The Extras - Gunslingers, Godfathers, Truck Drivers, & Silent Stars, plus 3 Films from the 80s & 90s
Episode Date: April 24, 2024We're peeling back the curtain on Warner Archive's March releases, with a special nod to the unexpected Blu-ray revival of the classic TV Western "Colt .45." Next we review the J...ohn Ford and John Wayne western "3 Godfathers" (1948) and its redemption story for the outlaws. Three modern classics are next, with the timely "The Little Drummer Girl," (1984), the inspiring "Stand and Deliver," (1988), and the action-comedy "Money Talks" (1997). We jump back to the 1920s with a review of the delightful silent double feature "The Boob/Why Be Good" and a hint at future silent film releases. We wrap up with director Raoul Walsh's "They Drive By Night" (1940), which is loaded with terrific performances by classic Hollywood favorites George Raft, Humphrey Bogart, Ann Sheridan, and Ida Lupino. We provide a review of each film, the restoration, and all of the extras to help you decide if you want to add it to your physical media collection.Purchase links:COLT .45 (1957-1960) THE COMPLETE SERIES Blu-ray3 GODFATHERS (1948) Blu-rayTHEY DRIVE BY NIGHT (1940) Blu-rayTHE BOOB and WHY BE GOOD? (1926/29) Blu-raySTAND AND DELIVER (1988) Blu-rayMONEY TALKS (1997) Blu-rayTHE LITTLE DRUMMER GIRL (1984) Blu-ray 46s Film Making 46s: Filmmakers talk origins, challenges, budgets, and profits.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifyThe 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Gregory Orr, grandson of Jack L. Warner and producer of the documentary Jack L. Warner
the Last Mogul, and you are listening to The Extras.
Hello and welcome to The Extras.
I'm Tim Larger, your host, and joining me today is George Feltenstein to review some
of the March TV and film releases from the Warner Archive. Hi George.
Hey Tim.
Well, March, I'm looking at March and it's like this is a very, very busy month. So we have a lot
of titles that we're going to be talking about today. But I think probably going back to the
announcement, one of the real pleasant surprises about this month was when you announced this release of the classic TV western series, Cold 45.
I don't think anyone saw that one coming.
I know we get a lot of requests for various TV series, but the fact is that as I watched this, I was so enjoying it. And I'm so glad that this series is getting a new life
on Blu-ray for people who maybe never saw it because it looks terrific and it's highly entertaining.
Well, Count Me is one of the people that never saw it. This was before my time in all ways.
never saw it. This was before my time in all ways. And if I wanted to see an episode, we had nothing to look at because this is a series that was never put on videotape, even ancient
1980s one inch, you know, right? This was just not around. A lot of people wouldn't know this
because it's not like Wade Preston gets up
and sings a Warner Brothers music publishing song
or something, which is the issue that keeps
some of our other classic Warner Brothers TV series
in the land of difficulty.
But there were music clearances of the music in this series that held it up years ago.
Like if we wanted to put it out when we were doing Law Man, Bronco, the Dakotas, Maverick, Cheyenne,
all the Warner Brothers Westerns, we couldn't get to a few of them because of music.
And this was one of them.
It just happened to be we were having a conversation internally
about the importance of this series in the canon of early Warner Brothers television.
And there is a very voracious appetite right now, as there should be, for Westerns.
And this series seemed like a perfect choice as we all sat around the table and were thinking,
you know, what hasn't been around at all?
Putting everything together, scanning the negatives at 4K, coming out with beautiful
Blu-ray set in a sleeve where the seasons are individually packaged in an amary. So it's sturdy,
three amary's, one for each season. And so I'm very happy with the presentation.
I'm super happy that people such as yourself share my enthusiasm, you know, because
as I was going through the episodes as they would be completed and checking the quality and so forth
and so on, I just found it was very snackable. The shows are short and before you know it,
shows are short and before you know it, they're over and you're on to the next one and you've got that wonderful production quality of having been made here at the studio.
So I just thought it was a perfect opportunity for us to let people know that television
is going to be more of a prominent focus within our activities.
