The Extras - The Stars Shine In Our July Warner Archive Blu-ray Reviews
Episode Date: August 20, 2024The Stars Shine in our review of six new Blu-rays from the Warner Archive. To begin, George Feltenstein takes us through the intricate process of restoring the 1940 Technicolor epic "Northwest Pa...ssage," starring Spencer Tracy, discussing the hurdles of working with nitrate negatives and the impressive results. This cinema classic from King Vidor brims with adventure and beautiful landscapes that look better than ever.Our reviews continue as we spotlight Clark Gable and Norma Shearer's unforgettable performances in the 1939 MGM classic "Idiot's Delight." George explains director Clarence Brown's anti-war messaging and details the inclusion of both the international and American endings to the film.Next, we review the 1965 musical "Harum Scarum" starring Elvis in a comedy set in the deserts of Arabia. Gorgeous sets filled with beautiful women plus Elvis' trademark rock'n'roll songs make this a pop hit for Elvis fans. Finally, we shine a light on three forgotten gems that deserve a second look. We start with the 1995 period drama "The Stars Fell on Henrietta" starring Robert Duvall in an unforgettable performance and supporting actors Aidan Quinn, Frances Fisher, and Brian Dennehy. Next, we highlight Sissy Spacek's powerful role in the 1985 film "Marie, A True Story." Directed Roger Donaldson, this film has a terrific script and a wonderful supporting cast that includes Jeff Daniels, Morgan Freeman, and Fred Thompson. And finally, there is the heartwarming 1994 Irish film "War of the Buttons," a gem of a family film that deserves a wider audience.Tune in for an episode brimming with film reviews, restoration insights, and a profound appreciation for cinematic history! As always, we provide a full review of each film, a detailed explanation of the HD restoration, and background on all of the included extras.NORTHWEST PASSAGE (1940) IDIOT’S DELIGHT (1939)HARUM SCARUM (1965)MARIE: A TRUE STORY (1985)THE STARS FELL ON HENRIETTA (1995)WAR OF THE BUTTONS (1994) 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
Transcript
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Hi, this is Stephen C. Smith, documentary producer and author of Music by Max Steiner,
the epic life of Hollywood's most influential composer.
And you are listening to The Extras.
Hello and welcome to The Extras.
I'm Tim, a larger host, and joining me today is George Felmstein of the Warner
Archive to review six July-August film releases from the Warner Archive. Hi, George.
Hey, Tim. Once again, it is always a pleasure to be with you and to talk about what we've
got coming out and we've got a lot to talk about today. So I've been looking forward
to this as I always do.
And I'll just say a quick word to everybody out there listening.
I have been on vacation a lot this summer.
We haven't had as many podcasts rolling out, but I've always made it a priority.
George, when you and I get together to talk about the Warner Archive releases.
And it was great fun to go through these, what I'm going to call July
releases that got pushed into August.
I think that kind of leads right into a question I had for you, which is Top Cat, the complete
series, is that still going to be coming out in August or is that moving?
We've already made a change on our Facebook page and I think it's been
pretty much communicated out to everyone that that's a September 17th street date.
The delay is part of what has delayed other titles this year in that there is
not enough replication in North America
right now with only one company doing all the work for everybody and we're not
the only company that has had to shift release dates but we also don't want to
rush any processes beforehand so everything seems to be a line
that hopefully we'll get the train back on the track.
We're doing our best,
but I'd rather wait a couple more weeks
and make sure that the release is to our quality standards
and there aren't gonna be any issues
that would cause a defective release, so forth and so on.
So in the
case of Topcat is just replication space and time and it's going to be a great
release and people will be really happy when they see it. Well we'll have a lot
to talk about when we talk about Topcat but let's talk about these originally
July 30th now released on August 13th titles.
Yes, and just one note,
we won't be talking about the Scooby-Doo double feature.
We'll push that off into one of our future episodes as well.
