The Extras - Warner Archive June Release Announcement PLUS New 4-Film Collections
Episode Date: May 5, 2025Send us a textWarner Archive announces six spectacular Blu-ray releases for June, along with new value-priced four-film collections and the Looney Tunes Collectors Vault Vol. 1. George Feltenstein sha...res details about each release, including the meticulous 4K restorations from original camera negatives that bring these classics to life like never before.• Four-film collections featuring Clark Gable, Gary Cooper, and Elizabeth Taylor are coming in June, with 24 collections planned overall• High Society 4K street date moved to June 10th to ensure "magnificent" presentation with Dolby Atmos and original mono tracks• Looney Tunes Collectors Vault Vol. 1 offers 50 cartoons for just $3 more than the previous single-disc releases• The Citadel (1938) - King Vidor's critically acclaimed drama about the medical profession with Robert Donat and Rosalind Russell• A Date with Judy (1948) - Technicolor MGM musical starring Jane Powell and a 16-year-old Elizabeth Taylor• The Enchanted Cottage (1945) - Fantasy romance restored to its full 92-minute version after decades of circulation in a cut form• Executive Suite (1954) - Corporate drama featuring a stellar cast including William Holden and Barbara Stanwyck, with Oliver Stone commentary• His Kind of Woman (1951) - Noir comedy starring Robert Mitchum and Jane Russell with a scene-stealing Vincent Price• Splendor in the Grass (1961) - Elia Kazan's powerful drama with Natalie Wood and Warren Beatty, now properly restored after years of poor transfersPurchase links:Clark Gable 4 Film Collection releasing June 10thElizabeth Taylor 4 Film Collection releasing June 10thGary Cooper 4 Film Collection releasing June 17th The Extras Facebook pageThe Extras Twitter Warner Archive & Warner Bros Catalog Group As an Amazon Affiliate, The Extras may receive a commission for purchases through our purchase links. There is no additional cost to you, and every little bit helps us in the production of the podcast. Thanks in advance. Otaku 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. tim@theextras.tv
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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.
I'm Tim Larder, your host, and joining me is George Feltenstein to announce the June
Blu-ray releases from the Warner Archive.
Hi, George.
Hello, Tim.
Great to be with you again
as always my friend. Well this is another great month and though we're talking about six blu-ray
releases today, there is more actually that we're going to talk about because some you announced
already previously. So June is really a robust month. So before we talk about the six individual
blu-rays that you announced yesterday on Facebook, I did want to ask you about this four film
collection that you announced just a few days ago as well.
Well what we're doing is picking up something we started a couple of years ago and had to
put on the side for a little while.
We had put together four Hitchcock films in a four-film collection with a value proposition
so that people basically get four films for $39.98 SRP. There's great value in that. And it's aimed
more at a casual collector or people who are starting out collecting. And it's always been a successful way of curating particular groups of films
and getting them out to more people. And so we did it with Bogart and Bacall, we
did it with Film Noir, we did it with Hitchcock, and I had been making the plea that we start doing it on a more broad basis.
So these first three, which are Clark Gable and Gary Cooper and Elizabeth Taylor, I was
trying to remember it all in my mind because we've actually planned out about 24 of these.
So we'll be doing two or three a month for the ongoing future. And given that we're almost at
a 500 Blu-ray release count, we've got a lot of back catalog to work with. And I want to stress
that these collections, there will be some that will be six film.
There's gonna be one or two that will be six but mostly the before they won't be star driven some of the theme driven but they will all be previously released title.
The cool thing is that some of them will be films that were initially released through the mothership, through Warner Brothers Home Entertainment on Blu-ray.
And I wouldn't take just anything, but if they were good quality when they came out,
then they're going to enter this portal so we're going to be able to make the selections a little more.
Broad in their appeal by including some films that went to retail as opposed to through our archive.
What is my filter of making sure that some of the things that are out there that don't look particularly
good or may have something wrong with them, they're not going to be part of these collections.
