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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Fri Apr 03, 2009 1:42 pm 
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Thanks, Matt, for the clarification.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Fri Apr 03, 2009 7:14 pm 
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Pre-code beaver


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Wed Apr 08, 2009 12:15 pm 

Joined: Fri Jun 02, 2006 11:36 pm
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This first volume of Paramount's Pre-Code catalogue is fantastic. While Universal continues to neglect these films with special features, perhaps it is enough to just have the films. Torch Singer is a marvelous example of an early "woman's drama" with Claudette Colbert. Her performance as a woman of the streets who struggles to find her daughter and her heart is a breath-taking example of the subtle qualities that these early films could embrace.
Equally fascinating in this set are the films Hot Saturday, with Cary Grant as a notorious millionaire who corrupts beautiful young women in small towns, and Search for Beauty that lays bare the sex obsessed consumer driven elements of America's fascination with health and beauty in the age of ballyhoo. Overall, these films are a fascinating look into how Paramount dealt with issues of sex, morality, vice, and adult themes in a way that is often more invested in a good time and displaying a life of luxury rather than the hard realities of the street, i.e. Warner Brothers' pre-code period. Let's hope that Universal sees that there is a real interest in seeing these early Paramount films, because Paramount's catalogue has been the one that has lacked real stewardship in this period of classic dvd releases.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Wed Apr 08, 2009 12:35 pm 
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DVD Times on the Pre-Code Hollywood set


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Apr 23, 2009 12:14 pm 

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Amazon is now allowing pre-orders on a 'Remember the Night' DVD. RRP is given as $19.98, but no street date yet.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Apr 23, 2009 2:45 pm 

Joined: Tue Jun 05, 2007 1:24 am
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Location: Los Angeles
Tolmides wrote:
Amazon is now allowing pre-orders on a 'Remember the Night' DVD. RRP is given as $19.98, but no street date yet.

Nice catch. I really hope this is not an error. REMEMBER THE NIGHT is an amazing film imo -- a perfect fusion of Sturges and Leisen's sensibilities (blissfully, the screwball never overwhelms the romanticism) and the best rewatch-every-Christmas movie ever made. It's also, by far, Stanwyck and MacMurray's greatest teaming. I can't believe it fell off the cultural map.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Apr 23, 2009 5:07 pm 
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If Amazon's correct, I wonder if this is going to be in the Cinema Classics line-up like the previous two Leisens, the brilliant Midnight and the fairly good Easy Living. Hope they find room for To Each His Own as well.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Apr 23, 2009 5:57 pm 
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Mr Finch wrote:
Hope they find room for To Each His Own as well.

And Hold Back the Dawn.

jaredsap wrote:
the best rewatch-every-Christmas movie ever made.

Don't be silly, Jared. Everyone knows that Die Hard is the best rewatch-every-Christmas movie ever made.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Apr 23, 2009 7:24 pm 

Joined: Tue Jun 05, 2007 1:24 am
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Location: Los Angeles
Jeff wrote:
Don't be silly, Jared. Everyone knows that Die Hard is the best rewatch-every-Christmas movie ever made.

Don't worry. Whenever exhibitors ask me for Christmas ideas, I always suggest DIE HARD (even though it's owned by Fox, not Sony).


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Wed Jul 29, 2009 1:36 am 
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Claudette Colbert Legacy Collection: 11/3/09


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Wed Jul 29, 2009 12:32 pm 

Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 12:49 pm
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A Lubitsch and a Leisen ... can't go wrong with that. But still no street date on Remember the Night.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Jul 30, 2009 12:48 am 
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This looks cool-- anybody know anything about Maid of Salem?


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Jul 30, 2009 9:49 am 

Joined: Tue Nov 25, 2008 12:39 pm
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HerrSchreck wrote:
-- anybody know anything about Maid of Salem?

Aside from it being a kind of dry-run for THE CRUCIBLE ...?


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Jul 30, 2009 1:31 pm 
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Have you seen it Harry?