So we're gonna talk about six titles today,
three that are classic older films,
and then three more recent classics.
I think it'd be kind of fun.
We'll kind of ping pong back and forth.
So I'll throw at you which one we're gonna talk about next,
but right off the bat, I enjoyed all of them,
but I thought we'd start with the only Technicolor film
that we're gonna be talking about
because of how much work and how great these
Technicolor restorations have been.
And this one falls right into that.
That's the epic Northwest Passage starring Spencer Tracy.
This is a rip roaring fun adventure story and it's just beautifully shot on location.
And as I mentioned, everything about it looks and sounds terrific.
Well, I'm so proud of this and I'm so grateful that it came out as, dare I say, perfect as it did.
But when we're working with the Technicolor Nitrate feature, we're having to scan each of the
feature, we're having to scan each of the three negatives really, you know, the yellow, the cyan, the magenta, black and white negatives that when put together
they create a recombine and we align to the pixel. And this is just a dramatic difference
that was not possible in the film lab of 1940
when the film came out.
And I've talked about this before,
but our scanning team, who are artisans of the highest order,
what they're able to do with these films is jaw dropping.
And every time I get a first test disc, as we're beginning the process of making sure
that there isn't a speckle or anything wrong with the image, we're making sure that it's
gone through two or three passes of quality control.
But when I first saw it, I was like, wow.
And it would probably be good for me to explain a little bit about the history of these, specifically
the MGM films.
The MGM Technicolor films were transferred from nitrate stock to safety stock as part
of MGM's Nitrate to Safety Conversion Program, which began in the mid-60s and continued over
10 years.
And as they would finish making that transition, they'dipped the negatives off to storage at what was then
called George Eastman House in Rochester. And that's where the nitrate would be
cared for. Happily, you know, we've talked before about the George Eastman House
fire in the late 70s. Northwest Passage and many of the Technicolor films were spared the flames.
Not all.
And some films, it was one or two reels got burned, the rest didn't.
All of Northwest Passage was complete.
And what MGM did in the 70s was they made color reversal inter-negatives. And that was a kind of cheap film element that allowed you to
copy the negative and make prints from that color reversal inter-negative. So it basically
made it a one-step process to making a release print. The color reversal inter-negatives were reverse liter negatives were very unstable. They didn't look very good. And it wasn't
until the very late 80s that Turner Entertainment Company, which was MGM Entertainment Company
without the name MGM since the name had been sold out under the ownership of Ted Turner,
Turner Entertainment Company continued the MGM preservation process, but
went back and made new inter-positives of all the technicolor films because the color
reversal inter-negatives were not good at all.
So a lot of what people saw on laser discs in the 90s and some of our DVDs in the ATS and whatnot
came from these interpositives.
Better than what had been before with the color reversal internegatives, but lacking,
depending on what lab did them.
There were about four or five different laboratories that made these interpositives.
And the interpositive on North Best Passage
came from one of the lesser qualified labs, shall we say.
And I was not pleased with the muddy, ready look of it.
So every time I've seen this film until our new master, it's been kind of brown and rusty
looking and not at all what King Vidor intended in creating a mostly outdoor technicolor historical
a spectacular in terms of history. So seeing this is the result of a lot of technological improvements
in how we scan and recombine the 4k elements and that scan becomes the 1080p HD master that creates creates our Blu-ray. So this was just a jaw-dropping example of all that work
and the progress as technology has progressed of our ability to make these
films look better than they did when they came out, which is sometimes it
would seem like that's a kind of ridiculous statement, but in this case it's actually true because those original prints were soft.
The nature of putting three layers together and the dyes that were embedded in what is called the dye transfer process.
They had an inherent softness
that helped to tone down the grain.