I want these collections to really be successful, of course, but I also want them to be well
appreciated and hoping that they garner new fans and will open them up to joining the
ranks of those of us who understand the importance
of physical media.
Yeah.
And that's a really new development to have the Warner Brother, the mothership Warner
Brother home entertainment titles in there.
Only a few.
Only a few.
But I like the caveat that it has to hit that quality level that you are creating and have
created with this Warner Archive brand at all of these amazing restorations.
So that's great to hear.
I have the Thin Man 6 film collection and I really, really enjoy having that.
And it's great because each film, each disc, is the original one you released with the extras,
whether it be from the Bogie and Bacall collection or the Noire collection.
So it saves a little space. And I like the artwork. I just like those all around.
So sometimes I double dip. So they're great.
Well, I hope that the fans will really enjoy this additional method by which they can add films to their collection.
Yeah, yeah. It's really great.
And to hear so many are coming and so many are being released each month
is a great one for the fans to hear.
Well, there was a little bit of housekeeping news too that I wanted to ask you about,
and that was about the High Society 4K and Blu-ray.
Yes, we moved the street date to June 10th
because we're still working on
finishing the presentation and we want to make sure that it's as magnificent as it can be.
That's what like to June 10th now is it? Yeah, we moved it out two weeks and I'm very encouraged by everything that's going on.
I think people who love the movie will be very pleased with what's been going on.
And then we're so fortunate to be in the hands of David McKenzie in Fidelity in
Motion, who's doing the authoring and encoding compression of the
disk. Disks because the Blu-ray and the 4k will both have the same content. The
4k will obviously have more definition and more pixels and Dolby Vision,
but the Blu-ray which will be packed in
the 4K Blu-ray combo or the Blu-ray standalone,
will benefit from having the Dolby Atmos and the original MonoTracks.
I'm sure it's going to look amazing just on Blu-ray.
So on 4K, it'll be all the more because of VistaVision.
It's very exciting.
So that's moving to June 10th. Of course, the other big news we have in June, which
we've already talked about, is June 17th, the arrival of Looney Tunes Collector's Vault
Volume 1. And I think this is a good moment for me to reassure people because the pre-orders went up
with something askew in the packaging indicating that it is a Blu-ray disc, but not saying the
Blu-ray disc using the Blu-ray Disc Association's official logo. And that usually indicates BDRs.
official logo and that usually indicates BDRs.
And as long as I have anything to say about it, there will never be a Warner Archive BDR.
I'm very much about the replicated disk
and the packaging that was first on our Facebook page
and we're having that error corrected.
But as soon as I saw that, I reached out to people to get it fixed.
Hopefully by the time people hear this, it will have been fixed. But most definitely
they are disks being replicated in Mexico as we speak.
Right. Well, I think that was just a good thing to let people know in case there is confusion
out there.
So I didn't like the illustration, so I just used the original one because I like that
one better anyway on our Facebook and our social media because it has that three-dimensional
audit.
It kind of didn't bother me because I didn't even like it.
I was like, something wrong with that one. And I-
Well, given that it just went up for pre-order
and it's selling very well,
I'm hoping that that will continue,
but I didn't want anybody to be concerned
that it was gonna be some kind of change in direction
for us, not after 13 years of replicated Blu-rays.
And George, I sell the price point.
It's only $3 more than the, uh, the one disc.
That's right.
And you get 25 more cartoons.
You know, basically it's 50 cents a cartoon.
I think and hope people will be pleased by the value proposition that
offers.
I didn't know.
It's, it's terrific terrific when I saw that price.
I guess I was expecting it to be a little bit higher than that.
That puts it right in the no brainer category, which it pretty much already was if you were
a fan of Looney Tunes.
But at that price point, that really, really just pushes it up there to the, I'm going
to buy this right off.
So, well, let's turn our attention now to the individual Blu-ray releases for June and we'll
go alphabetically.
That means that first up we have the 1938 drama, The Citadel.
What can you tell us about this film?
