Posted: Thu Nov 02, 2006 3:20 pm
Absolutely true, for those films they have a dvd of, it's always noted in the description. So waiting goes on....
Was the version on French TV an untinted version with an improvised jazz score because I have a copy like that. At Films sans Frontieres it says VERSION ORIGINALE MUET, COLORE & SONORISE en 1986. I have another version which was a different tinted restoration with an experimental soundtrack which I think was produced by IRCAM. It may be that version.Kinsayder wrote:I'm very interested in this title too (and there was a very acceptable print with a modern score and CNC restoration shown on French TV a while ago).
Looks like you are right - I can't really make it out. I found the link from the directors list. Is this an indication that they might release it in the future? If you do a google search for L'Inhumaine dvd L'Herbier then this link comes up but I suppose you can't rely on google searches. I assumed that it was a forthcoming release.Kinsayder wrote:However, I'm not sure the link is an announcement of a DVD release, rather than part of a list of titles that FSF own the distribution rights to (which also includes an interesting handful of Fritz Langs).
Yes, it was untinted, with a jazz score by Sylvain Kassap.vogler wrote:Was the version on French TV an untinted version with an improvised jazz score because I have a copy like that. At Films sans Frontieres it says VERSION ORIGINALE MUET, COLORE & SONORISE en 1986. I have another version which was a different tinted restoration with an experimental soundtrack which I think was produced by IRCAM. It may be that version.
Yep, that's a very curious and funny movie. One could rave endlessly about Lubitsch's really weird use of all sorts of mattes and the surrealist interiors. Don't expect too much, however: story and acting can be rather dull in this one, and clearly as a whole it is not up to his later standards. Same goes for "Sumurun", in which the supposed 'desert' landscapes look like they were filmed on some Berlin refuse pit (and probably they were). I'm looking forward to these releases, too, however. I never had the chance to see "Anne Boleyn", for example, which apparently is totally unlike his other work. So I'll grab the Transit box when it comes out later this month.HerrSchreck wrote: I'm actually pretty psyched about THE WILDCAT.
Have you read the review on the Beaver? Apparently these Image releases have a lot of problems, especially "Visages d'enfants". So, if you don't absolutely need English subs/titles, better get the MK2 resp. arte edition releases, even if you miss out on "Crainquebille" for a while (I have the feeling it will come out too soon by arte, as arte TV showed it a few months ago which normally indicates that a dvd release is not too far away). It's by far the weakest of the three films, anyway. But I guess you will be blown away by "Visages", one of the most lyrical and beautiful French silents I ever came across. Almost Cocteauish in places, and totally entrancing.HerrSchreck wrote:
Also-- anybody picked up the HVe Feyder set? I'm gonna grab it inna couple hours when the stores open. I'm so fucking hung over and running on 2 hrs sleep, I could use a great french masterpiece or three to jolt my fuckin blood back inta circulation.
No idea, honestly. I only have "Visages" taped from a recent TV broadcast on arte Germany. It's also available on a German arte dvd with German subs (in case that helps). I guess I must get me that one soon. The MK2 of "L'atlantide" is probably interlaced, judging from the image alone (I have no way to tell via a computer analysis or something). But it looks quite good, and you also get the Pabst version with it. But it's all in French, of course. So, get the HVE then, and tell us how it is.HerrSchreck wrote:I'm familiar with the films from the VHS days-- question is the French edition (which HVe apparently preconverted to NTSC) progressive or not?
Unlike the L'Inhumaine incident I think I may have actually got something right this time. I just found a dvd-r version of L'Herbier's 1928 film L'Argent here. Quality appears to be very good although the image does have a logo in the top left corner probably for the whole film. It's very rare though and a film I have been longing to see for ages. It's quite expensive for dvd-r at $24.99 but it is spread over 3 discs.vogler wrote:I have been going on about Marcel L'Herbier's L'Inhumaine for ages and it looks like it's finally going to get a dvd release courtesy of Films sans Frontieres.
EDIT: It's not really a dvd release, don't get excited.
It's hard to tell much from the low quality sample, but goodness, what an incredible mis-match of the scene excerpted and Ravel's "Pavane", which certainly is at odds with the scene of some hustle and bustle! Sounds like a really basic drop-the-needle affair. Hopefully the image quality makes up for some of this...vogler wrote: Quality appears to be very good although the image does have a logo in the top left corner probably for the whole film. It's very rare though and a film I have been longing to see for ages. It's quite expensive for dvd-r at $24.99 but it is spread over 3 discs.
Yes, the music is indeed a strange choice but they say that the image is a 9+. That logo is annoying though and probably indicates that it was a TV broadcast. I really want to see this film but for me there's just something I don't like about paying $24.99 for a copy of something someone has recorded off TV. I prefer copies of rare and unavailable films to be given freely or traded.unclehulot wrote:It's hard to tell much from the low quality sample, but goodness, what an incredible mis-match of the scene excerpted and Ravel's "Pavane", which certainly is at odds with the scene of some hustle and bustle! Sounds like a really basic drop-the-needle affair. Hopefully the image quality makes up for some of this...
Absolutely bloody brilliant news.Tommaso wrote:and best of all:
La souriante Mme Beudet/L'invitation au voyage/ la coquille et le clergymen (Germaine Dulac).
I have seen these Dulac films this year on arte TV, and they are so damn brilliant that I can't wait to grab this dvd....
All these releases are coming in the next few months.
Yes, normally I try not to use swear words, but that bloody Marotta guy clearly deserves it!! "Coquille" on the Kino set is plainly unwatchable with that 'music', and the print is badly battered, too.vogler wrote: Hopefully they'll also find some better music to accompany la coquille et le clergymen than that inept drivel that was used on the Kino set. Somebody Marotta wasn't it? What a useless arse!
The print for Coquille was my biggest disappointment on the Kino set. I would have been happy to see the film in any condition if it weren't for the fact that I already had a VHS where the print was much better. That tramline that runs through much of the film is very annoying, much more so than random damage marks. I'm sure Arte will have a much better print though.Tommaso wrote: "Coquille" on the Kino set is plainly unwatchable with that 'music', and the print is badly battered, too.
Poirier's Verdun is currently available in a beautifully restored and English-friendly French edition from Carlotta Films, reviewed here and here.Tommaso wrote:Verdun (Poirier, 1928)
The Milestone edition of South is itself a port of the R2 BFI (including most, but not all, of the extras). It's been a while since I pulled out my copy, but I think the Milestone is also PAL->NTSC. It's not a bad port, but of course an R2 PAL should be better.Tommaso wrote:Similarly, the dvd of "South" looks conspicuously like the Milestone edition. Have you or anyone else seen these films and can comment on them (content-and printwise)? I missed out on both them as yet.

Believe it or not, South is also available as a paid-for download, though you get much more in the DVD package (there's more information in the DVD Times review here).Tommaso wrote:Thanks Tryavna and Kinsayder, for your comments. I never even noticed the BFI had released "South", and "Verdun" also sounds interesting. Now I have to think whether I will wait for the arte releases or go for the existing releases in the first place...
The BFI South dvd is a beautiful package. I bought if for my Mother's birthday due to her interest in Shackleton's expedition and whilst I have not had a chance to watch it all the way through yet (she lives many hundreds of miles from me) I did watch some of it and it looks absolutely beautiful. It is also such incredibly valuable archive material and I was amazed that it exists at all. I've been meaning to buy a copy for myself and I'll get there in the end.Tommaso wrote: I never even noticed the BFI had released "South"