And we have found a perfect balance,
or we aim for a perfect balance
where the film retains its grain structure,
but also retains or obtains, I should say,
a sharpness that never had before. So from
a technological standpoint it's a winner but the film itself is amazing because
when you think those technicolor cameras were so big and heavy and this was
mostly filmed outdoors and that's why I'm delighted
that as we did on the old DVD we have included the featurette Northward Ho
which MGM made to show how hard it was to make this film. They didn't do those
kinds of things very often in those days. And thankfully in this case,
they documented how hard it was to just physically make this film.
Right.
And then of course you have a superb screenplay
and great performances from everyone,
but most specifically Spencer Tracy.
And I just think, you know, I happen
to be very, very enamored of King Vidor's work. He's one of my favorite directors to
have this film look so good and really bring this into the 21st century in a major way.
So that people will look at this movie and not say, oh, it's almost 85
years old.
It doesn't look like it.
Right.
So.
Yeah.
And going back to that northward hoe, that really does show you how big the cameras are
and they're trying to place them on the mountainsides and the rivers and the lake. It gives you a great peek into that process.
And this was a very expensive film. So it was a very expensive film. It's shot on location in
beautiful Idaho, as you mentioned. And the little featurette there shows it well and gives you that
background to it. So I'm so glad you're able to include that.
But as you watch it and you're thinking, you know, having watched the film about just all
the extras there, the camera setups, and then the physical rigor of playing those parts
and dragging those boats up the mountain.
I'm not giving away anything plot wise, but just some of the production that they had to go through. It's fascinating. The movie
just pops with this new Technicolor restoration, and it just makes it so enjoyable to watch.
If you enjoy these adventure stories, these epic stories, this is right up there for an MGM from 1940, going back quite a ways.
And it just looks, it doesn't look like a 1940 film, put it that way.
No, not at all. And especially MGM hand the three color process technicolor features,
some of which weren't even all technicolor.
You had the Wizard of Oz, which was basically technicolor, with the beginning and end in
sepia tone.
And you had Sweethearts with Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy which was the first MGM feature
with Technicolor and there was a finale for Ice Follies of 1939 with Joan Crawford, you
know that finale sequence is in Technicolor but the rest of the movie was black and white. So 1940 was MGM opening the door a little bit.
Northwest Passage was the big outdoor epic
and then there were other films to follow.
But they didn't really embrace technicolor
with a vengeance until after World War II.
20th Century Fox, I think, was far more aggressive in that
period of the early 40s of using Technicolor. I have heard that L.B.
Maier didn't particularly like color initially, regardless of the process, but
he changed his mind. Really, I think one of the key films that helped change his mind was meet me in st
Louis because the technicolor films really started to flow after that
so this is really a remarkable film from a technological standpoint as well as a storytelling standpoint the
acting the performances everything and
I
Didn't put anything else on this disk. I didn't put anything else on this disc.
I didn't put any cartoons on this disc.
I wanted that featurette to speak for the making
of the film and stay true to just Northwest Passage.
And it was based on a bestselling book
that was actually, it had another part to it.
And I think the studio intended to make the second part,
but the costs and the coming of the war put that on hold.
And it's really a shame because many people have spoken
to me about this film and they've said,
oh, I wish they had made the second part.
The first part was so good, but it stands on its own.
And of course, most people don't even know that it was part of like a two part story.
Right. So I'm very proud and very glad that you enjoyed it.
I can tell that you really are enthusiastic about it.
And that's incredibly rewarding.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
I just think every time these Technicolor films come out,
they're just so worthy of the spotlight
because of all the work.
And then, you know, kind of as you just went through
the fact that this is a 1940, you know, going way back,
and it looks like something much more recent,
that's for sure.
So this is a home run from this month, I thought that we would start off talking about.
Now the next one, we're going to jump ahead.
This is from 1985, but I was very impressed with this film, the acting, the cast, everything.
And this is Marie, a true story, directed by Roger Donaldson.
I thought this was a very good film.
Sissy Spacek is terrific.
And there's just a strong supporting cast with Jeff Daniels, Morgan Freeman, and Fred
Thompson.