This is an exceptionally fine film and it is from a small group of films that MGM produced
in England.
There was a quota system established
at least before World War II,
where basically there had to be a certain amount
of films made in the UK in order for them to allow films
from the US or other places to come in.
As I understand it, I'm not quite sure of all the intricacies of that,
but Warner Brothers had the Teddington Studios in England,
and MGM opened up Studio in England, and the first two films, the idea was to bring Culver City talent from the home
studio in terms of creatives and at least one or two actors or actresses to the UK for
these kind of productions.
And the efforts ended up being stymied by the start of World War II in the UK,
and then MGM picked up later in a different way,
but a much bigger way after the war was over.
But the first two titles,
first two films made at the MGM British studio were Yank at Oxford with Robert Taylor
and The Citadel with Robert Donat and Rosalind Russell.
And this was directed by the great King Vidor. He's one of the great film directors of all time,
but certainly his association with MGM went back to films like The Big Parade in 1925.
His work is quite remarkable in my opinion.
This is based on a very best-selling novel of the era by A.J. Cronin.
It's about the medical profession and it's a really,
really well-written, finally performed drama.
Robert Donat, who would later go on to win the Oscar in 39
for another MGM British production, Goodbye Mr. Chips.
He stars in this movie.
Roslyn Russell was under contract to MGM
and went from Hollywood to London to be in this film.
And then later to be Sir, Ralph Richardson is in this movie. movie and of course a very young Rex Harrison with hair
It's it's a really really
compelling movie. It's the story is very efficiently told and
It won the New York Film Critics Circle Best Picture as well as the National Board of Review Best Picture
for the year. It earned four Oscar nominations.
So MGM's efforts in the UK were off to a great start that was unfortunately put to pause
by World War II.
After World War II, they became quite aggressive in making
a lot of films at the British studio, which was basically in high operation from the mid-40s
right up until 1970.
That was the period where MGM kind of fell apart when Kirk Corian became the main stockholder
and started destroying the studio assets. The London studio was one of the ones to go, but that was actually a different physical
studio base than this studio.
This was a different studio and there were only a handful of films that came out of there
before the war, but they were all really, really good.
The Citadel, most importantly, is a film that's all really, really good. And the Citadel, most importantly,
is a film that's looked really, really awful until now.
And we have a new 4K scan from our preservation elements,
and it looks and sounds terrific.
My colleagues did a wonderful job.
Presentation is really wonderful.
And we've put some 1938 MGM shorts on the disc.
And just because it's about the medical profession, we cross studios and put on a Warner Brothers
cartoon, the Daffy Dock, which speaks for itself and the trailers on there.
So it's a wonderful package.
I'm looking forward to seeing this with the restoration, with the 4K scans of the best
preservation elements.
It was nominated for so many awards, so I'm really looking forward to watching this.
The Citadel is probably the least known of these six new June releases we're talking
about today.
And I'm hoping that with this release, it will become far more popular and well known,
thanks to the quality of the Blu-ray presentation.
Well, next up, George, is a MGM musical, A Date with Judy from 1948.
What can you tell us about this Technicolor release?
Well, those of you in the listening or viewing audience for the extras have often heard Tim
and I discuss what goes into working with technicolor negatives for these restorations
and the efforts we're able to achieve.
It almost looks like 3D.
It's just remarkable.
This is yet another one of those films.
It also happens to be a film that was a big box office
success when it was released.
And kind of an unusual thing for the era,
it was an adaptation based on a very popular radio sitcom.
A Day with Judy was on the radio adaptation based on a very popular radio sitcom.
A Day with Judy was on the radio for most of the 1940s. I think it ran from like 1940 to 1950.
And on this Blu-ray disc,
we're gonna put two episodes of the radio show
so people can hear what its aegis was.
But MGM thought it was attractive enough
to take some of their, I don't wanna say juvenile,
but some of their teenage performers
and have them be focal points within a story.
It's quite a delightful film.