I take my hat off as I always do to William T. Orr, because under his aegis Warner Brothers Television was founded and flourished.
And this is just alongside it fills a hole of a missing Warner Brothers Western series.
Yeah, yeah.
And the fan response has been tremendous.
Yeah, I mean, it's one of those kind of pleasant surprises
and I think anybody who picks up this set
is gonna just really enjoy.
To your point, you can watch one, they're self-contained,
they go by quickly.
And just for people who don't know,
Wade Preston plays Christopher Colt.
He's an undercover, I guess it's a army undercover officer
posing as the salesman of the Colt pistols.
And he arrives in a town or a setting
and he has a little, you know, something he
has to uncover or deal with or some gunman or bad guy, whatever.
They're just so highly entertaining.
It's a great formula.
You know, it's a formula that's been done, but it's really fun, creative and Wade, who
I didn't really know, Wade Preston, I mean, he just really fits the part.
He looks it, he fits it so much.
He's terrific.
You just took the words right out of my mouth.
I was gonna say he's terrific.
He's charming.
He's very matter of fact.
And it's easy to see why he fell alongside
so many of the Warner Western stars
that were in these series made in the late 50s and early 60s.
I'm very proud of the release as I indicated the last time I was with you,
or one of the last times I was with you.
We've got another Western in the oven and that should be ready.
Once the pop-up timer comes up,
hopefully we'll be letting people know what
the next one will be.
It's very exciting and I hope we'll be able to bring lots more television as we continue
on our mission to unleash the library. And just to further explain for those listening,
this is a, what, three seasons.
So there's what, 10 discs and 67 episodes.
Right.
So there's a lot of entertainment in this.
And I saw a good chunk of these episodes
and it was fun to see the guest stars,
Dan Blocker, of course, famous from Bonanza,
Angie Dickinson is in there.
I really enjoyed the one with Leonard Nimoy.
That one.
It was, he plays a, not a good guy.
And Adam West in three different episodes has three different characters.
Including one is Doc Holliday. And each performance very different. I enjoyed all three of those.
And then each season I noticed that they did a new intro. I just couldn't help noticing that.
Where he comes in and he does a little intro, you know, just a theme song and intro.
So really great production value and great guest stars.
And it's just a lot of fun.
So highly recommended to those who want to get their Western collection on Blu-ray now
because it looks so much better.
I mean, the images just looks pristine. Well, I thank you for the kind words.
And again, the hat gets tipped off to our wonderful colleagues
at Warner Brothers Motion Picture Imaging.
They worked wonders.
These negatives hadn't been touched, really,
in much more than 60 years.
So it was a great opportunity also to protect the show.
When you go back to elements that you haven't touched
in over 60 years, you have to make sure
that they're not going vinegar and so forth and so on.
So everything was scanned and protected.
And there are also backup film element protections as well.
So there is analog and digital protection.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, it was really great.
And I thought that would kind of lead us into the discussion of the one Western you had
in March, fan favorite, I would say, classic in so many ways.
And that's Three Godfathers from 1948. I know so many people hold this film dear,
and they watch it at Christmas time because of the storyline that's there. And this new
master for this film really showcases the Western setting, the desert scenes and everything.
And of course, the performances are terrific. I was extraordinarily excited about this. I was disappointed we didn't have it
ready in time for Christmas. But this is not, you know, a quintessential Christmas
film the way, you know, A Christmas Carol is is Christmas in Connecticut know you can in this can be watched anytime of the year and enjoy it but.
The thing that's most important is the technical restoration.
The fact that we had complete nitrate technical negatives.
negatives and could scan each of them then recombine for perfect precision using our own technology.
The result of this is incredibly sharp, beautiful images.
These technical restorations hold great importance in my mind because this film was mastered in HD about 20 years ago for the purposes of releasing
on DVD from an interpositive and that's what's been kicking around until now.
It doesn't look terrible, but you put that up against this and you see the difference.
And we won't take those old HD masters that are filled with all sorts of
antiquated noise reduction and were QC'd on CRTs.
We have to start from the beginning on this.
And that is why so many things take a long time to get out.
