The Extras - Warner Archive July Release Announcement
Episode Date: June 8, 2023George Feltenstein joins the podcast to announce the six new Blu-rays releasing in July from the Warner Archive. MovieZyng Affiliate The BEST place to buy all of your Warner Archive and Boutique DVDs... and Blu-raysWarner Archive Store on Amazon Support the podcast by shopping with our Amazon Affiliate linkDisclaimer: 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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, where we take you behind the scenes of your favorite
TV shows, movies and animation, and their release on digital DVD, Blu-ray and 4k for your favorite streaming site.
I'm Tim Larger, your host and joining me is George Feltenstein to announce the July
Blu-ray releases from the Warner Archive.
Hi George.
Hi Tim, great to be with you again and glad to be able to talk about the latest offerings
we have on the menu from Warner
Archive.
Yeah, I'm excited to hear June.
I mean, those were some great releases that we still have to look forward to, but from
our last announce.
And now we have, boy, the heart of summer here with July with the announcements we're
going to be talking about today.
So I'm looking forward to hearing about these releases. How many are there and where would
you like to start? Well, depending if you count a double feature, there are eight. I mean, there's
seven releases. There's the double feature we have of the two Scooby-Doo telefilms and then six and six theatrical films. So it's a loaded month. And we tried to make it a month where
we have something for everyone
because we have a lot of dedicated consumers
who love when we bring a modern classic to Blu-ray
that's been long overdue for the format,
something like a stand
and deliver.
And then we have a lot of consumers who want films from the 30s and 40s.
And we're trying to please everyone.
And because we've also had new opportunities open to us, in recent years, we couldn't release
things from Looney Tunes.
Now we can, so we've been doing that.
Similarly, the Scooby-Doo franchise was off limits to us for Blu-Ray, and now it isn't.
What we have released has sold exceptionally well.
We are responding to fan requests and healthy sales figures which are
really attractive to our shareholders who want to see us be a very profitable
company. So we will be releasing a double feature of two of the most requested
Scooby-Doo telefilms, Scooby-Doo and the Witches Ghost from 1999 and Scooby-Doo and the
Alien Invaders from 2000. These are both at a maxed out bitrate on a BD-50.
There's certain people out there who are under the misunderstanding that if you
put two programs on a disk it's going to affect the compression.
That would be true if these were two-hour films.
But when you're looking at basically, I think it's a total of 140 minutes of content, we will be easily over the 35 to 40 MBS bitrate on the whole disc.
Everything will be not compressed and looking the best that it can be.
And these are really fan favorites.
These are fun adventures that have a little bit of a horror twist and another with a little
bit of a sci-fi twist.
They've been very popular for a very long time.
One of them is 25 years old, the other is 24 years old.
That's scary.
But it's also indicative of the popularity of this franchise. So, you know, kids that grew up watching
these films are now adults with kids of their own in most cases, and they can share them with
their kids. And the popularity of Scooby-Doo is obvious. And we're delighted to be able to respond to fan requests by bringing these two out looking great.
They both also have 5.1 surround tracks.
So it's going to be a wonderful disc.
I think people will enjoy both films tremendously.
Is there any extras with this release, George?
We're going to have the same extras that were on the DVDs that are motion related.
I think there may have been some CD-ROM games given the infancy of the DVD format that were
on maybe one or two of those.
We can't translate that on Blu-ray.
And frankly, you know, there were also like
learn how to draw Scooby Doo. We don't, we don't carry those things over. They're really
a product of a different time. But there are very short making of pieces. I think they're
like three minutes a piece and promotional trailers, if you will. So they'll be there too.
Yeah.
We try to carry over as much as we can when it makes sense.
So I think to your point earlier too, it's like you have this whole library of
Scooby-Doo that people have just been like, Hey, how come this isn't coming out?
So it's great now that Warner Archive could kind of take on that mantle and release these.
And I think-
It was very frustrating that we couldn't because we saw the need and we saw the opportunity.
But there is now enough Scooby to go around for everybody.
And, you know, our mission is to keep making those shiny silver discs that people can put
them on their shelf and
enjoy them.
And the ones you've released, you know, that we talked about for May were fantastic in
June. And I think that the big thing is to get these out there looking so good.
Well, yeah, that's what people want. And I'm hoping we're able to do that.
Yeah.
And then where did you want to go next, George?
Well, I thought it would be fun to go in a different direction and talk about the films
that are most recent and then go back in time rather than what we usually do is start with
the earliest and go to the most recent.