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Jul 30, 2009 4:47 pm 

Joined: Tue Nov 25, 2008 12:39 pm
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HerrSchreck wrote:
Have you seen it Harry?

Yeah.
Back in about 1999 or so I responded to an ad in CLASSIC IMAGES (I was writing for them back then) from a bootlegger who was going out of business & was selling his "ahem" master tapes. Some of them were 3 or 4 movies crammed onto the 6 hour running time, so you can imagine the quality of any tape you might have bought from him.
That's probably too much info, but it explains how I stumbled across this obscure film. MAID was one of the titles on one of those "anthology" tapes & I hadn't a clue who was in it or what it was about until I watched it.
It's based on the same historical records of the witch trials that Arthur Miller used for his play which might account for some of the character names & situations repeating, but as I watched it I kep thinking that Miller must have seen the film, there's just a few too many similarities.
I haven't watched it in about a decade, so my memories aren't what you'd call fresh, but I recall it being a pretty good film.
Odd, isn't it, that anything headlining Claudette Colbert from that period could fall into obscurity...


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Jul 30, 2009 8:03 pm 
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Agreed-- buit since Uni has still not seen fit to release Island of Lost Souls or Stranger On The Third Floor or City Streets, I'm not surprised there's still some Claudette laying around.

Another great early Paramount I wish they'd get out in a decent edition is Murder By The Clock. Way obscure, and dripping with good atmosphere.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Thu Jul 30, 2009 8:29 pm 
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Murder by the Clock is certainly notable for yet another "looney" performance from Irving Pichel whose greatest turn in this vein must be as Manservant to Sapphic Gloria Holden in Dracula's Daughter.

Murder does have that very stagey static look about it with rigid blocking and movment etc but the material sort of suits that, as it does the hammy delivery of most of the actors (including Irving.)

This box is a mixed bag really - I dont remember Maid with any great affection, but the Leisen is welcome, as is the Lubitsch Bluebeard which came out on a very attractive French DVD last year. The latter is a very underrated picture, so often left to drift in the "ruined by censorship" label, and although there's no doubt the ending had to be rewritten and the last twenty minutes looks like it's been rushed through the mincing machine after the clasically timed first hour, the leads are wonderful. She's great with Cooper, and the pajamas routine is pretty classic.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Fri Jul 31, 2009 12:43 am 
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Glad to see Bluebeard's Eighth Wife come out. I would like to have seen some earlier Colbert pre-codes like Manslaughter get an official release though.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Fri Jul 31, 2009 9:11 am 

Joined: Tue Nov 25, 2008 12:39 pm
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Quote:
Another great early Paramount I wish they'd get out in a decent edition is Murder By The Clock.

Agreed. It's notexactly obscure among horror film afficionados, but I'd lay odds a good percentage of them have only read about it (I have yet to see it).
Universal could easily release a Paramount pre-code horror box with SOULS and CLOCK and a few other titles.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Sat Aug 01, 2009 12:03 am 

Joined: Wed Jan 09, 2008 11:55 am
Posts: 119
MAID OF SALEM had a brief exposure on the "old" AMC network around ten or a dozen years ago. I only saw it piecemeal over several telecasts (frankly, it never quite grabbed me enough pop a tape in and catch the whole show)but it was enough to notice the similarities to the Miller play that Harry mentioned. Print quality looked at least as good as comparable Para/Colbert historicals (CLEOPATRA) of the period and she looked quite fetching in cap and apron!

Great news about BLUEBEARD'S EIGHTH WIFE! I haven't seen this since 16mm university screenings circa mid-70's. I don't recall this one ever being telecast by TBS/Turner/Supersation 17 or by AMC despite long term Uni/Para library contracts by both. And yes David, I do recall it beginning so perfectly and then unraveling as it progresses. I was not very aware then of precode Hollywood and subsequent reissue cuts. WIFE and NINOTCHKA, THE MERRY WIDOW and THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER were my introduction to Lubitsch!


