New DVD Spin: Bonnie and Clyde, Wristcutters, Midsomer Murders, and More
It's a kiss-kiss-bang-bang week for DVDs!
Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty in Warner Bros. 'Bonnie & Clyde' -
Warner Bros.
Bonnie
and Clyde (Warner Bros.) "They're young, they're in love and they kill people," goes one of the more effective taglines in Hollywood history. This week's top pick is of course a defining film of the antiestablishment 1960s, one that helped transform both American popular movies and the way American audiences "read" popular movies. This 1967 gangster opus, inspired by the legendary Depression-era bandits and lovers, was a surprise sensation as it imported stylistic punch from the French New Wave while at the same time taking the spaces out of the phrase "sex and violence." A myth-maker both on and behind the screen, it was shocking in '67 and today remains fresh as a thrilling, often darkly funny, and exquisitely made classic. It still hits us with an ending that, in the modern argot, ain't nuttin' like a gangsta party. Critic David Thomson, in his retrospective appreciation in L.A. Weekly, observes that "death was their best moment; it was when they looked in each other's eyes with rapture and knew that machine-gun bullets were the trigger for the shuddering orgasm they longed for." As Glenn Erickson puts it in his consideration of this new DVD, the final scene's "blast of psychic overkill ushered in a new era of explicit violence for mainstream movies.... Forty years later, in a culture grown even more bloodthirsty, Bonnie and Clyde has retained its kick." Finally, Roger Ebert closes his "Great Movies" piece on Bonnie and Clyde with, "When I saw it, I had been a film critic for less than six months, and it was the first masterpiece I had seen on the job. I felt an exhilaration beyond describing. I did not suspect how long it would be between such experiences, but at least I learned that they were possible."
His persistence paid off when Bonnie and Clyde turned into a commercial and ultimately critical smash for Warner Brothers, picking up ten Oscar nominations that included wins for supporting actress Estelle Parsons and cinematographer Burnett Guffey. And let's not forget the terrific work we get here from director Arthur Penn, editor Dede Allen, and a cast of relative unknowns such as Gene Hackman, Michael J. Pollard, Denver Pyle, and Gene Wilder in his big-screen debut one year before The Producers and four years before he became Willy Wonka. For the film's 40th (more or less) anniversary, Warner Bros. has given Bonnie and Clyde a fully restored and remastered new release, and -- boy howdy! -- it's a thing of beauty. The image is rich and sharp and just shy of flawless. Various purchase options offer a assortment of extras. The "Two-Disc Special Edition" hands us a superb new documentary about the production, Revolution! The Making of Bonnie and Clyde, by Laurent Bouzereau. It's presented in three parts -- "Bonnie and Clyde's Gang" (22 minutes), "The Reality and Myth of Bonnie and Clyde" (24 mins.), and "Releasing Bonnie and Clyde" (18 mins.) -- and features new reminiscences from Beatty, Dunaway, Hackman, Pollard, Parsons, director Penn, screenwriter Robert Benton, editor Dede Allen, creative consultant Robert Towne, Morgan Fairchild (Faye Dunaway's stand-in), costume designer Theadora Van Runkle, art director Dean Tavoularis, press agent Mick Guttman, and L.A. Confidential director Curtis Hanson (who, as a young photographer, had a hand in landing Faye Dunaway in the role of Bonnie Parker; Hanson's "payment" was being allowed to shadow the crew in Texas during production).