And the most recent is like a brand new movie for us.
It's only 29 years old.
This film is a very underrated, charming film that comes from a production company a couple
of hundred feet from my office on the lot, called Malpaso.
You may be familiar with the man named Mr. Eastwood that runs the joint. This is one of
the Malpaso productions that Clint Eastwood only produced. He did not direct or perform in this
film, but it's a terrific film with a terrific cast. It's
called The Stars Fell on Henrietta and it was released by Warner Brothers in
1995 and it's got a great cast. Robert Duvall, who is one of my personal
favorite actors of our contemporary age. Yes.
Aidan Quinn, Francis Fisher, and Brian Dennehy, who I always thought was magnificent and everything
that he did.
And this is a depression era story.
It's quite charming, is very, very well made, and Clint Eastwood didn't invest any of his
time in something that he didn't believe in as a story worth telling.
The film was directed by James Keach.
The performances are terrific, and it's a wonderful period piece that had never made
it to Blu-ray, and we changed that that and we did so with a brand new master.
Yes, this is a terrific cast from the 90s. I mean Aiden Quinn was in it and Francis Fisher, Brian
They were just in a ton of stuff. Of course Robert Duvall as you mentioned
So this is a fun one to have coming out in HD and it really is
Robert Duvall's he usually steals most of his in, but this was really a vehicle for
him. And just to put things in perspective, this is 12 years after he won his Oscar for 10 of
mercies. He's had an incredible career. And if you're a Robert Duvall fan, this is a must have and we're
really really proud to be releasing it.
So going back chronologically only a year, a film that is not that well known, it's an
Irish film that is actually a remake of a 1960s French film.
It's called War of the Buttons.
This came from Oscar-winning producer David Putnam, he who was responsible for bringing
Chariots of Fire to the screen. And it's most definitely an art film, but it's a comedy about kids in an Irish village.
And it is very charming.
And it's the kind of thing that's worth rediscovering.
And I'm delighted that we're able to bring it out.
This is a new master master and it looks terrific.
It's 94 minutes long. It is just a great diversion.
A really, really entertaining movie.
In the DVD days, we did release this on DVD years ago,
we were trying to shine a light on films that were rare and hard to find,
that didn't get a big theatrical release but were worth watching.
This is certainly one of those and now it's coming to Blu-ray looking absolutely spectacular.
And George, you've had a few of these that feels like you've done over the course of
this year, these smaller kind of art house films and then when I've watched them, I mean,
they've been just fantastic because the quality of the film just endures so well, even though it might not be as well
known and then seeing it, you know, in the HD.
And I'm thinking of, was it a midwinter's?
Midwinter's Tales, Sabin Gray's, Poor Night Falls.
They're like little gems that people forgotten about and because they
feel more recent, obviously, they've kind of gone out of the thinking because they're not old enough
and they're not new enough and they're kind of in that little range there. So it's great to see
these films come out. So it's great. Well, the next film I'm going to talk about is actually from the 80s. This is from 1985, and this is a tour de force performance from a wonderful Oscar winning
actress, Sissy Spacek.
The film is called Marie.
It's also called Marie, a true story, because in fact, it was a true story about a woman named Marie who was exposing
political corruption on the Tennessee parole board.
And really exceptional filmmaker, who I believe is, if I'm correct, Australian, Roger Donaldson.
He was quite hot in the 80s, made a lot of films that were very important and some commercial
successes like Cocktail.
But he also directed No Way Out and 13 Days.
He directed this story where basically Sissy Spacek gives an outstanding performance, exposing the political corruption that she sees.
There's great performances also from Jeff Daniels and Morgan Freeman. And this came out in the United
States and Canada as an MGM release, and that's why it's part of our library. But it was part of a larger initiative by producer Dino DeLorentis,
who had probably three or four or five different production companies during his lifetime,
because he was always closing down one and opening another. And he made a deal with MGM to
distribute in the United States of Canada and own a group of films that also includes
Year of the Dragon and Red Sonja.
So Maria True Story was one of those films and it was very,
very well respected.
And it's notable that in the real story of this woman whose name was Marie Raganti, when she was needing
an attorney when she was getting in trouble for exposing the corruption, she hired a
lawyer whose name was Fred Thompson.
Fred Thompson went from being a lawyer to being an actor, and eventually went to being a Tennessee senator.
And then after he left the Senate,
he went back to acting, and he's since passed away.
But a lot of people recognize him.
He did a lot of television.
He did.