It's a story about corruption in the Tennessee state government, but it's also a really strong feminist story about this character that sissy basic
portrays of Marie and all that she had to overcome. It's it's
inspiring. And it's a bit of a you know, drama and thriller at
the same time. So I really enjoyed this film a lot.
It is a terrific film. And it's somewhat lot. It is a terrific film and it's somewhat forgotten.
It was a mod of success when it came out.
This was part of a group of films that were being produced by Dino De Laurentiis and MGM
had acquired domestic distribution in perpetuity, which meant that when we purchased Turner, which
had purchased the MGM library up through April 1986, this became part of the Warner Library
in the United States and Canada.
So I thought it would be very, very important to get this film out there because it is a
very important message.
It is now, oh, God help us, it's almost 40 years old.
I can't believe that.
But, you know, it's incredibly timely
because it's about someone taking a risk
and advocating corruption.
And Lord knows we still need people to do that today
because I unfortunately think the world
is a lot more corrupt now than it was even then.
But you think of movies that came later
like Aaron Brockovich, this is really a precursor to that.
Yes.
And at the same time, Sissy Spacek was already
an Oscar winner having won Best Actress
for Coal Miner's Daughter in 1981
for the 1980 film. It's just terrific. And Jeff Daniels and Morgan Freeman are just superb. I
don't think they're ever not. And this was Fred Thompson's first movie. He did a lot of film work and then became, you know,
part of Congress and then went back to film work.
And I understand he's since passed away, but he's portraying himself.
He really was that character in the true life story of Marie.
Right. I think it also is lovely to
see it on Blu-ray because it is a widescreen film and it just it looks
terrific. The Blu-ray is very very impressive and this is a story that
needs to be told. It's very inspirational. Roger Donaldson is a really fine director. A lot of people may not know his name, but they know certain films that he directed,
like No Way Out with Kevin Costner or the remake of The Getaway with Alec Baldwin.
He had a lot of really good hit films.
He got awareness in the United States when there was suddenly
a focus on Australian cinema and a film called Smash Palace in 1981 that was a big hit on
the art circuit. And that's what led him to come to Hollywood. He even got to direct Tom
Cruise in Cocktail. That was probably his biggest box office hit.
That's right. In any event, I hope people will pick this film up and enjoy it.
It's really a terrific, terrific film.
Yeah, I was looking up Donaldson and some of his filmography, and you just went through
it, but I was like, oh, wow, I know so many of these films, but I had forgotten a little
bit about him specifically. And it
was good to be reminded of the quality of work that he's done. What can you say going
back to the film? What can you say about Sissy Spacek? I mean, she just brings such a humanity
to this character and quite the arc. She starts off as this abused wife, has three kids, and has to start
this journey of leaving this man and then going back to school and then going through
all of this needing to stand up to these very powerful politicians and a corrupt system.
And she is so inspiring.
Obviously the story is set in its era, right?
But you can watch this movie and appreciate it
because of how fine the filmmaking and the acting is,
knowing that these same types of corruptions
are going on all the time,
and people need to do what
she did in terms of standing up against the government, the institution, whatever it might
be that is corrupt in this case.
So I just wanted to talk about a little bit earlier.
I know a lot of times we talk about some of the newer films a little later in our review,
but I just wanted to bring it to people's attention early because it's such a fine film.
I think that's what gets the most attention in what we do are the classics and the really
big classics like A Northwest Passage. But we try to cover all bases and having films from the 80s and 90s and 70s, 60s,
you know, whatever decade, things need to get a new light upon them. And this film,
this film is almost, is basically 40 years old. And it was not like an Oscar winning blockbuster.
It was a modest success and well received and not unlike other films of its era like
Silkwood, which I believe came two years earlier.