But I'm delighted we were able to do a full restoration
on this as well as on the 1936 version
of Three Godfathers that MGM made.
This is based on a very famous story by Peter B. Kine
and was filmed numerous times.
It was filmed at Universal as a very early talkie called
Hell's Heroes, which we also own because MGM bought the story to remake it.
And Hell's Heroes and Three Godfathers 1936 are on a double feature DVD that we put out a long time ago.
But we did a full restoration on both the 36 and the 48, but made the 48 the prominent
feature, because that's what people really, really want.
And to be able to offer two films on the disc with such exceptional quality is extraordinarily gratifying.
And again, it's MPI to the rescue.
Right.
And of course, it's the teaming of John Ford and John Wayne.
And I think for fans of the Western genre,
I mean, any and all of their collaborations
are something that you treasure and kind of want to have
on your shelf.
And having an HD is a tremendous upgrade.
Well, and again, all of those original negatives, the three strip Technicolor negatives were
scanned individually at 4K, then recombined for this new master.
The results speak for themselves.
People have reviewed the
disc and loved it very much, especially because it has two versions on it also.
Yeah, that's pretty impressive that you were able to get that other one on there too.
And I didn't want it to end up being a two disc set, you know. And the other
thing that was important is I talked to our colleagues and said, can we get both
on the disk without sacrificing, sacrificing, I should say, the Warner Archive minimum for
bitrate because we insist on very high bitrates so that the consumer gets the best possible
viewing experience.
And I think that we have that here and I'm very proud of it.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a terrific film.
It looks terrific and I couldn't recommend it more highly for fans of the genre, John
Wayne, John Ford, all the above.
It's just a great film.
And the thing that really touches me about this is the little tribute to the late Harry
Carey, who had just passed away and was so much part of the Ford stock company and the
introduction of his son.
It just gets you in the heart. And especially if people are fond of the Ford Wayne Cannon and the John Ford group of stock
players, it's particularly moving.
And then of course, Harry Carey Jr. was outstanding two years later in another Warner Archive
release from RKO 1950 Wagon Master, which is another remaster we're very proud of. So we're very fortunate
to be able to be the custodians of such incredible work and people can have it on their shelf
without any internet interruptions. That's the best part of it.
And it's an MGM feature as well.
Yes.
So for those who are looking to add to their MGM library for the celebration of the 100th,
this is a terrific opportunity here.
So that's a lot of fun.
Well, why don't we jump ahead because you have three films from the 80s and 90s and
I did want to go through those. And I have to say that this
first one from 1984, The Little Drummer Girl, it works well in its own merits as a thriller
and it's enjoyable. But with what's currently going on in the world today, it couldn't be more
in the world today, it couldn't be more relevant. And it just shows that, you know, John le Carre and the storyline and what the filmmakers did has, you know, it has an enduring element to it,
you know, all wrapped into this very entertaining thriller.
And the fact that the film is 40 years old, and it tells you that this unfortunate set of circumstances
does make it very timely and prescient. But George Roy Hill, who directed the film, was
really an exceptional talent. And Diane Keaton really played a very different role than we had seen her in previously.
She had already given an amazing dramatic performance in Reds, followed by another amazing
dramatic performance in Shoot the Moon.
But this is right up there with her best work. And I think the film was probably a little bit
on the forgotten side.
And I'm hoping that with this new Blu-ray presentation,
people will really reevaluate it
and see that there's great work at hand here.
Yeah, Diane Keaton is terrific.
I mean, she has to play quite a range and without giving away any spoilers, you know,
she's an actress and because of that, to some extent, she gets pulled in, right, to play
a role and we won't give away anything there.
But she just does a terrific job kind of playing those two parts or two elements
I should say to the storyline and
really, you know really sexy and and does a terrific job of course of of
The undercover role. So yeah, I mean it I thought it was a good one
It's great to see her at you know when she was younger at her peak there.
And she's such a terrific actress.
One of my personal favorites, I have to say.
Yeah.
You know, she's, she's terrific.
And this film is really worthy of reappraisal and rediscovery.
Yeah.
re-appraisal and rediscovery. Yeah.