He's a fine actor.
And this is a fine film with really great performances from very esteemed creative individuals.
The Master is a letterbox film.
It's a two, three, nine aspect ratio.
It looks and sounds terrific.
And we're delighted to be bringing this to Blu-ray. Sissy Spacek
I don't think gets enough credit for what a great actress she is and of course
she won an Oscar for playing Laura DeLine in Coal Miner's Daughter in 1980
beating out Mary Tyler Moore for ordinary people, which is no easy task. But I think sometimes people only think of
her as Carrie or as Loretta Lynn. She really did a lot of great screen work. And this is a fine film
we're proud to add to the Warner Archive collection. So then going back another 20 years to 1965, we find a very different MGM.
MGM in the 60s was creating all sorts of films. And the same year they released Dr. Shavago,
they released two films with Elvis Presley. And we're releasing one of them right now on
Blu-ray for the first time. It's a 4K scan off the camera negative.
And this is Harum Scarum from 1965.
Elvis is, he's not only a singer and a performer,
and he sings I think close to 10 songs in this movie.
He's also showing off some martial arts skills.
The story is, to be blunt, kind of silly.
It's about a secret group of bad guys called the Assassins that kidnap him and whisk him
to an Arabian realm that's been isolated for the world for 2000 years.
But Elvis sings all the way through.
And you've got Marianne Mobley as his co-star.
She co-starred with him again in Girl Happy.
The movie was directed by Gene Nelson,
who became a film director after spending many years as a very successful movie performer.
He acted and danced and sang opposite Doris Day in a lot of Warner Brothers movies like
Followed by a Broadway and T for Two.
Then he was Will Parker in Oklahoma and settled into many years as a successful director of films in the 60s,
and then went to Broadway and starred in Steven Sondheim's Follies.
So I think he's somewhat of a forgotten individual,
and he was very capable for bringing in modestly budget movies to be very profitable.
And virtually every Elvis movie,
regardless of who he played opposite or whatnot,
was profitable for the studio. I mean,
there are 15 Elvis movies that he made for MGM.
They all were very, very profitable and Elvis's fans just want more.
We also added two of the Chuck Jones, very, very profitable and Elvis's fans just want more.
We also added two of the Chuck Jones, Tom and Jerry cartoons from 1965 in HD on this
disc along with the trailer.
So it's going to be fun and we want to keep bringing, we keep getting requests for more
Elvis on Blu-ray.
And so the romp continues and there will be more. So that's a lot of fun.
Yeah, I mean there's just so many Elvis fans and so many Elvis movies. I mean just getting them out
on a regular basis, you know, you're going to be able to do that hopefully for a while.
But it's great to see another one out. The last few ones have been, you know, fun romps too,
like you said. You know, they're. They're there to showcase the singing,
and that's kind of, it's all about Elvis.
So when you put the movie in,
they're just a fun evening for you to enjoy.
So looking forward to that one.
Stay with us, we'll be right back.
Hi, I'm Marcus Mazzell, host of Past Present Feature,
a filmmaker appreciation podcast
showcasing new festival releases and the past films that inspired them.
As a filmmaker myself, I started this podcast with the intention of building community while
talking shop and to show love to past cinema that sparked a new wave of filmmakers to create
the films of the future.
Please like and subscribe to this podcast and follow us on social media at past present
feature.
Thank you for listening.
Let's roll it.
So am I.
And I'm particularly excited to talk about the next film because we've been working on
this for at least two years, maybe two and a half years, because this is a 25 year older movie than
Harem's Caram.
This is from 1940 and it's King Vidor directing the great Spencer Tracy in MGM's Technicolor
Adventure Epic Northwest Passage from 1940.
We have had so many requests for this
and the previous iteration of this looked so bad.
And this film was meant to look gorgeous
because MGM, particularly Elbi Mare,
was not particularly in love with Technicolor and the costs of it.
They preferred to make their movies in black and white, whereas other studios were more quick to
embrace the three-color Technicolor process, I think of Twentieth Century Fox versus MGM.
When MGM did make a film in Technicolor,
it was a major event at that time.
And Northwest Passage required location shooting,
and it was such an arduous film to make
that they went to the trouble
at the time of filming the filming,
which people didn't usually do at that time.
They created a little featurette as an MGM short called Northwest Ho,
which we will have on the disk just as we did on the DVD.
But what's important here is this is
a 4K scan of the original three technicolor negatives
which have been meticulously recombined using our proprietary technology which matches everything
down to the pixel.
