
Brando, Trevor Howard, Richard Harris, Gordon Jackson, Hugh Griffith.
A DVD that at least tries to simulate how beautiful this movie looked
when it opened in 1962 in 70 mm roadshow engagements (which wasn't
in any way captured by the MGM/UA laser disc released in the mid
'90s) should be viewable. Cinematographer Robert Surtees shot this
expensive semi-clunker in the rare Ultra Panavision process, which
delivered a super-wide 2.76 to 1 aspect ratio, which was quite a
knockout even when the plot was sputtering. The film itself is a
good lively adventure for thee-quarters of its length. It falls
almost totally apart after the mutiny, although Brando's death scene
has gained in estimation over the years. (He discovered that traumatic
burn victims tend to shiver, so he laid down on a bed of ice.) Warner
Home Video has the materials. Maybe they're thinking about going
with a DVD to cash in on the Brando mystique, although Brando hated
the finished film. He probably lost a lot of work because of it
also, due to the reputation he acquired during production of being
an expensive pain in the ass.
16. John Flynn's THE OUTFIT (1974), with Robert Duvall, Joe Don
Baker, Robert Ryan, Joanna Cassidy, Sheree North. Probably the most
under-seen, under-appreciated crime pic of the 1970s, and unquestionably
the best ever from director-writer John Flynn (ROLLING THUNDER, BEST SELLER),
who based his script on a Donald Westlake book (which Westlake apparently
wrote as Richard Stark). Every scene is hard and lean and under-played.
It's a revenge tale about a small-time felon named Macklin (Robert
Duvall) who learns after getting out of prison for a bank job that
his brother was shot by two gunnies, apparently because the bank
they hit was owned by mob guys. Macklin hooks up with Cody (Baker)
and goes right to the top bad guy (Ryan) to settle things. Sharp
dialogue, good shootin', across-the-plate performances. Warner Home
Video has it out on VHS a few years ago, so they probably have the
DVD rights. The tape is out of stock on Amazon. Has anyone ever
seen this film on cable?
17. Richard Lester's PETULIA (1968), with George C. Scott, Julie
Christie, Shirley Knight, Richard Chamberlain. Another cool title
being kept on ice by Warner Home Video. One of Richard Lester's
best-ever films -- a angular, bittersweet account of an affair
that almost happens...but never quite does. The would-be lovers are Archie,
a 40ish doctor who's going through a divorce (Scott), and Petulia
(Christie), the flaky affluent wife of an abusive husband (Richard
Chamberlain. Lester's hopscotch cutting (including flash-forwards)
suggested Petulia's disjointed way of processing things, as well
as the summer-of-love freak vibe that was manifesting in San Francisco
just as PETULIA was being shot there in 1967. Knight is especially
moving as Scott's rejected wife. Ahead of its time, and probably
too subtle and unusual for its own commercial good back then. It
really needs to be available on DVD, and I'm insisting on a double
commentary track from Lester and his admirer, director Steven Soderbergh,
who co-wrote a brilliant book together called "Getting Away
With It."
18. Frank Perry's PLAY IT AS IT LAYS (1972), with Tuesday Weld,
Anthony Perkins, Adam Roarke, Tammy Grimes, Ruth Ford. A better-than-pretty-good
film about a kind of jaded existential despair among wealthy Hollywood
types in the early '70s, directed by the once-very-hot Frank Perry
(DIARY OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE, RANCHO DELUXE, MOMMIE DEAREST), and based
on a respected 1970 Joan Didion novel of the same name. Last fall
I called it "a dark and nihilistic portrait of some very skewed
souls, [that] has a chilly,
almost- spooky fascination with downer attitudes among affluent
people." Out of circulation
for 30 years, and never even released on tape or laser disc. Universal
Home Video has the materials.
19. John Boorman's POINT BLANK (1967), with Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson,
John Vernon, Lloyd Bochner, Carroll O'Connor. One of the greatest
hard-boiled noirs ever made, a great Los Angeles movie (ask Thom
Andersen), and a kind of neo-impressionist art film about emptiness
and alienation in the mid '60s. Not as arterial or crazy as our
current urban actioners, but somehow possessed of a crude force
and vitality that feels more sincerely violent. Marvin's "Walker"
is my kind of psycho. Quiet, focused, savage when so inclined. $93
thousand. That clop-clop-clop on the soundtrack as he comes closer
and closer to seeing his ex-girlfriend who betrayed him. That wacko
test-drive scene with Michael Strong's "Big John" Steadman.
"Trust me, Walker
trust me!" The way Marvin
whispers into the ear of Bochner's secretary while crushing a phone-circuit
joiner with his heel. Vernon falling from his Santa Monica penthouse
I have to stop this. The MGM/UA laser disc was on the pale, bleachy
side. I seem to recall Boorman himself telling me it could have
looked a bit better.
20. Sidney Lumet's PRINCE OF THE CITY (1981), with Treat Williams,
Jerry Orbach, Lindsay Crouse, Richard Foronjy, James Tolkan, Lance
Henrickjson, Carmine Caridi. One of the all-time great New York
movies, in the same grittily atmospheric league as THE FRENCH CONNECTION
and SERPICO. Lumet's anguished cop drama is also one of the most persuasive
arguments against anyone involved in illegal on-the-job activity ever
doing the "right" moral thing and making a clean breast
of it. This is one of those films that isn't supposed to look pretty or immaculate,
but it deserves a DVD release anyway. A doc about the "real"
Ciello and his ex-partners would be interesting, and I'd love to
hear Lumet, Williams and Orbach talk about the shooting. It's an
obtuse thing to say, but there's profound integrity at work in a
film lasting just shy of three hours that's partly about cops and
mob guys, but is mostly about New York prosecutors in white shirts
and red ties sitting around talking about indictments.
Reminder
The new site at
www.hollywood-elsewhere.com went up on
Wednesday, 8.18. The column will appear at both the new site and
my familiar old berth at Movie Poop Shoot Poop concurrently
for a few weeks, as a way of maximizing readers and making sure no
one is left unawares when I finally leave Poop Shoot forever.
So if you haven't yet visited, please go to the new site (again, at
www.hollywood-elsewhere.com) and bookmark it so that when I'm totally
free and un-tethered, finding the column will not be a
problem for anyone. Thanks.
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