Well, our next film is also from the 80s and it's such an inspiring film.
I mean, when I watched it, I just had the same feelings as when I watched it the first
time back in 1988 when it came out.
And that's Stand and Deliver.
It's just so good. But what I wanna be sure we really talk about
is how good it looks on Blu-ray.
Stay with us, we'll be right back.
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voices that have lived in.
And this is a 4K scan off the camera negative.
Everything that you've seen up till now is over 20 years old.
That was the last time they mastered this probably 22, 23 years ago
and it really looked awful. It should be noted this was a very low budget production.
This was also a production not intended initially for theatrical presentation. This was a production that I believe, I'm not much
sure of this, but I believe it started with PBS's series American Playhouse.
They had the funding in the late 80s and early 90s to make independent films, some of which did get theatrical releases
before they ended up on PBS.
This is something that just had so much buzz to it
that one of our brothers jumped to the pool and said,
yeah, we want a part of this
and we think it's bigger than just a television film.
And of course, Edward James almost
is magnificent. He's just fantastic. And there's a great supporting cast.
Robert Starr Yeah, I guess, well, he was nominated for a
Best Actor Academy Award. I mean, he just really, I mean, he's just the image of that East LA teacher,
that inspiring teacher, I think, that kind
of endures now in other films that have come that have maybe been kind of like Stand and
Deliver in terms of inspiring teachers and things of that nature.
But it's such an LA film.
And I'm watching it.
Very much so.
You and I both live here in LA and I'm watching it and I'm like recognizing all of these locations
and the bridges in East LA that cross the river and just to feel everything.
It's a terrific LA story, the filming of it and the setting, but it's the acting.
These young actors, including Lou Diamond Phillips and how they just inhabit these young
students and it's so memorable.
And then it was fun to see.
I kind of had forgotten, but you get to see a young Andy Garcia in there.
It was kind of fun to see him.
Yeah, I mean, Lou Diamond Phillips, I think this followed La Bamba, if my memory is correct.
But he made such an impression in this film.
It's really hard to imagine that he didn't win the Oscar, but it was tough competition.
But that doesn't take anything away from it being an Oscar-worthy performance for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's terrific.
And I think that the film already has so many fans.
And for those fans of the film, for the teachers, the young people, for them
to be able to see it now looking so good, I think helps.
And we've talked about this before, George, how these new HD masters really help anybody
who's a little younger and not used to seeing film and film grain, you know, it makes them
so much more accessible to them so that they can just get sucked into the storyline
of these films because the story and the message
and the inspiration that this movie has resonates today
and will continue to for a long, long time.
Aven to that.
Well, the next film is an action comedy from 1997 and it really, I mean, it's just such a film
of its era. And that's the Chris Tucker Charlie Sheen of film Money Talks. That's a play on words,
of course, because his character talks nonstop. The Chris Tucker character, and he's the humor,
and he's the driving force of course in this
film and it's from a first-time director, film director Brett Ratner who teamed up
with Chris Tucker just the next year on the Rush Hour series where they use the same formula
that really they created here in Money Talks.
So it's great that this film is finally getting out on Blu-ray.
And we've had a great deal of requests for it. I mean, there is a fan base that wants to see
these films and we're always happy to oblige. And it really is a timepiece because you look back,
it's more than 25 years old and the whole change of whether it be hairstyles or the size of
cellular phone devices.
It's very, very different.
But what holds up is the entertainment and the chemistry between the two of them is particularly
Sheen and Tucker.
It's really terrific.
And it's a beautifully shot movie and that's why the new Master looks so great on Blu-ray.
Yeah, and it's another kind of quintessential LA film.
We just talked about that for Stand and Deliver in East LA.
And this one is quintessential LA as well.
You've got all of the highways and chases and all of the different
locations from the tough neighborhoods to the ultra wealthy in Beverly Hills. And so that's
kind of a time capsule as well. That's really fun from the 90s there as well. Yeah. So I mean,
this film has so many fans. I mean, Chris Tucker has
not done that many films. If you look at his filmography, other than the three Rush Hours and
this one, I mean, he's been in some other ones, but in terms of, I think, you know, this one
was really his first starring role and set up, you know, what stardom he found and, you know,
mega stardom with the Rush Hour trilogy after that.