It has a lot of music in it. I tend to think
of this more as a comedy with music because there aren't that many musical numbers in
it per se. And it's not the kind of film where the story is moved forward by the
music. Music happens mostly in a performance setting.
And that's just, that's fine. You know, that's wonderful. But it's really a very cute story
about Judy Foster, who's a teenage girl, and her boyfriend, Oogie Pringle,
and her best friend, Oogie's sister, Carol,
played by Elizabeth Taylor.
Now, Elizabeth Taylor was 16 years old
when she made this film,
and she had blossomed very quickly
from an incredibly gorgeous child to an incredibly beautiful woman.
She looks like she's 22, not 16.
But she's also terrific in the picture.
Everybody in the film is really good.
It's basically a family-oriented sitcom,
and you have the added bonus of Carmen Miranda making her journey from
20th Century Fox where she had been under contract and coming to MGM to make two films,
both of which were with Jane Powell, the other being Nancy Goes to Rio. But Carmen Miranda,
along with Xavier Kugai and his orchestra, they
provide a lot of the musical performances as well as Jane Powell herself. And this film
is best known for the song, It's a Most Unusual Day, which became a very big hit of the popular
era of 1948. And most importantly, it's just MGM Entertainment from the land of Pasternakia. And when I say
that I'm referring to Joe Pasternak, the producer who made more populist films with music, as
opposed to Arthur Fried, who made the more sophisticated musicals.
And that's why you have Carmen Miranda and Xavier Cougat and Jane Powell will sing popular
music as well as operetta type music.
It's all in here and it's a hell of a lot of fun and it was one of the most successful
movies MGM had in 1948.
It was a big box office success.
And Wallace Beery, who's always very tough and gruff,
he actually is softened in this movie playing Judy's father.
He's quite funny in the movie.
It's just really a confection that's quite delightful,
but most importantly, it's gonna knock people's socks off
when they see how gorgeous
the Technicolor looks. Right. Yeah. Technicolor released by Warner Archive. You got to own it
if you are into musicals. Absolutely. So that's a pairing that now over the last three or four years,
we've been talking on the extras about it is just always a home run. And you have a classic Tom and Jerry on here. I can't remember if you mentioned that, so
I want to throw that in.
Professor Tom, we did carry over the same short and cartoon that were on the DVD, but
we added the radio shows to give it a little more heft. And one of the radio shows has
Frank Sinatra as a guest star. So it's really just
a lot of fun. It should make a great disc to add to the collections.
Well, next up, George, is the romantic film, The Enchanted Cottage from 1945. What can
you tell us about this film? Well, this is actually based on a play
by Arthur Wing Pinheiro,
and it was first made into a movie in 1924
with Richard Bartholomew as the star.
But RKO decided it needed an update for World War II.
This was released theatrically toward the end of World War II,
but it was very much a world-weary audience that was looking for
something in terms of a love story that also had a fantasy aspect to it.
This is the kind of film that many people really loved,
because it was very different.
It's a different kind of love story.
Robert Young plays a soldier who comes back
from World War II with scars from the war,
and he believes because of his physical damage,
for lack of a better word,
that he's no longer worth being loved.
And he meets a woman played by Darth Maguire.
She also thinks that she isn't attractive.
And their love story actually blossoms
into something quite beautiful.
I don't want to spoil the plot,
but it was so infectious that it was filmed obviously more than once.
We have on this disc two different radio broadcasts
that consolidate the story.
The first is a Luxe Radio Theater adaptation that's an hour long,
that stars Dorothy McGuire and Robert Young,
the stars of the movie.
But the other one is from 1953 and it's half hour long from
General Electric Theater with all different performers. So it's really the underlying play that is
transcending generations in its popularity.
This is a film we've had a lot of requests for.
It was very successful for RKO.