So the registration of the colors is even better than it could have been in a wet lab with a print that was
made in 1940.
So you get outstanding color and most importantly, it's a great movie.
This was an adaptation of a book by Kenneth Roberts called Rogers Rangers, and it was supposed to be a two-part
movie, because this is book one, Rogers Rangers, but there never was a sequel, which I attribute
probably to the cost and the fact that the war was going on in subsequent years. Not because Northwest
Passage wasn't a huge success, it was a big success critically and financially.
But this will be an opportunity for people to see this movie as they've
never seen it before. The colors just are gorgeous and the photography is exceptional.
And MGM went to the great expense of filming this in Technicolor
to make a historically accurate tale that is filled with adventure and really is also a showcase for how great
an actor Spencer Tracy was. This is set against the French and Indian War and it is very realistic.
Robert Young also co-stars along with Ruth Hussey, but King Vidor is one of my favorite directors.
And I don't think there are many films in his filmography that aren't of greatness.
And this is certainly another feather in his cap.
And it is also a representation of when MGM committed to making a major motion picture, they gave it their
all. So it's a tribute to MGM and Spencer Tracy and King Vidor and Technicolor. And
when we're able to bring these new Blu-rays out of these Technicolor restorations, that
takes so long to do and they're so expensive, but they're so worth it because we're finally being able
to let the people see the film the way
they never could before.
And we're really happy about that.
And I was just noticing too, that this is 128 minute movies.
It's by far the longest movie of the group
we've talked about.
But so the technicolor, the length of the movie,
I mean, that adds just to the complexity
and the time it takes.
Sure, because we have to scan.
It's like scanning 320-minute negatives.
Right.
This is not a 90-minute movie.
So just so much excitement for this one.
And I've never seen it looking as good as it's going to look.
So I'm really,
really looking forward to seeing this new Technicolor restoration.
You will be pleased. I am sure.
And then for the last film in this group,
we only go back one year and we have two names
above the title that define MGM, certainly in the 1930s.
The leading lady being Norma Shearer and the leading man being Mr. Clark Gable.
This is Clarence Brown's production of Robert E. Sherwood's hit Broadway play, Idiot's Delight.
And when you've got Clarence Brown directing Gable and Shearer in a great play, the results
are charming, fantastic, and both Shearer and Gable are at their real peak.
It's a terrific film.
It's a great deal of fun.
And this is a 4K scan of our best preservation elements as
Idiot's Delight is one of the hundreds of
MGM black and white nitrate negatives that
were destroyed in the tragic fire that we talk often about
on your podcast.
But thankfully, preservation, second generation safety elements
made by MGM long before the fire are there for us to work from
and can yield staggering results.
Sometimes people say,
we can't believe this wasn't off the negative.
That's what we want them to say.
And this film also has a great supporting cast.
Edward Arnold is in it.
Charles Coburn, who I love and everything, Joseph Schiltkraut.
Robert Sherwood was one of the great playwrights of the 20th century.
He certainly of the early 20th century, earlier first half.
And it's, it's just terrific fun. And I'm delighted that we're able to
give idiots delight. It's Blu-ray debut.
Well, anytime a movie comes out and it says 1939 after it, we've talked about how great
of a year that is. This is what, Gable's second movie of that year,
after Gone With the Wind?
I believe that he finished shooting this
right before he started working on Gone With the Wind.
I think it was shot at the end of 38.
Then he went right into Gone With the Wind from this.
And Norma Shearer went from this into a little movie called The Women.
It also happens to be a 1939 masterpiece.
That's been on Blu-ray from Warner Brothers for quite some time.
But it's a really great looking Blu-ray and I could
spend a long time talking about that film but it speaks for itself.
But this film sure would actually won the Pulitzer Prize for the play, the Broadway play on which
this is based. So it's a really, really fine work and we added some HD looney tunes on here.
It's going to be a great disc. I think people are really,
really going to enjoy it. Well, as always, George, these are fun, fun, fun episodes to
record with you because I love hearing about them as everybody else does at the same time.
So thank you so much. Thank you, Tim. And let's look forward to what we have for the next podcast.
For those who would like more information about the film's announced today, we have for the next podcast. order links for these titles when they become available. And if you aren't yet subscribed or following the show at your favorite podcast provider, we appreciate it if you would do that, that helps the show. And it also keeps you up to date on any of the updates and episodes as they
come out. Until next time you've been listening to Tim Millard, stay slightly obsessed.
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 Bros.
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.