So it looks great.
Anybody who's a big fan of Charlie Sheen, Chris, Red Ratner, those films of the 90s,
I think they're going to want to have this one for sure.
Absolutely.
Well, now I wanted to kind of go back quite a few decades to review the silent classic
double feature. I know we had so many
people interested to hear a review on this one and that a double feature includes the boob and why
be good. And kind of like the comment I made with the more recent stand and deliver about
with the more recent Stand and Deliver about making it accessible because of the great quality of the remaster. These, I mean, these are way older, but they look so good. And
that really helps as you're watching these to, you know, in terms of your enjoyment of
them. And I thoroughly enjoyed these.
They work very well together as companion pieces. Neither film is particularly at the top of the list
of something you'd find in essential silent film viewing,
but they're products of their time
and they really capture the eras so well.
And just between 1926 when the Boo was released and 1929 when YB Good was
released, things had moved at such a fast clip. And of course, YB Good has that synchronized Vitaphone score telling you that talkies were
about to be the norm. And these silent films that went out with synchronized scores and effects
were kind of filling the demand as studios were building sound stages and converting more and more to silence.
The boob was preserved by MGM during the 1960s
as part of their Nitrate to Safety conversion program.
So the safety elements that survived
were the basis of the work that was done on that film, then Why Be Good was considered
a lost film. Most of the Warner Brothers and First National Pictures silent movies, the
original negatives burnt in a fire on the Warner Brothers lot in the mid-30s and that's why it's so hard to find a lot of Warner Brothers films
and some of the early talkies as well because there's no trace of them except
in overseas archives or private hands and this was located in an overseas archive and it was a group effort of a lot of different
organizations to restore the film from a surviving Italian print, which means that all the titles
had to be redone in English so that people could read the intertitles properly.
This is something we put out on DVD a few years ago, but to be able to put it out on Blu-ray is very exciting.
And, of course, in the first film, it's notable as an early Joan Crawford silent appearance.
The star is Gertrude Olmsted, but the director is William Wellman and very
important people involved in the making of that film.
And with Why Be Good, Colleen Moore was one of the biggest silent screen
stars of her time and quite adorable on the screen, I have to say.
Yeah.
and quite adorable on the screen, I have to say. And to be able to bring these two films together on one Blu-ray,
it's a very good value for the consumer.
And we do have another silent film that has been in the works for quite some time,
which we hope to be releasing in the next few months.
And I'm hoping there will be more.
But in the meantime, we have this,
which I really urge all silent film fans
to pick up a copy if they can and support it.
Because the more these things can perform admirably enough
to make our financial people happy because
profitability is first and foremost what we have to focus on. We have to entertain
the people and find that balance of art versus commerce. So hopefully people will
pick up this release and let us know as a company that there is a demand for high quality blu-ray restoration.
And this is just a lot of fun.
It's a jumping off point to learn about a lot of other people that were involved in
making these films happen.
And what else did they do?
Yeah.
Yeah, they're both good.
It's fun to see, see Joan Crawford show up in the boob. And
of course, seeing one of the early films, I don't know if it's one of the early films,
but of William A. Wellman is a lot of fun to see. And the storyline on that one is being
kind of lampooning Hollywood gangsters and cowboys makes it really fun because there was so many of those kinds of films coming out at that time. So it's really charming
in that way. And then in terms of Why Be Good, Colleen Moore is terrific. I mean, as you
mentioned, she was a huge star. You can see why she just is so charming in that film.
Yeah. I mean, she did make some early sound films
and there was nothing wrong with her voice at all.
But I think she kind of pulled away from the whole industry
and what was nice in her later years,
she was interviewed very often by historians
and there are wonderful filmed interviews
of her that are part of Kevin Brownlow and David Gill's massive story of silent cinema
Hollywood which was produced by four Thames television in the 80s.
And the Colleen Moore interviews in there are just, you just fall in love with her.