RKO re-released the movie, I believe in the
early 1950s, and they cut, I think about 15 minutes out of the negative. So I've said
that this is a 4K scan of the original negative, but the original negative was unfortunately cut. So we had to use secondary
nitrate elements to fill in the footage that had been cut out. So for a long time,
all people could see was like this 70 some odd minute version. This is the full 92 minute version
This is the full 92-minute version as it originally appeared and looking really beautiful. And I'm just so excited.
This is yet another that looked awful until now.
And it was just shown at the TCM Film Festival.
I was just going to say that when I had Scott McGee of TCM on to talk about the TCM Film Festival. He mentioned that the director, John Cromwell,
is the father of the actor.
Yes, James Cromwell.
Was going to be at the festival to introduce this film.
And that was kind of interesting.
And that's, yeah, I mean...
Well, and another thing that I noticed here,
I was kind of looking at the date, oh, 45.
This is the 80th anniversary of this film.
So yeah.
Is that a-
Yeah.
We at the Warner Archive aren't magnetized by anniversaries.
You don't need an anniversary to celebrate a great movie.
Just happens to be the 80th anniversary.
But I think the anniversary edition concept has been kind of lazy marketing.
Well, we talked about this, George.
I started it.
So I'm responsible for it.
I did it when nobody else did it.
But that was when I was a youthful lad.
I don't think you need to call that out.
It's convenient.
It's nice.
And a 50th anniversary of something, a 50th anniversary of something,
a 20th anniversary of something, that's really significant. But, you know, when I see like,
50th anniversary, 35th anniversary, it's like, really? How about the movie? Isn't that really
what you're talking about? Do you need, you know, what anniversary movies do we have this year?
Yeah, exactly. Yeah.
We try to aim a little higher in what we do.
So, yes, it's an anniversary, but most importantly, it's a great movie.
And I'm glad that you brought up John Cromwell because he is not that well known past cinephiles
as a great director, and he was a great director.
Directed many magnificent films, and he was a great director, directed many magnificent films,
and he deserves more credit.
TCM, when they were planning their festival this year,
they decided to have fantasy be one of their thematics.
And I knew that they were gonna show the film,
and I was very concerned about it
because I knew that everything we had looked
like not so nice.
Let's just put it that way.
So I huddled with the powers that are and said, don't you think it's time we gave a
new look to the Enchanted Cottage so that when it shows at TCM, it'll look beautiful and we can therefore
release a new Blu-ray and everybody was in agreement and here we are.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's great.
Well, those are all side notes.
It's great that this film is finally coming out, but it's interesting and it's great to
see different parts of the company, you know, working together to be sure that these restorations
happen.
I mean, that's one of the great things
that I would love to share with people
that are listening or watching this.
One of the really wonderful things
that has happened at the company
that I've been kind of jumping up and down about
for many years was we're really unified
between divisions, especially with TCM now having been brought
into Warner Brothers officially.
And my good friend Charlie Tabish,
who is TCM in a sense,
but is the SVP of programming
and has been with the network for 25 years,
Charlie reports into Mike DeLuca and Pam Abdee,
who are the heads of Warner Brothers Pictures. And to have people who are
making new movies, who love movies, and to have TCM under their imprimatur has saved the network, basically, and it's enabled there
to be a TCM tour here on the lot. And I myself have always been working closely with TCM,
but now it's a company-wide initiative to recognize how well we can collaborate because we all have the
same aim.
That's to please the classic film fan and more importantly, to cultivate and grow new
classic film fans.
Yeah, because as we've talked about here on the podcast before, we're already in 2025.
So films before 2000 really are already 25 years old. And that's hard to imagine.
Matrix is 26 years old.
So it's like, where do you call it classic where everybody has a slightly different definition,
but from a just a business perspective, you've got to introduce younger people and younger fans.
And when I say younger, I mean under 50 50 under 40 to some of these great films that I'm also talking about teenagers and people
in their 20s if something is great it's gonna transcend time and will always
capture new audiences they just need to be led to it and it's hard because with
each passing year there are more and more new films made,
and there's also great television being made. And all of this competes for the eyeballs.