Finally, rounding out the Two-Disc Special Edition are two deleted scenes (minus their audio, which has been lost, but subtitled from the shooting script), the teaser and theatrical trailers, and Warren Betty Wardrobe Tests (7 mins.). The handsomely packaged "Ultimate Collector's Edition" holds all that plus a 36-page book, a reproduction of the original pressbook, and a mail-in poster offer. The Blu-ray disc reproduces the "Ultimate Collector's Edition" with all the video material on a single disc. DVD Beaver has posted a review of the Blu-ray edition, with specs and screenshots. Warner Bros. Pictures' Gangsters Collection Vol. 3 This latest group of crime genre classics, three making their first U.S. home video appearance, stars some of Hollywood's top tough guys -- James Cagney, Edward G. Robinson, and Humphrey Bogart. The films have been given brand new transfers from newly restored film elements. The DVDs also include the always-welcome "Warner Night at the Movies" extras such as rarely seen Warner Bros. shorts, vintage newsreels and classic cartoons, plus original theatrical trailers. The discs are available individually and bundled together in the boxed set: Picture Snatcher (1933) Lady Killer (1933) Smart Money (1931) Black Legion (1937) Mayor of Hell (1933) Brother Orchid (1940) Wristcutters: a Love Story (Lionsgate)
Along with his Russian drinking buddy Eugene (Shea Whigham), Zia hits the dusty road in Eugene's beater of a car -- which has, incidentally, a dimensional black hole beneath the passenger seat. Shannyn Sossamon is Mikal, a hitchhiker they pick up. She's an afterlife newbie who's there, she claims, on a technical error -- her O.D., you see, was not deliberate. So she's looking for the mythical (or are they?) People In Charge. Things take a turn for the weird(er) when the Oz-like trio stop at Kneller's Happy Campers, a roadside community where casual miracles are just life as usual. Caretaking the joint is Kneller, played by none other than Tom Waits, and there's nobody on the planet better for the role. Can Mikal be the girl for Zia even though his quest is to find his ex, who offed herself a month after he did and, evidence suggests, is somewhere nearby? The plot goes a bit off-track at the climax, with an underdeveloped section about a would-be Messiah (Will Arnett, underused) and a really big miracle he has planned. Nonetheless, Wristcutters: a Love Story is well-made and often charming. It's recommended for fans of lightweight "quirky" indies with black (really more of a charcoal gray) humor. Fans of Six-String Samurai will find Wristcutters to be so similar in style and tone that the two movies would make a pretty cool double feature. Lionsgate delivers Wristcutters: a Love Story on DVD with an enjoyable and informative audio commentary track by director Dukic, actor Patrick Fugit, and producers Mikal Portnoi Lazarev and Tatiana Kelly. Their production of this low-cost indie was peppered with found locations (such as an abandoned theme park that became the Kneller's Happy Campers site), and happenstance such as a dead body on the beach. Also here are some brief behind-the-scenes featurettes, including Fugit's on-set photo gallery, and ten deleted scenes -- a couple of which should have remained in the final cut. Midsomer Murders (Fan site: The Definitive Midsomer Guide) (Acorn Media)
The series reinvigorates the traditional English "cozy" mystery formula with a modern setting, flashes of wry humor, and inventive, often macabre murders, such as a man pelted to death by catapulted wine bottles while his invalid wife looks on from the manor house window, or an actor cutting his throat on stage after somebody replaced the play's prop razor with a real one. The ghastly deeds contrast sometimes amusingly with the pastoral settings (given names such as Badger's Drift and Strangler's Wood) and genteel country estates where, apparently, everyone has a secret and a motive for foul doings. Throughout these 100-minute episodes, the familiar tropes of Agatha Christie-style paperbacks -- stabbbings, bludgeonings, poisonings, mad vicars, lost wills, lovers' trysts, secret identities, hidden parentage, buried treasures, revenge schemes, and so on -- are freshened up with first-rate performances from a sterling cast playing eccentric characters. Nettles gave up a career in the Royal Shakespeare Company to play likable, hardworking family man Tom Barnaby, and Shakespeare's loss is our gain.
