The Extras - EXCLUSIVE: Warner Archive August Blu-ray Release Announcement
Episode Date: July 10, 2023Hear it first on THE EXTRAS! George Feltenstein announces the new Blu-rays coming from the Warner Archive in August. MovieZyng Affiliate The BEST place to buy all of your Warner Archive and Boutique D...VDs and Blu-raysDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.The Extras Facebook pageThe Extras Twitter Warner Archive & Warner Bros Catalog GroupOtaku Media produces podcasts, behind-the-scenes extras, and media that connect creatives with their fans and businesses with their consumers. Contact us today to see how we can work together to achieve your goals. www.otakumedia.tv
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Hi, I'm film historian and author John Fricke.
I've written books about Judy Garland and the Wizard of Oz movie, and you're listening
to The Extras.
Hello and welcome to The Extras, where we take you behind the scenes of your favorite
TV shows, movies, and animation, and they're released on digital, DVD, Blu-ray, and 4K,
or your favorite streaming site.
I'm Tim Millard, your host.
And joining me is George Feldstein to announce the August Blu-ray releases from the Warner
Archive.
But before we dive in, I just want to remind everyone that if you haven't yet, be sure
to follow or subscribe at your favorite podcast provider, as that's the only way to guarantee
you get all of our Warner Archive podcasts,
including these monthly release announcements. Well, hi, George. How are you doing today?
I'm doing well, Tim. And it's always exciting to be able to share this kind of hot off the
presses news with you and the people that listen to the Extras podcast. Always very exciting.
the people that listen to the extras podcasts, always very exciting.
Yeah, these announcement podcasts are quickly becoming some of my favorites because I come into them with that same anticipation that everybody else does. So people are really
enjoying them. Well, how many films will we be going through today for the August releases? Once again, we have a sextet of new releases, all of which are,
I would say, fairly different and unique. And we're spanning decades from the 30s to the 60s.
So it's a nice array of, I think, something for everyone. And we'll start with the first release.
something for everyone. And we'll start with the first release. We'll go chronologically. This is an extraordinarily important and famous film that a lot of people have been waiting for
and requesting. It's the original 1933 version of Little Women starring Katharine Hepburn,
version of Little Women starring Katherine Hepburn, directed by George Cugor, and also co-stars the lovely Joan Bennett. This is the, famously 16 years later by MGM and Technicolor,
and it was a shot-for-shot, practically remake. It was exactly the same script,
but it had the benefit of Technicolor. This original version is considered really the definitive film. And it's been remade
recently. And it was remade in the 90s. It's a story that really is continually compelling.
And Katherine Hepburn is wonderful in this. And this is very early in her career. And Hepburn and Cukor worked together many, many times,
were lifelong friends.
And this was also one of the bigger hits for RKO in 1933.
And that was a pretty good year for them
because they had a little movie called King Kong
and the launch of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers
and flying down to Rio.
So it was a busy year at RKO.
This is a beautiful new master.
It is from the best available elements.
It's a 4K scan.
I think people are going to be very, very excited.
We will have some additional extras that
aren't related to the feature
but are more
of what would be part of the movie-going
experience in 1933.
And this is one of
those rare RKO movies where
we actually do have a
trailer. We actually have
film on the trailer.
It will look really, really good. But
this is a big upgrade from the DVD, and I think people will love to add it to their collection.
The next film is the first Warner Brothers film to win the Best Picture Academy Award.
And the Oscar-winning film is The Life of Emil Zola from 1937,
starring the great Paul Muni, who had the year before won the Best Actor Oscar for The Story
of Louis Pasteur. Here he plays the great Emil Zola, and this is directed by William Dieterle.
And this is directed by William Dieterle. And the film was another example of Warner Brothers kind of dealing with social issues by going back into historical context. very prestigious for the Warners to win their first Academy Award. It certainly wouldn't be
the last, but they were proud to finally have a Best Picture on the mantle. And this is a 4K scan
off the original nitrate camera negative. It's a beautiful restoration. And the film also features
a great performance by Gail Sondergaard, who had also won an Oscar the year before.
She was the first actress to get the Best Supporting Actress Oscar.
And I believe that was for Anthony Adverse.
I may be wrong, but I think that's what it was for.
But she had a long career.
And this is a wonderful film.
And we'll have a radio version of it on there for an extra and various other
little additives. But it's going to be a great disc, and I think people are really going to
enjoy it. Then moving forward, our next film takes us all the way to 1951, and this is a sequel to a
film we put on Blu-ray, I guess, about five, six years ago.
But this is a film people have been waiting for to look good.
And it is a 4K scan off the original camera negative.
And it's Vincent Minnelli's Father's Little Dividend.