So we have to make sure that people really take advantage of the great library that we happen to be fortunate caretakers of here at Warner Brothers
Discovery and making it available to new audiences.
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 next we have a drama directed by Robert Wise from an Ernest Lehman script.
If you think Robert Wise and Ernest Lehman,
you're also thinking about The Sound of Music and West Side Story.
Well, I had to mention that they are teaming up on this one.
And the cast for this movie is pretty remarkable.
I mean, the fact that they were able to get that many huge stars of the era.
And it's a great movie.
We're talking about Executive Suite from 1954, William Holden, June Allison, Barbara Stanwyck,
Frederick March, Walter Pidgeon, Shelley Winters, Paul Douglas, and Louis Calharn, plus Dean
Jagger and Nina Foesch, and even Tim Konzadein, who is the oldest
of the first My Three Sons sons.
William Holden was an Oscar winner by that time.
Barbara Stanwyck had not won an Oscar.
She had been nominated many times, but Frederick March was an Oscar winner.
Shelley Winters was an Oscar winner.
I mean, this was like a mega supercast.
One of the cool things about this movie is,
when it starts, you hear the lion roar,
the MGM lion roar, but you don't hear any music.
There's no music through the entire movie.
At the beginning of the movie,
you just hear a bell ringing.
Our DVD of this, I believe, was not in the proper aspect ratio.
This was MGM's widescreen ratio when they weren't using CinemaScope of 1.75 to 1.
So this is in the proper aspect ratio.
It's a 4K scan off the camera negative.
I know that's starting to sound like it's a repetition.
And I speak of it with such pride each time because it doesn't get better than that.
This is a very modern feeling movie for something that is ostensibly over 70 years old.
It's about the drama of the corporate world. Corporate
world has certainly become a lot more complex in the 70 years subsequent, but
Robert Wise was already established as a fine film director and he did some
really good work at MGM in the 50s and then went elsewhere to do great work
elsewhere. Had a long, wonderful
career. I'm happy to say that I did get to meet him a long time ago. Just an amazing,
amazing individual. And this film deserves for people who haven't seen it to get to see
it. If I were putting double features together, I would say, watch executive suite and then watch network.
It's that kind of thing.
This has got melodrama to it.
There's love stories intertwined.
I love the fact that Barbara Stanwyck and
William Holden are working together again here,
because she was really
responsible for him starring in Golden boy in nineteen thirty nine in columbia.
Columbia really didn't wanna give hold in the role and she fought for him.
And there's wonderful clip from the oscars that people can see.
Courtesy the academy on youtube where barbara stanck was given a special Oscar and thanked
William Holden. William Holden and Barbara Stanwyck were presenting the
year before he of course died relatively young in an accident and in between him
saluting her on the Oscars one year and her getting a special Oscar the next year,
Holden had passed away.
So she got her Oscar and said,
this is for you, my golden boy.
I get all choked up just thinking about it,
but I love so many of the people involved
in the making of this movie.
And the film holds up really well.
And that's thanks to incredible writing of Ernest
Lehman based on a bestselling novel of the time by Cameron Hawley. And Ernest Lehman was a genius
at adapting other literary material. And this is a perfect example of that. So this is the collaboration of two people who brought
so much cinematic splendor to our history. I'm delighted that we're adding
this to the Warner Archive collection in Blu-ray. Yeah I was looking at the cover
and you can barely fit the so many names of so many stars. The promotion they had
a hard time limiting it because it was just full of stars, both behind and in front of the cameras.
And then I noticed on here, I couldn't miss it, that you have a featured commentary.
By Oliver Stone.
Yeah.
Who certainly has a perspective on big business.
Right.
You know, having made Wall Street many years ago, that commentary is terrific.
It was obviously created quite some time ago for the DVD release, but a great commentary
is forever great like a great movie is.
And I think people really enjoy hearing Mr. Stone's thoughts on the film.
Yeah.
And then you have some lighter fare on there, the Tom and Jerry cartoon and the
Pete Smith special and then the trailer. So a lot of good extras on this one as well.
