“DVD Beat” Archive

02.19.10 Coming Soon On DVD – Hammer Films Collection

Roger, Corman

Roger Corman was recently honored with a special Academy Award, and a new 3-D remake of his 1978 production Piranha is heading for theaters this year. So it makes sense that Corman’s “B” movie classics from New World Pictures have found a new home at Shout Factory!/Vivendi.

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The Corman library has been out of circulation for a few years, and the company is welcoming such water-logged monstrosity movies as the original Piranha, Humanoids from the Deep, Up from the Depths, and Demon of Paradise back in April. They will be followed by the likes of Rock ‘N’ Roll High School, Suburbia, Death Race 2000, Deathsport and others. We say it’s about time the Academy recognized Corman’s contributions to cinema, as a producer, director and mentor to young talent. It’s just a shame his award will not be part of the telecast this year.
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12.06.09 This Week In Film History 12-07-09

button-film-historyDecember 7, 1919: Director/actor Erich von Stroheim, "The Man You Love to Hate," makes his directorial debut with Blind Husbands.

December 11, 1930: A protest of All Quiet on the Western Front by members of the Nazi Party in Berlin will lead to the banning of the film from Germany.

December 9, 1937: In a poll conducted by gossip columnist Ed Sullivan, Clark Gable and Myrna Loy are crowned "King and Queen of Hollywood."


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12.01.09 Bad Girls Go To DVD & Other Movie Classics

Cary On

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Turner Classic Movies has pacted with Universal to issue several new-to-DVDs showcasing the great Cary Grant. This comes after TCM’s release of such Universal-licensed efforts as Remember the Night and the Universal Cult Horror Collection. These films, originally produced by Paramount, will be available individually, or collected in a set called Cary Grant: The Early Paramount Years. The titles include:

The Last Outpost (1935) finds Grant as a British officer wounded in WWI-era Kurdistan who falls for a nurse (Gertrude Michael) who happens to be married to the intelligence agent (Claude Rains) who rescued him.

The Eagle and the Hawk (1933), in which Cary tries to save the reputation of WWI British flying ace Fredric March after he commits suicide. Carole Lombard has a small role as the woman with whom March has an affair.

The Devil and the Deep (1932) is a superior sub drama, although Mr. Grant is only appears briefly, playing a lieutenant transferred to another base when sub commander Charles Laughton suspects him of having an affair with wife Tallulah Bankhead. Things don’t get easier when Gary Cooper comes on board, and when Laughton suspects the same, the future of his crew is put in jeopardy.
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11.27.09 Better Noir

“Film noir” is a term that movie marketers have pinned to practically every film involving crime or suspense that was shot in b

five_against_the_houselack-and-white during the 1950s. While some of the labeling has been downright silly, such as the case with some of the DVD entries from the Fox library (Daisy Kenyon?), it’s great to see the interest for making classic noirs available to fans out there.

Sony has lagged behind Warner, Fox and others in excavating their vast library from Columbia for screen gems, but they’re certainly coming on strong of late. Consider recent sets centered on the works of Budd Boetticher, William Castle and efforts from Ishiro Honda and Toho Studios that have been issued recently.

Sony’s streak continues with the impressive five-disc Columbia Pictures Film Noir Classics I, a nifty compendium of creepy crime movies from the dark side of the screen and human nature.


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10.13.09 Lost ’60s And ’70s Flicks Found

Feelin’ Groovy: Going deep, deep, deep into their library to issue the next wave in their “Martini Movies” series, Sony has plucked some fascinating obscurities for public DVD screenings. They are from the 1960s and 1970s, which designates them as Groovy Movies of sorts.

In this batch of titles are:

Love and Pain and the Whole Damn Thing (1973): An exquisitely filmed romantic drama in which sheltered Timothy Bottoms meets older Maggie Smith during a bicycle journey through Spain. The two carry on a romance, but Smith eventually gets ill. Alan J. Pakula helmed this change-of-pace effort.

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07.09.09 Just When You Thought It Was Safe To Go Back In The Water: Esther, Boris & Bela

All Swimming! All Dancing!: Fans of swimmer/song-and-dance specialist Esther Williams, the MGM player who made a big splash in movies for the studio in the 1940s and 1950s, can now stop “wading” for more of her films to be issued on DVD.  This extras-loaded set, entitled TCM Spotlight: Esther Williams, Vol. 2, includes:

Thrill of a Romance (1945): Esther is a swimming instructor at a Sierra Nevada mountain resort who falls for handsome soldier Van Johnson, even though she recently got married. Among the songs are “Please Don’t Say No, Say Maybe,” “I Should Care," “Lonely Night” and the title tune.

Fiesta (1947): Esther shifts her interests from musical comedy and romance to drama and bullfighting. The daughter of a celebrated matador, she disguises herself as a man to take the place of her disinterested brother (Ricardo Montalban) in the ring. Cyd Charisse, Mary Astor and Fortunio Bonanova also star.


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06.18.09 Icons Of Screwball Comedy, And More

COUP DE TORCH: At last, Sony has opened the floodgates to their library, and look what’s pouring out—all sorts of goodies for film fanatics. First and foremost are Icons Of Screwball Comedy, Vol. 1 and Icons Of Screwball Comedy, Vol. 2, two wonderful collections of wacky farces.


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