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Sat Aug 01, 2009 1:36 am 
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david hare wrote:
Murder by the Clock is certainly notable for yet another "looney" performance from Irving Pichel whose greatest turn in this vein must be as Manservant to Sapphic Gloria Holden in Dracula's Daughter.

Murder does have that very stagey static look about it with rigid blocking and movment etc but the material sort of suits that, as it does the hammy delivery of most of the actors (including Irving.)

This box is a mixed bag really - I dont remember Maid with any great affection, but the Leisen is welcome, as is the Lubitsch Bluebeard which came out on a very attractive French DVD last year. The latter is a very underrated picture, so often left to drift in the "ruined by censorship" label, and although there's no doubt the ending had to be rewritten and the last twenty minutes looks like it's been rushed through the mincing machine after the clasically timed first hour, the leads are wonderful. She's great with Cooper, and the pajamas routine is pretty classic.

Irving is positively LOONY in this film! When whosis (the bottle blonde and evil vamp pulling the manstrings, forget the actress' name) goes to jail to get him all amped up with a boner for killing, the looks on his face are with the price of admission alone. Apparently with the rise of Bela and Boris, Paramount had the idea (for about five minutes) that Irving would be their guy.

Though he is far more horror-ific in the magnificent Drac's Daughter. I still from time to time mutter his sublime one-word reply to Gloria Holden's inquiry ("Look at me Sandor, tell me what you see..") after she's been playing the piano, whenever somoene asks me something like what time it is or what I'd like to have for brunch:

"Death."


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Sat Aug 01, 2009 4:25 am 
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And in reply, in her throatiest baritone, Gloria says.. "I feel RELEASE!!"

Yay glore!!


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Sat Aug 01, 2009 12:16 pm 
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She truly was perfect casting for that film. Incredible that aspects of it made it thru the recently erected Code.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Sat Aug 01, 2009 5:54 pm 
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She's impossible to find in anything else. Among her miniscule credits is a bit as "party guest" in Auntie Mame - if you can stomach sitting through it. I confess I can't find hide nor hair of the woman. In the first "Party scene" there IS an elderly Lesbian couple (sans dialogue of course) in the background with one brief medium shot, but they're both wearing tweeds.

Glore would NEVER wear tweeds - in fact I always think of her, along with Talullah as the Dykonic lipstick Lesbians.

The movie apparently did have Code problems but they related to her "relationship" with Sandor! I thought the real problem in that relationship was that Irving seems to be more interested in slapping on Gloria's pancake and lippy than he is in Madam herself.

Another note - the piano piece she's playing in that sublime pre-cruising scene is the Chopin Nocturne Opus 15 No 2 (F sharp minor.) This is the very Noctune La Crawford plays when first visiting Connie Veidt in Cukor's A Woman's Face. This is the unforgettable moment in which Connie says -
"Quite a girl, you wirte poetry and play the piano! SO you like music my dear?"

"Oh, yes - some Symphonies, most Concertos.."

Some credit for the Drac Daughter atmospherics should go to Lambert Hillyer, whose later Invisible Ray with Karloof as really VERY nice and shows considerable nuance in the relationship between Karloff and the Daughter.


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 Post subject: Re: Universal Backlot Series
PostPosted: Sun Aug 02, 2009 9:53 am 
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Agreed on Invisi Ray. It's a great role for Bela, and one of our last glimpses of him adorned in Full Hungarian Dignity, his 1930's charm and charismatic sex appeal and powerful presence still in tact. His Ygor in Son of Franky is a magnificent character, but I'm talking about the proud, dashing nature of Bela, which we catch the last vestiges of running up to the mid-30's. The combination of his advancing age, his drug addiction, and the descent into Banner Productions and PRC schlock reduced the man rather quickly from dashing fellow to crashing jello... but of course I love him in just about everything he did. Even nonsense like The Phantom Creeps. Part of the problem of course is that like Boris, he was getting on in years already by the early 30's and the start of his stardom.

Gloria's elusive nature: the rare vintage makes the wine that much more exquisite! Hail Gloria! Surprised schreckian (the real one) legends haven't sprung up around her, theorizing that she really was a vampire.


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