This was a period in the 80s. We had a lot of films. This is before
comic book blockbuster movies ruled the box office. So people were making films that had
a statement and the statement here is still quite prescient. And I really hope people will enjoy this. And again, to your point, Sissy Spacek,
despite having won an Oscar, I still think she's underrated
for being the exceptional actress that she is.
She's given so many phenomenal performances.
And I'm very, very grateful we were able to bring this out.
Stay with us. We'll be right back. Hi, this is 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 Brothers catalog, Physical Media Releases.
So if that interests you, you can find the link on our Facebook page or look for the
link in the podcast show notes.
Well, because of what you just said, because of the older films and then the newer films
that are blended this month, we're going to ping pong back to one of the older classics
now and go all the way back to 1939.
This is Idiot's Delight starring Clark Gable and Norma Shear.
I guess the word is right in the title. This is a pretty delightful film, very entertaining.
And the performances by both Gable and Shear are top notch, I thought.
Yeah, this was clearly a Class A MGM production from start to finish.
And it was based on a play that won the Pulitzer Prize from Robert Sherwood, who was, I would
say, one of, if not the most prestigious playwright of that era.
And it had a definite anti-war pacifist tone to it. And because of that, a lot of people
thought the play would be unfilmable because of pressure from certain foreign countries
that were already dictatorships like Italy and Germany. you know I know at least one studio
turned it down. MGM paid a great deal of money for the rights to film it and had
Sherwood write the screenplay. So this was one of the most prestigious releases
they were working on at the time.
And it kicked off the year 1939, which was not only an amazing year for MGM, but
I consider the greatest year in Hollywood history, at least the golden age of
Hollywood. We've talked about this many times. We made a documentary about it here. It's
incomparable at every studio was able to do that year. It was the apex of the studio system
before the war and everything else basically changed the business. So the pacifist tone of the movie led to MGM kind of attempting to make a harder-hitting
film.
And when they previewed it, the audiences really hated the end of the movie.
So they reshot the end of the movie and're basically are two endings and that's why we have two endings on the disk
Because what you're watching when you see the movie is the international version
Which is far more somber than the ending they had for US audiences
Which was a little more frivolous and happy-go-lucky
whereas you know, they're singing abide with me and audiences which was a little more frivolous and happy-go-lucky whereas
you know, they're singing abide with me and bombs are going off
in the background in the
European version. So one of the concerns when we announced this was oh
Why aren't they having both versions because our DVD
Oh, why aren't they having both versions? Because our DVD only had one ending. The DVD release was one of the famous 150 DVDs that started the Warner Archive 15 years ago.
And when you're putting 150 films out at once and doing it in an untested way,
because we didn't know the business was going to be the success that it
was. We weren't able to dedicate the attention. It was basically the disc. You put it in, it plays,
and eventually it's now well known to our loyal consumers. We started to be able to add trailers
and eventually remaster things and so
forth and so on, but Idiot's Delight was just the movie only and only one ending.
This gives you the US ending as a special feature so that people can see
what American audiences saw versus what was intended internationally.
But it was really a conflict for MGM because the ending they had originally filmed, which
they didn't use at all, was far more incendiary to the audiences.
The studio was very frightened that they had a bomb on their
hands with two of their biggest stars. Fortunately it turned out not to be that.
A lot of people really love the film and it is considered, you know, when you have
William Daniels as the cinematographer, Clarence Brown directing, great cast. It's a great entertainment
and it's provocative and very thoughtful. Of course, it's most famous for Clark Gable's
musical number, Putting on the Ritz, that was excerpted and that's entertainment.
Right.
But the film was so much more substantial than that.
And it had been a big hit on the Broadway stage
with Alfred Lund and Lynn Fontan,
who really were Broadway superstars,
only made one movie, but they made it for MGM.
And no, we haven't put it out yet.
But we will, it was on VHS,
we've gotta do something with it.
So who knows what the future is for the guardsmen,
that was the name of the film.
But it's often been said that Norma Shearer
was trying to emulate the stage performance of Lynn Fontaine.