She's just as spunky as she was 40 years earlier or 50 years earlier in the silent films that
she made and made her such a superstar.
She really was.
Yeah.
Well, we have one more film, George, and I'm not going to say we saved the best for last
because they've all been good, but I know this is a fan favorite and that's Raoul Walsh's
They Drive by Night from 1940.
It's a highly entertaining film and it's the cast that's so terrific, I thought.
I mean, you have four huge stars.
George Raft is great, but I guess I really was drawn to the performance
by Anne Sheridan and Ida Lupino. I just thought they were fantastic.
Yeah. I remember seeing this film when I was young, probably younger than 10 years old,
maybe like eight or nine years old, that it was on the afternoon movie, and that was the only way you could see things like this.
And I was especially taken aback by the dialogue.
The rapid fire dialogue was just so sharp
and so on the nose and so witty.
And being a Warner Brothers movie, it moves at a rapid pace.
I, Lepino, choose up the scenery,
not in a bad way, in a great way.
And it was because of her performance in this film
that she ended up locking herself in
with a Warner Brothers contract.
And she did some spectacular work while she was here.
Yeah, and she was very young,
was she not, when she did this film?
But her presence on screen is,
well, you could just tell she was going to be a huge star from that performance. And you have a great amount of extras on here as well. And that's where you could kind of get a little bit of the
story of behind the scenes of the film with that feature at
divided highway.
Right.
They drive by night.
So it's really nice amount of extras with this one.
I've always felt this film was kind of a little bit left out when they're talking about quote
unquote the great gangster films. This isn't a gangster film in the sense of Public Enemy or
Little Caesar or Roaring Twenties, but it is a film that's a crime drama as well
as a love story, as well as it has some noir aspects to it. It's got everything
and the cast is magnificent.
Of course, we've talked many times on this podcast about how
wonderful the performances of these great actors are.
When you bring them all together from the Warner stock company, it's magic.
Yeah. To that point, Humphrey Bogart doesn't have that big of a
part in this film and maybe of the four, he has the least meaty role.
But he, of course, when he's on screen, it's great to see him.
And he's in a lot of scenes with George Raft because they play the brothers.
I'm watching this movie and it's a terrific kind of social commentary as well about these truckers
and business. So it has all of these diverse elements like you mentioned, some of the noir
and some of the other. So it's complex in that way. It's not as easy to define or pigeonhole, but I think that gives it some of the enduring quality to it and why, you know, it's a favorite of so many people.
For sure. We've had so many requests for it, as we do for so many films from this period. And I'm glad we were able to come through with this and there will be more.
Yeah, just a great lineup for March, George.
And it's always fun to go over them with you.
It's just such a pleasure to watch these and then talk about them with you.
They were all exceptionally fun to watch.
And I can't help but think that it's just another forecast of how great this year is that you're putting together with just such a diversity of more recent films, silent films, and then these
classics, and then these, the TV box sets, which I know so many people are looking forward to. So
it's a great way to offer things for the diverse audience out there so that everybody can find
something that they're going to be interested in in the month of March. way to offer things for the diverse audience out there so that everybody can find something
that they're going to be interested in in the month of March.
Absolutely. And we're hoping to do just as you say, to bring more of the same and hopefully
make a lot of people happy.
As always, there are purchase links in the podcast show notes and on our website for
those interested in purchasing the TV series Colt 45 and the films that we reviewed today.
And there is one update on Money Talks.
For those who pre-ordered and have received the film, there was an audio issue that is
being resolved and a disc replacement program is currently being formulated so we will have that info on our Facebook page when it is released so
keep an eye out for that and if you're not currently following the show on
Facebook you can find all of our social media links in the podcast show notes
and if you aren't yet subscribed or following the show at your favorite
podcast provider please do that that helps the show and helps us bring you more of these episodes about the Warner Archive
releases. Until next time, you've been listening to Tim Millard, host of the Extras Podcast, and I wanted to let you know that
we have a new private Facebook group for fans of the Warner Archive and Warner Bros.
Catalog physical media releases.
So if that interests you, you can find the link on our Facebook page or look for the