So this is a fantastic release.
I'm looking forward to seeing it myself.
Well, next we have, I think the only noir for the month, but wow.
It's the only noir for this month, but wow. This is the only noir for this month.
There are many more coming.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, just for June.
That's the 1951 RKO, His Kind of Woman.
Tell us about this one.
Well, the most important thing about this film
is it was the first to co-star, but not the last,
to co-star Robert Mitchum and Jane Russell.
And they clicked on screen and made more films together
at RKO.
This is almost a noir comedy.
It's a very serious noir,
but Vincent Price plays a kind of crazy guy.
He's like this egotistical gun collector. He's
just so wacky that he basically steals the movie. It's pretty hard to steal the movie
away from Jane Russell and Robert Mitchum. Everybody in this movie is terrific. It's very well written. We do have a commentary by film historian Vivian Sobchak.
We also have a trailer.
I'll say it upfront now,
RKO did not have a trailer department.
So they farmed out making their trailers
to National Screen Service.
And as a result, when the library was sold,
there were no trailers that came with all
the other film elements.
So if we ever have a trailer on an RKO film, it's a rarity.
We do have the trailer on this, but the quality leaves a lot to be desired, but it's better
than nothing.
That's right.
So if somebody's got a better trailer out there, let us know.
We would love to borrow it.
This is a great release, great war.
Obviously we had it out on DVD before, but once again, a 4K scan off the original nitrate
camera.
Right.
And it doesn't just look great.
It sounds great.
I have no idea whether they had started recording magnetically or not, because magnetic recording
was just starting to permeate Hollywood at this time.
But when I saw the preliminaries on the new master, I was not only thrilled with how great
it looked, but also how great it sounded.
And that benefits Jane Russell because they always had her sing a song or two in a movie
because Howard Hughes, who owned Arkayo at the time, he was definitely her most ardent
supporter.
And I say that only in the most honest way.
There's nothing lascivious going on there. He just believed in her and gave her a lot of great opportunities.
And she was definitely a much loved star in Hollywood.
But her in a film noir with Robert Mitchum is magic.
Sure.
I'm so glad that we're putting this out.
And the popularity of Mitchum and Russell, you know, Jane Russell endures today because
they were so handsome and beautiful and talented and everything.
And these films are so great, especially when you get them now restored so that they're
looking great in HD.
So looking forward to that one.
Well, we have one more film and that is Splendor in the Grass from 1961.
What can you tell us about this one?
I would say this is one of the most important films of its time. It's directed by Ilya Kazan.
It was written for the screen. It's not based on a play or a book, but written for the screen by
William Inge, who of course wrote The Dark at the Top of the Stairs and
Picnic and Bust-Up. Incredibly talented writer. And for 1961, this movie was constricted by
the production code, but it's pretty raw in terms of dealing with the complexities of the main character,
Deanie, played by Natalie Wood.
This was really her breakthrough performance.
She plays a, I'd say high school graduating age girl who is tempestuously
in love with her boyfriend, but played by Warren Beatty,
making his big screen debut.
And under the direction of Kazan with Inge's writing,
it's just an astounding film with great performances
and heartbreaking moments and a lot of realism.
And I find the film fascinating every time I see it.
This should have been on Blu-ray probably 15 years ago,
but we had problems in those days kind of convincing people,
hey, you need to go back and remaster this.
We have an HD master of this film that was done probably,
let's say 15, 16 years ago,
and that's been circulating on TV and streaming,
and it looks absolutely awful.
The colors are wrong, scenes that are supposed to be at night
are in the day, it was very magenta tinted. It just didn't look right.
Now we went back to the camera negative. We had our best colorists and best mastering people working
on this. And it's so beautiful. And interestingly, this was not shot here at Warner Brothers,
although this is very much a Warner Brothers film.
The interiors were all shot at,
I believe the Filmways studio,
it was called at the time,
in the upper part of Manhattan in 1960, 61 era.