I can't vouch for that,
because that wasn't around then.
But I think she's terrific in gable's particularly good and this is what he did right before they started coming with the wind.
So it's it's an honor to be able to bring these films out and again.
This film had been touched in terms of remastering in 30 years. So we were able to scan a preservation
element at 4K. The original negative did burn in the fire. The preservation element was
a second generation fine grain, gave us a beautiful picture. The sound has been restored.
It's a great presentation. And I'm just delighted. I'm not an idiot, I don't think, but I'm delighted by this movie.
Yeah. You just mentioned Clark Gable, who is so charming in this film, but she just, that whole Russian countess element, you know, where she's there up in the mountains there, that whole sequence, she just, I don't know, I thought she just
steals the show. She's just so good. I don't know. She's so good and obviously she's so
good in many things, but I just love that. And it's so great now that you're able to
put both endings on. There are a couple other extras. You put some classic cartoons on.
Indeed, there are.
So you have what the good egg and it's an ill win both in HD
and then the theatrical trailer. So this is a great, great disc for the fans.
Well, I'm glad you enjoyed it as much as I did. I'm very, very happy that it's in people's hands and
it has a message that is unfortunately quite timely. So I hope that it will keep people thinking and support good versus evil.
Well now to continue our theme here, we're going to bounce back to 1995 and a gem of
a film, especially because of the star.
And it's loaded actually with great actors
from the 80s and 90s.
And that's the film, The Stars Fell on Henrietta,
released in 1995.
And one of my all time favorite actors plays the lead in this
and that's Robert Duvall.
And then supporting him is Aidan Quinn, Brian Dennehy,
and the lovely Francis Fisher.
This is a, I really enjoyed this film.
It's told in a classic way about these down and out
characters and it has that feel good quality to it
that never gets old.
But it's really Duvall's performance that drives this film.
That's what, that was exactly what I was just about to say.
This is a showcase for Robert Duvall
He is this film. This is a Malpaso production. Mr. Eastwood and his production company
produced this movie and
The studios attitude at the time and they really think it's changed, is whatever Mr. Eastwood
wants to do, we're behind it.
What he did was he put his A-Team on this movie, and they really created a work that
transcends, it helps you basically time travel back into the 1930s with, I think, impressive accuracy.
It really conveys the period, the costuming, the cinematography directed by James Keach.
It's beautifully done.
I just thought this film really needs reappraisal because it kind of got overlooked when it
was released.
We created a new master for this and anytime we work on a Malpaso production, it has to
get the seal of approval from Joel Cox, who is Clint's editor, his Oscar-winning editor, and really is the unofficial like
motor behind what keeps Malpaso going.
So he sat with the colorist John Yarborough as they created the new master that is used
for this Blu-ray.
They made it look so gorgeous and it's so compelling with all the acting
is sensational.
It really speaks for itself, but it is not a film that a lot of people have heard about.
That's part of what we try to do is remind people of certain movies that were released
in the past. And I don't mean, you know, the old Hollywood
era classics, but more recent films, this being only 30 years old. So, you know, it's
really a gem of picture. And I am a fan of Mr. Duvall as you are. And this is really the kind of showcase for his inestimable talents, the way Tender
Mercies was a decade earlier, and that earned him an Academy Award. He really, he was one
of the great actors of our time without question.
Yes.
And he makes this film into something really special. And there's even a little
part in this movie played by Billy Bob Thornton.
Yes. I thought I'd recognized him. You know, it's fun. And the same was true of Marie to
see these just such fine actors in the lead roles, but then these fantastic supporting casts as well of
also extremely fine actors that they loaded these films with. And it's great to see them
in their different roles. So yeah, a real gem. So glad you're bringing it out for all
of the Duvall fans and fans of these little classics that maybe kind of get forgotten
and shouldn't be forgotten at all.
Well, I quite agree.
