glad my late night listmaking got some fruitful discussion going.
FrauBlucher wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 7:29 am
ryan, perfect timing. Yesterday on TCM,
Suspicion was on and it made me think what Hitchcock would be a UHD candidate for CC. Would it be something they already have or something they would license anew? The Universals are pretty much out of the question.
FrauBlucher wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:59 am
North By Northwest would be an awesome UHD. Not sure WB will put it out. It is a color film which they seem to favor though. It was a CC laserdisc so there’s that.
I would love
Suspicion but I have to imagine, as others have speculated, that
North by Northwest is probably what Criterion would go for if they went to WB for a Hitchcock. ex-laserdisc title that amazingly still isn't on the format, even though Universal is quite handily plowing through their Hitchcock holdings. I do think
Suspicion isn't out of the question, but even if WB doesn't let go of NXNW, I see
Strangers on a Train and
Dial M for Murder being bigger candidates there. I do think all the 1940-onward Hitchcock titles will eventually make their way to the format, which I'll cover more below.
DandyDancing wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 8:34 am
ryannichols7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 6:10 am
Sound of Metal (Netflix)
Its Amazon studios.
that it is! corrected, apologies (I must admit I have little desire to see the film and I made the list off hand)
rrenault wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 9:26 am
I just hope I don't start getting into the habit of picking up the more accessibly priced European UHD releases of films like Rules of the Game and Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, only to get burned by Criterion releasing the same film with a much superior encode. This has already happened to me with Le Cercle Rouge, and I caved and double-dipped.
Welp...
The Seventh Seal was at least encoded by David M, so I feel safe there.
10-12 years ago when I got into buying blu-rays I didn't pay much attention to encode quality and the like. I just thought, "A Man Escaped on blu-ray? Ok cool." I've slowly become a terminal case though. :p
P.S. To add to ryannichols' post, it's also interesting to observe all but three of Criterion's 18 UHD release are exclusive to CC...
The Seventh Seal is a very safe bet that the Criterion edition couldn't top the BFI one, all it would do is bring over Criterion's existing (and admittedly excellent) extras, and I love having two different commentaries between the two. for your first point, I agree with you. I've noticed this stuff more and more once upgrading setups, and I'm sure once I move into UHD I'll really care about it. that said, stuff with slight differences (
Citizen Kane and
Mulholland Drive between the US/UK releases I'd probably miss, whereas the Canal ones seem to be a bit more noticable.
very good factoid there at the end, the three 'shared' titles of course being
Citizen Kane,
Mulholland Drive, and
Le Cercle Rouge. I'm curious going forward to see what that ratio will look like, especially as we get more UHDs from Studiocanal in region B and so far, Criterion is the only US label doing UHDs from them (Kino and eventually Indicator seem like the only possibilities).
The Trial is another forthcoming one I didn't mention that Criterion will almost certainly release on UHD in region A, with Canal handling B themselves.
Roscoe wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 9:40 am
FrauBlucher wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 7:29 am
ryan, perfect timing. Yesterday on TCM,
Suspicion was on and it made me think what Hitchcock would be a UHD candidate for CC. Would it be something they already have or something they would license anew? The Universals are pretty much out of the question.
That's interesting. I'd upgrade to UHDs of NOTORIOUS and REBECCA and LADY VANISHES, no questions asked, pending reviews and all that. I'd settle for a good solid Blu-Ray of YOUNG AND INNOCENT. Not sure about 39 STEPS, would an upgrade be all that much of an upgrade?
I was wondering about the Netflix/Criterion conduit. Has it dried up? A UHD of THE IRISHMAN and Cuaron's ROMA would be most welcome, and those Welles WIND projects seem stuck on streaming, probably for good at this stage. Am I wrong?
bottlesofsmoke wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:02 am
When/if they re-release
Spellbound, it seems like UHD would be a no-brainer.
therewillbeblus wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:14 am
While
Suspicion is miles better than
Spellbound, the latter is more visually arresting and Criterion (wisely) seems to be pushing those kinds of films as upgrades, for the most part. I'd rather they release practically any other Hitch though
to this point - I struggle to see
Spellbound, the last of the three formerly OOP Hitchcock/Selznick titles being the first one to go UHD, as visually stunning as the film (the Dali sequence!!) is.
Rebecca and
Notorious still remain incredibly popular whereas that one not so much, I'm surprised they didn't get to it in the Bluray era. that said, the deal could be sweetened if Criterion actually acquired
The Paradine Case, which Kino let go out of print recently, but again, I'd be surprised if that went UHD. I do love
The Lady Vanishes dearly, one of my favorite Hitchcocks, but I don't know if elements would be up to par there...the other British titles certainly not. we do really need
Young and Innocent,
Sabotage, and
Secret Agent, I've only seen the first and it's another really great film (I actually prefer it to
39 Steps!)
I don't think Netflix has dried up. I think
Roma and
The Irishman will probably come to the format at some point, both are still very popular with big fanbases that will gladly repurchase the films again on disc format. I think Scorcese will probably prioritize other movies though (since Criterion seems dedicated to releasing one of his movies quarterly..), I'm sure it'll happen but I'm sure he would rather rescue
After Hours or something first. what's Cuaron up to?