Reuniting Spencer Tracy and Elizabeth Taylor and Joan Bennett as a sequel to Father of the Bride.
Father of the Bride was so incredibly successful that MGM put Father's Little Dividend into production as soon as they could.
As a matter of fact, this movie was filmed during the filming of An American in Paris.
Vincent Minnelli finished shooting everything but the ballet for An American in Paris. Vincent Minnelli finished shooting everything but
the ballet for American in Paris, shot Father's Little Dividend while they were rehearsing the
ballet, and then finished American in Paris ballet after Father's Little Dividend was over.
But this is one of those rare instances where the sequel was as well received as the original film, was very profitable.
It's been bouncing around looking awful.
And finally, we go back to the camera negative and make it look beautiful.
And I think this is going to be a very welcome disc.
Wow.
Three films and we already have two from Joan Bennett.
That's right.
Yeah. That's right. Yeah.
That's right.
She had a very, very long career and was a very beloved member of the Hollywood community.
That is for certain.
Our next film takes us into the glorious grandeur of CinemaScope.
And it is from 1955 and directed by the great auteur Jacques Tourneur, and he made all sorts of films.
His film noirs were quite remarkable, as were his westernae, Vera Miles, and Lloyd Bridges, who came from underwater.
I guess, I don't know if you've done Sea Hunt on television yet, so maybe my joke doesn't
take place, but this is one of those rare Allied Artist movies that was an A picture,
an A budget picture for them.
And as a result, it was very successful at the box office.
And this is one of the films where Walter Mirrish, who later went on with his brother to form the Mirrish Corporation,
they produced great films for United Artists.
Walter Mirrish really got his start at Monogram slash Allied Artists in the late 1940s and
was a preeminent producer at Allied before they made their independent company, started making
movies for United Artists. So Walter Marish, who just passed
away at, I think he was 101, produced this, Jacques Tourneur directing it. This is a favorite film,
and it's particularly gratifying to us that we get to bring this film out in a beautiful 4K scan.
We actually use the camera negative as well as the yellow separation
in order to restore the color and have this look as good as it can be.
It's a remarkable upgrade.
This is one of those films that came out on DVD
in the very early days of Warner Archive.
And now we're getting to revisit it with a beautiful 4K scan and a restoration.
It truly is looking and sounding great.
And for the tourneur fans out there and the Western fans out there
and the Joel McRae fans out there,
this is a wonderful thing to be able to share with
the film fan community.
Do you have any extras on this one, George?
We have 1955 theatrical bonuses.
It's again, when we don't have something directly related to the film, we always like to add
something that's like the Warner Night movies, only in this case,
it doesn't have to be studio-centric because Allied Artists didn't make shorts and cartoons
or anything like that.
So we will have material from some of the other libraries that we control to make it
a well-balanced disc. I think people
are going to like what are the bonuses on this disc. Then we move to the year 1962,
and we have a full-length animated feature film that is a Warner Brothers release,
but it actually was not produced at the Warner Brothers cartoon department.
This was produced by UPA, which was the groundbreaking animation studio that came forth, I believe, around 1949.
They started with the Gerald McBoing Boing cartoons and the early Mr. Magoo cartoons, and they really had a revolutionary approach to animation that was a totally different kind of design.
at some point, but the film wasn't the first UPA theatrical feature, but it was among their early ones. This is Gay Peri. There's a dash between per and e, because this is about all the characters
in this animated film are cats. And the leading lady cat, Musette,
happens to be voiced by none other than Judy Garland.
It's the only time, to my knowledge,
she provided her voice talent for an animated motion picture.
And opposite her, as Jean-Tom,
the love of Musette's life, was young at the time, Robert Goulet, who had just made a name for himself on Broadway in Camelot.
And in support, we have other voice talents like Hermione Gingold and the great Paul Freese, who's not given enough credit.
He was such an incredible vocal artist.
He was the voice of Boris Batinov.
He would do narration for everything.
He's just not appreciated enough.
And Academy Award-winning actor Red Buttons plays Jean-Tom's best friend. And Red Buttons had won the Supporting Actor Oscar for Sayonara in 1957. It was a 1957 film.
So Red Buttons was very popular at the time.
And so that added prestige and comic effect.
All the voices are really good. But what's really interesting about this feature film is the songs were written by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg, who wrote the score for The Wizard of Oz.
Oh, wow.
So Judy Garland, once again, is singing the songs.
She had just really almost a lifelong friendship and relationship
and professional relationship with Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg frequently.
But particularly to have gotten them to create the original songs for this
film was a big deal. And they wrote a beautiful ballad. There's several really great songs in
this film, but one ballad they wrote that I think everybody thought was going to be a
quintessential, timeless hit is a song called Little Drops of Rain.