Well, we'll go a little lighter with the last two films here that we're going to talk about.
And we'll start with the 1965 Elvis film, Harem Scare-Em.
And like the other Elvis films you've released recently, these are just fun.
They're like popcorn, right?
They're light, they have some action, some espionage, some beautiful girls, and then
Elvis sings and fantastic music.
I think in this one, he might even be doing a little kung fu.
Yeah, there's karate because he actually was in real life, he was doing karate and that
was kind of like the karate period.
And so they weaved that into this.
Overseas the film was called Harem Holiday.
There's of course a song in the movie, Harem Holiday.
I think they were originally going to release it here as well under that title.
Why they changed it to Haremgerm, I have no idea.
One of the things about Elvis's filmography is it's no secret that very few of his films
took advantage of giving him the kind of roles that showed that he was quite more substantial as an actor than
the screenplays he was often given.
There are exceptions to that that underscore his ability as an actor, but these films are
very heavily laden with music and they're really it's really an opportunity to hear Elvis
saying and the color is gorgeous this is another case where we went back to the
negative scandal at 4k created a new master and it's just a lot of light fun
yeah and all the Elvis fans keep asking for more Elvis films, and we shall deliver among all the other diversity
that we're trying to bring from this library
that covers more than 100 years of movies.
Yeah, and I think it's great that you're getting these out
on Blu-Aid because you just mentioned the color.
The sets, the costumes, they always do a terrific job
on these Elvis films. I guess they're
filmed in Metro color. And so they're just a eye candy, you know, as you're watching.
There's a lot of eye candy in there. You're going to have a good time if you enjoy Elvis
and his music mixed in there. It's going to be a good time. And then you have a couple
of cartoons that you put on here and the original theatrical
trailer as well.
Some of the Chuck Jones, Tom and Jerry cartoons that were made in the era, this gives people
a chance to see them in HD.
And again, it's the concept of if you went to see this movie in 1965 in a theater, what
would you have seen along with the movie?
There you go. So it's just a lot of fun and the fans have been very
very supportive of the Elvis releases so we hope there will be more in the future.
Well the last film we're going to review, I'm gonna say it's really a gem of a film. One that I was not familiar
with, maybe part of it is kind of like a midwinter's, the film that we talked about a few months
ago, kind of like that. That's maybe been forgotten or for whatever reason in the States
here not as well known because it's set in Ireland. But
that's the war of the buttons from 1994. It's charming. It's funny. It's just all around
a terrific film. And when I went into watching this, I did not expect to enjoy it so much. Well, it has no famous names attached to it.
It is truly a forgotten film,
and it was a remake of a French film
based on a French novel.
The production company, I believe, if I'm correct,
I think David Putnam was involved
in the production of this movie.
He was the producer and he had had great success just a few years earlier with films like Chariots
of Fire and so forth. So he had the ability to get films made that wouldn't otherwise be made.
films made that wouldn't otherwise be made.
This was a small indie production.
I think we're very fortunate to have it in the library.
I thought it deserved to be released and that people would discover it and find it very lighthearted, very enjoyable.
It's rated PG.
This is a family movie. It just has a great deal of potential.
These are the kinds of films we want people to discover. And part of the Warner Archive's
mission has always been rare and hard to find. And we had put this on DVD, but now it's in Blu-ray with a beautiful new HD master.
We're very proud of the release and I hope that people will enjoy it.
Got a lot of very positive response when we announced this,
which made me quite, quite happy because I knew there was probably a little fan base for it,
but it was a lot larger than I thought it
would be. This did not have a very broad theatrical release. It's not the kind of
thing that you're gonna see popping up in streaming. The way to watch it is by
buying the disc from the Warner Archive collection. So I don't think anybody who
buys it overgraded. I totally agree with what you just said about that.
David Putnam, I mean, he has a long list of terrific films.
As I'm watching the film, the writing is so good.
Just the structure of the film is so solid.