The Other Side of the Wind is one of those "confirmed but in perpetuity" deals, basically everyone who has worked on the Welles releases in the past have all confirmed its happening, and I think as more footage gets unearthed it gets pushed. whenever it is released, I'm sure it'll be a very comprehensive edition, as with all Criterion releases from the Welles filmography..
tenia wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:21 am
ryannichols7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 6:10 am
-lack of big ticket Janus titles.
The Seventh Seal is the one I remain most surprised by, even with the BFI's disc I'm sure Criterion could sell enough copies in the states. even then,
8 1/2 and
Juliet of the Spirits would be extremely stunning picks for Fellini, and are the two titles most likely of his to see the bump from Criterion (I'd say
La Dolce Vita too obviously, but that's in Paramount's court)
I wonder if it's because Criterion might not be too big on splitting sets, and those are both from big sets. I suppose though that exceptions exist : the Bergman set still had subsequent individual releases, and we've seen individual releases from the Olympics and the WCP sets, so who knows.
I picked those two as an example because they were the first two Janus holdings I could think of (and want) that had 4K restorations and would suit the format.
Tokyo Olympiad would be another dream 4K title if we were splitting boxes, but it's certainly all dependent.
tenia wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:21 am
ryannichols7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 6:10 am
the 6 titles that went OOP before (Malick is alive, of course) would probably be the 'biggest' to start, and I could see something like
Nashville or
Days of Heaven returning.
Days of Heaven would need a new restoration, since the old one isn't ageing so well and definitely isn't fit for a UHD release, but Nashville just got released on BD by Paramount themselves, and I think at some point, licences need to be clearer than "the BD is released by X but it doesn't mean there won't be a UHD from Y".
yes, on top of that every Paramount title that Criterion released on DVD and later upgraded to Bluray was simply the same reused master from the DVD, absolutely none of which have aged that well. they'd all need big overhauls, and that opens the other can of worms of who would do the restorations. it is worth noting that Kino is doing some of their own work on the Paramount titles they're doing on UHD, so maybe they'd let Criterion do the same?
on top of this, "Paramount Presents" (let's see how long that lasts) has still only done one UHD so far,
Liberty Valance - no further have been announced.
tenia wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:21 am
ryannichols7 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 6:10 am
The Tales of Hoffmann and
Mississippi Masala would've been real knockouts with HDR, and I'm honestly really surprised
Exotica won't be a UHD - feels like something that Arrow would've done.
I wonder how much of this lack of UHD releases stems from Criterion thinking those won't sell enough UHDs to justify investing into a UHD release and how much comes from the restorations possibly just having been done in SDR and Criterion still trying to avoid SDR UHDs .
yes, since as speculators forget, a 4K restoration doesn't always mean it's ready for a 4K disc, there's gotta be an HDR pass. there can definitely be good SDR UHDs as we've seen, but I'm sure the preference (as it should be) is for ones with HDR.
The Virgin Suicides is of course the first SDR UHD from Criterion, but this was at the insistence of Sofia Coppola and Ed Lachmann as their intended look, and don't think it'lll be any sort of new trend going forward. it's certainly possible Egoyan could have felt the same for
Exotica and ditto Nair for
Mississippi Masala, but since Lachmann shot the latter too..I'm sure it was just a "this won't sell enough" situation.
bottlesofsmoke wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:32 am
I agree on
Spellbound, the story behind it’s making is more interesting than the movie.
Suspicion would be interesting because WB has already put it out through WAC, while
Kane and
Shaft were just WB releases. If they’re willing to license out WAC titles for UHD that opens up a huge can of worms, but at least we know they are willing to license certain non-WAC titles for sure.
Strangers in a Train isn’t WAC and would be an awesome choice. I think some people have predicted
The Searchers, and that makes a lot of sense too. The dream for me would be a UHD of
The Bandwagon because not only do I love the film, it would be a chance to get a Minnelli Criterion, because outside of
Tea and Symphony there isn’t anything left not on Blu-Ray already, though I can totally see them putting that one out, I sure hope so.
ah but
Shaft was a WAC title, so that can of worms has been opened already! I definitely have predicted
The Searchers elsewhere - I used to be 100% about that coming to Criterion, but after George Feltenstein's recent comments about WB prioritizing color films for UHD..all bets are off. whoever it comes from, I would just like to see the film on the format, but I'd
love if Criterion brought in the usual Ford scholars to talk about his biggest film in addition to that.
as mentioned in other posts,
Le Samourai and
Rules of the Game are already finished, restoration wise. I'm sure both will be on disc in a matter of time - it's been 11 years since ROTG hit Bluray and basically anyone that cares about
Le Samourai, and even those that don't (me) know that the film deserves far better than it got on the previous Bluray. good decision of course by Criterion to not release the restoration that had been done, but also smart to at least give a 'temporary' fix. this is one that I certainly hope they'd correct the Bluray edition for as well, rather than just including their old disc
dwk wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 11:43 am
tenia wrote: ↑Fri Jun 24, 2022 10:21 am
I wonder how much of this lack of UHD releases stems from Criterion thinking those won't sell enough UHDs to justify investing into a UHD release and how much comes from the restorations possibly just having been done in SDR and Criterion still trying to avoid SDR UHDs .
I can't recall if it was an email response shared on reddit or if Lee Kline said something on his podcast, but I remember getting confirmation that they were working on a SDR UHD.
it's
The Virgin Suicides unless another is forthcoming. as covered elsewhere, it is confirmed that Coppola and Lachmann felt that SDR fit their intended look.
I think that covers everything!