And I think there was a tie there over the rainbow. It unfortunately did not become the
kind of hit record everybody anticipated. But the love story, it's set against a Parisian background. And the story was written by Dorothy and Chuck Jones.
Dorothy Jones was Chuck Jones' first wife.
I believe she passed away at a relatively young age.
But they had collaborated on this story together.
And the film is directed by a frequent collaborator of Chuck Jones,
Abe Levittow.
Now, the rumor is, I can't confirm this as fact,
the rumor is that Chuck Jones was working on this project,
which ended up being a Warner Brothers release,
but he was under contract to the Warner
Brothers cartoon department and he was let go from the Warner Brothers cartoon department before it
was shut down only to reopen and the reason allegedly that he was let go was that Jack
Warner was angry that he had been working on this other film, which they were picking up for distribution anyway.
But the cleverness and wit and the beauty of the artwork,
they were very influenced by impressionistic artists.
The whole design of this animated feature is really stupendous.
So once again, we have a 4K scan from the camera negative, and it's going to
absolutely blow people away when they see the colors and how beautiful the film is. And I
remember enjoying this film greatly as a little kid. It was always on television, but now you're getting to see it, you know, in a beautiful way that we could never have anticipated. So this is a very exciting release, and it will have some appropriate animated extras.
with the king of rock and roll himself, Mr. Elvis Presley, starring in one of his more popular MGM films, Spin Out from 1966. And this co-stars Shelley Fabre, who got her start as the daughter
on the Donna Reed Show. And then after being on the Donna Reed show for a while,
she decided she wanted to be in movies
and got under contract to MGM
and was in several films there.
She was really an audience favorite.
But this is one of several Elvis movies
where he plays a race car driver, Mike McCoy.
This is also produced by Joe Pasternak, who was the longtime MGM musical producer.
You know, we talked about him before, because he did things like Courtship of Eddie's Father,
which we just released. he had diversified away from
musical films. But the few musicals he did make in the 60s, he made one with Connie Francis and
several with Elvis. And Elvis's films are to be treasured because he didn't make enough of them.
And so we're grateful for the ones that we have. And among the 17 Elvis Presley
movies that we control, Spin Out has always been one of the more popular ones. So it was time for
its cinemascope color greatness to be given the Blu-ray treatment. And it's a 4K scan off the
camera negative. I sound like a broken record sometimes, but that's not anything
to be ashamed of. It's something to be proud of. Yes. Yes, for sure. Well, this is an amazing
month. Another home run here, George, because you've got a pre-code, you've got an Academy
Award-winning drama, you've got a comedy that I think your friend Leonard Maltin said quite possibly is
the first modern kind of sequel to a popular studio film that puts it in a unique place as
well. Then you've got the animation with Judy Garland. You can never have too many Judy Garland
films out there. And then you've got an Elvis Presley in a musical. So, oh, and I forgot
the Western. So you've got so much variety for everybody. I just love what you're doing with the
programming here with Warner Archive, George. Well, thank you. And Tim, I'm always happy to
be able to share these little advanced previews of what these discs are going to be like.
And we're actually in the midst of working on them right now to finish them so that they can be on
people's doorsteps in August. So we're very proud of what we've been doing and very grateful for the continued consumer support, because without the consumer support, there would be no Warner Archive.
And we're never taking that for granted. many different kinds of films as we can, as quickly as we can, without skimping on the
quality of the master.
It has to be pristine and it has to be a knockout of the park.
And hopefully people will be as excited about these as people have been about the recent
releases, which have done really well
and bode well for the future.
Right, right.
Well, as always, George, thanks for coming on the podcast.
And I know that you'll be posting more information on your Facebook pages.
We'll also have some more information on the extras Facebook pages as that comes out.
And then also the pre-orders, which should be coming soon.
So as always, thank you, George. Wonderful. And thank you, Tim.
Well, this is a strong lineup of Blu-ray releases for August. So it's looking like a terrific summer
of releases from the Warner Archive. As I mentioned, pre-order links will be made available in the podcast show notes as they become available and also on our webpage at www.theextras.tv.
So keep a lookout for those in the near future. And I did want to mention one new thing that we're
providing and that is transcripts for these podcasts. So if that interests you, look for the
transcripts tab and you'll find that there. Now, sometimes it has misspellings and it doesn't have all the correct capitalization,
but just to get it out to you quickly, it is available.
And if you're a writer or a website and you wanted to use that transcript,
I just ask that you give us a little credit and a link back.
That would be terrific.
Thank you so much.
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Until next time,
you've been listening to Tim Millard.
Stay slightly obsessed
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