You have these young kids and this rivalry between these two towns. And even
not understanding this, you know, growing up in the U.S., not understanding Ireland
and some of the culture there, I was just drawn in because it takes you back to your
own childhood and just the natural, these rivalries that can happen and it's a fantastically wonderful tale as you go along.
I just enjoyed it and I am so glad that you're putting out these films because the 90s were
a great era for independent filmmaking and now we're not in that era and we haven't been for independent filmmaking. And now we're not in that era
and we haven't been for a while.
Absolutely.
And we usually find films like this
in the New Line part of our library
because New Line was dedicating their self-funded productions
to like sequels to Nightmare on Elm Street or John Waters movie or whatever.
And they made really terrific movies, but they through their fine line films division
would acquire films of this nature. And we've been putting some of those out, but this was
But this was basically British-bound production, adapted from a French work.
So it was like an English-French co-production,
but very much funded by the studio.
The studio wasn't just an acquisition.
There was real hope that
this could turn into something very special. I think it was overshadowed by the glut of
so many films being released into the theaters because not only were the major studios putting
out robust release schedules, but you had all these little
independent distribution companies putting out both domestic and
international movies into the Indian art circuit. And the 90s was really the period for that kind of film. So it was rare for our studio at that time to take
the smaller films like that. It wasn't always successful in theatrical
distribution to do that, but the films found their audience later in other
media and that was the beauty
of the day when you could go to your blockbuster and rent a VHS tape and it
started with that and then going on to cable. Now you get to buy it on a blu-ray
with the most phenomenal quality. It's a brand new master. I also like the fact
that it's an hour and a half long.
It does. It starts its storytelling right away.
And it's just so tight and so well constructed and so well written.
It's really a pleasure.
And I think people who pick this up will be really happy to give it discovery.
Yeah.
I was trying to, as you were talking, I was trying to
think, where else are you going to find a film like this? There's
no male DVD service, there's no blockbuster stores, there's no
that odds of this going on a streaming.
Not going to happen.
I don't even know. I don't think this would be on TCM. It doesn't feel like it would.
It's not going to be on Max. It's like you're not going to be able to get this film except for From
the Warner Archive, I think. And you're going to be very happy to have this on your shelf because
it's a delightful film. So glad you guys are putting it out. It's got a, you know, just a real strong pedigree of
people who are behind it. So, highly recommended. And it deserves a rewatch every once in a while,
if you want to feel good. Yes. It's a feel good movie. Yeah. And when you say, okay, it's a film
with a lot of child actors, they're all dealt with and the characters are
developed very well, very thoughtfully. And the performances are very well done. So, just a delight.
Well, George, six movies, three more recent in the last, well, let's say, within the last 40 years and the others in the last 80, 90
years, but just a great month and a lot of fun to watch.
It's so easy when you have movies of this quality to be able to recommend them to people
because of how great they look on Blu-ray. Well, we try to please various different components of our consumer base.
The mission statement is to get as much as we can out of the vault and onto people's
shelves at home with the best possible quality.
And I hope we're achieving that.
For sure you are.
For sure you are.
So, well, as always, George, thanks
for coming on. It's always a pleasure to go over these movies with you. Thanks, Tim. It's great
to be here. I look forward to our next talk. We're going to have a lot of fun stuff to talk about
soon. Lots of fun stuff. And as we mentioned at the beginning of the podcast, Top Cat, the complete series is moving
out to September.
So that's being moved out a couple of weeks and we will have pre-order links for that
release when it is made available.
And there's a lot of exciting things coming up.
Some of you may remember that George announced the Alaskans and that series has been delayed.
It is now scheduled for the end of August so
I'm looking forward to reviewing that and speaking to George about it so you can look
forward to that. And we should be getting more information soon about the Looney Tunes
Collector's Choice Volume 4 and the individual titles that are going to be on that. So we
hope to have George and Jerry on for that discussion in the near future.
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