Acorn Media produces Midsomer Murders in two boxed sets. Holding all of Series One through Four (30 hours on 19 discs), Midsomer Murders - The Early Cases Collection restores the episodes to their original U.K. broadcast order. These include the five mysteries adapted from the novels of Caroline Graham, as well as the next 13 original stories inspired by her characters. Six of the episodes, including the first two in the series, were adapted by writer Anthony Horowitz (Foyle's War, Poirot, Robin of Sherwood). Guest stars include Orlando Bloom, Anna Massey, and Prunella Scales. The first two seasons come with a letterboxed (1.66:1 non-anamorphic) image, followed by the remaining seasons presented in 1.75:1 widescreen that's anamorphically enhanced. Special Features include an essay by John Nettles, a Midsomer map, production notes, behind-the-scenes featurettes, a Caroline Graham biography, and cast filmographies. The 19th disc holds exclusive bonus material: Super Sleuths, a documentary about the show's first decade, featuring John Nettles, Caroline Graham, writer Anthony Horowitz, and others. Sold separately, Midsomer Murders - Set 10 brings us episodes 40-43 from Series Eight (2004/2005). This week Acorn Media also streets Suburban Shootout - The Complete First Series, a satirical black comedy television series that's promoted as Britain's up-the-ante answer to Desperate Housewives. In 2006 the first series of Suburban Shootout aired in the UK and in the United States on Oxygen. (Official site, Oxygen site.) The smell of newly-mown grass, the sight of blooming flowerbeds, the clatter of automatic gunfire.... Welcome to Little Stempington, a posh London 'burb where the ladies care more about turf wars than topsoil. Amelia Bullmore (Cracker), Anna Chancellor (Four Weddings and a Funeral), and Felicity Montague (Bridget Jones's Diary) star in this clever, energetic, and wickedly satirical Britcom about warring gangs of vigilante housewives. The set holds the complete first season of eight episodes. Extras include a behind-the-scenes program, text cast filmographies, and audio commentaries on all eight episodes by the cast and crew. Jimmy
Carter: Man from Plains (Sony) The
Kite Runner (DreamWorks) The Mist
(Genius Entertainment and the Weinstein Company) Walk
the Line - Extended Cut (20th Century Fox) Alain Delon: 5-Film Collection (Turner Classic Movies) (Lionsgate) A provocative French thriller, Diaboliquement Votre (Diabolically Yours) (1967) places a wealthy man (Delon) at the center of an extraordinary plot after a car crash leaves him unable to remember who he is. With his wife (Senta Berger) convinced he is faking amnesia, he sets out to discover who and why someone wants him to believe he is going crazy and should end his life. In La Piscine (The Swimming Pool) (1969), a chilling portrait of male rivalry and jealousy reunites real-life lovers Alain Delon and Romy Schneider as a couple on vacation at a villa near St. Tropez. When her ex-love shows up unexpectedly with his beautiful teenage daughter (Jane Birkin), it creates a dangerous love triangle between the grown-ups that leads to deadly consequences. The dark, intricate melodrama La Veuve Couderc (The Widow Couderc) (1971) explores the possibility of love between a young man and older woman. Simone Signoret plays a contented widow who allows a handsome stranger (Delon) to move in and work on her farm. Their secret affair and plans for the future take a dramatic turn when he succumbs to her jealous sister-in-law's seductive daughter. In Le Gitan (The Gypsy) (1975), a long-suffering gypsy (Delon) sets out to steal from the rich to provide sustenance to his fellow gypsies, all of them desperate and treated like trash by French society. Constantly outwitting the authorities as he moves deftly from place to place with the help of accomplices, this king of beggars ultimately cannot break the endless chain of displacement -- his people's sad destiny. Sensual, dark, and thought-provoking, Notre Historie (Our Story) (1984) is an unpredictable tale of obsessive love starring Delon as a middle-aged alcoholic whose life is turned upside down by a train ride. Sitting alone in a compartment as he reflects on the emptiness of his world, a beautiful woman (Nathalie Baye) suddenly enters, makes love to him and just as suddenly leaves the train, compelling him to follow her. Totaling 8 1/2 hours, the films are transferred to five discs from good widescreen source prints. Audio is French Dolby Digital stereo with subtitle options in English or Spanish. The ever-reliable DVD Beaver provides tech specs and ample screenshots. Most Popular Stories
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