If people wanted to film in
New York City and needed a soundstage, that was one
of the few places they had.
And Kazan was primarily New York based.
So they tell you in the credits that it was shot in New York City.
Obviously, the exteriors were shot around the greater New York area. There's nothing that conveys New York at all
because this takes place in the Midwest. But I just find it fascinating that they were
able to... There were very few major studio motion pictures filmed in New York at that
time. It was very rare. This is really one of the great films of all time.
Certainly one of the great romances.
You ache for Natalie Wood's character
and you see how really the seedlings
of the star Warren Beatty was to become.
He was very young when he did the film
and I just always find it poignant. I've
been fighting to get this done for a long time. And finally, by having a 4K scan of the camera
negative and creating a beautiful new master, it's just astounding. Great performances by
supporting members from the actress deal
of people like Pat Hingle.
They're just remarkable.
I would assume a lot of people haven't seen this movie
and it deserves to be better seen.
But what we have on the movie, aside from the trailer,
we also have a wonderful documentary
that was done in the mid-90s
and it's Ilya Kazan, A Director's Journey.
It's a feature length combination interview with Kazan,
as well as scenes of his works.
It deals with his work on the stage,
but mostly his work on the screen.
He just had such an amazing career and influence on so many
performers. We look at his body of work just within our library, East of Eden and
Streetcar Named Desire and many others. America, America. He had a good tie to
Warner Brothers and to be able to take one of his great works and give it this kind of stellar presentation is an honor.
And that's why I'm really delighted we were able to add the documentary onto the disc.
Yeah. And you didn't mention it, but it's a 4K scan of the original camera negative.
So there you go again. You know, These are fantastic new scans.
So boy, George, you had a 30s film, you have 40s, you have a 50s, and you have a 60s.
You covered four decades there this month of June.
All classic films, just amazing films that people are going to really be happy to add
to their collection.
So what a month.
Plus, you've got the four film collections
and then the-
Community tools.
Collectors vault, yeah.
So what a month.
And high society.
Oh yeah, and high society now falling into June.
So that's gonna be quite the month.
What are we gonna have a lot to talk about
in June and July, George?
Yeah, we've got great stuff coming in July
that I'm working on right now.
Some big surprises.
I promised people that this year was going to hold
a lot of things coming to fruition
that they had been looking forward to for a long time.
And being able to put Cheyenne out on Blu-ray
and to give it a sturdy package,
as well as beautiful new
masters. McGilligrilla, you know, it's just very, very gratifying to be able to
span the library in different ways and this is definitely a very classics
focused month and we will be doing more of the same next month with maybe some
contemporary things mixed in as well.
So lots to look forward to.
Lots to look forward to.
And George, sometimes you can feel
what you might call like a momentum.
And I feel like the momentum has been building this year,
actually over the last few years,
as you've been able to get more of these titles approved
and restored and everything.
So what a great
start.
I had to buy a new pair of boxing gloves because as I'm fighting for film history, it starts
to wear out the gloves.
There you go. But I'm just saying I feel the momentum and I feel it in people's comments
as they're like, wow, this is coming out and where am I going to, you know, I got to save my pennies to get these because I have been waiting so long for this
one and everything. And, and it's just a great feeling for fans of the Warner Archive and
for physical media in general. So thanks for coming on as always. And it's always a lot
of fun to hear what, what you're bringing to the fans.
Thank you, Tim. And I look forward to our next opportunity to talk about the Warner Archive collection.
For those who would like more information about the films announced today, be sure to
check out our Facebook page and our Warner Archive Facebook group.
You can find the links for those and all of our social media sites in the podcast show
notes.
Facebook is also the best place to get
the pre-order links for these titles when they become available. If you aren't yet subscribed
or following the show at your favorite podcast provider, you may want to do that so that you
don't miss anything coming up. It's a very busy summer as we go into June and July. So
you may want to do that right away. Until next time, you've been listening to Tim Millard.
Stay slightly obsessed.