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Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Thu Nov 05, 2009 2:16 am
by zombeaner
You can also pick them up through the TCM store for $17.99

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Thu Nov 05, 2009 3:50 am
by stereo
I also don't think it's the entire archive collection at DD. I can't find Urgh! A Music War or Carny for example (but I may just be blind).

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Thu Nov 05, 2009 11:03 am
by zombeaner
stereo wrote:I also don't think it's the entire archive collection at DD. I can't find Urgh! A Music War or Carny for example (but I may just be blind).
The TCM store has Urgh, it was the first one I looked for.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 3:12 am
by MoonlitKnight
stereo wrote:I also don't think it's the entire archive collection at DD. I can't find Urgh! A Music War or Carny for example (but I may just be blind).
Yeah, you're right. They don't have either...nor do they have Rudolph's "Made in Heaven," a title for which I searched. :-k

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 6:26 pm
by starmanof51
New stuff, dominated by Edward G. Robinson:

Because You're Mine (Mario Lanza)
Call It A Day (Olivia DeHavilland)
Gun Glory (Stewart Granger)
I Love Melvin (Reynolds/O'Connor. Paging David Hare!)
The Man With Two Faces (Robinson)
Manpower (Robinson/Dietrich)
The Nutcracker (must be christmas)
Our Vines Have Tender Grapes (Robinson)
Out of the Fog (Garfied/Lupino)
Rich, Young, and Pretty (Jane Powell)
Tiger Shark (Robinson)
Two Seconds (Robinson)

and a six disc collection of something called "The Big Band, Jazz, and Swing Short Subject Collection", that has serious potential but is sparsely described.

With all the Robinson they've spewed out one way or another, I'm flummoxed at the "The Sea Wolf" being unreleased. I'd like to think it's due to a pressed disc possibility, but I'm too jaded for that.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 10:21 pm
by domino harvey
TIGER SHARK
They've started the dumping of Howard Hawks?! I was sure they were holding out for a Hawks set.

AND AND AND One of the greatest musicals ever, I Love Melvin, gets dumped?! So, what, no more musical boxes either?

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 4:36 pm
by buskeat
domino harvey wrote:TIGER SHARK
They've started the dumping of Howard Hawks?! I was sure they were holding out for a Hawks set.

AND AND AND One of the greatest musicals ever, I Love Melvin, gets dumped?! So, what, no more musical boxes either?
I think we'll see a Film Noir Vol. 5 in 2010, a Jean Harlow set in 2011, Magnificent Ambersons in 2012 perhaps. That should cover classic releases for the next three years right there, with Greed after that in 2024 in a 100th anniversary edition.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 5:21 pm
by HarryLong
Dumping OUR VINES HAVE TENDER GRAPES is downright criminal!

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 6:02 pm
by montgomery
starmanof51 wrote:and a six disc collection of something called "The Big Band, Jazz, and Swing Short Subject Collection", that has serious potential but is sparsely described.
This is totally unfounded, but my guess is that it's probably similar (or identical?) to the Vitaphone sets they put out on laserdisc.

Update: The list is up and yes, it's similar.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 6:09 pm
by atcolomb
Speaking of Edward G Robinson he was in a British film called Sammy Going South (1963) also titled as A Boy Ten Feet Tall, it's a good movie to watch about a Ten year old boy traveling 4500 miles on his own from the Suez Canal to Durban, South Africa. Well made and great performances and hard to get on dvd or any other format.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 8:07 pm
by starmanof51
Also added:

The Last Gangster (more Robinson)
Give a Girl A Break (between this and I Love Melvin, I think you're right about no more musicals boxes, Domino)

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 4:45 pm
by Zumpano

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 8:21 pm
by jaredsap
As much as I love the Cukor, I'm ecstatic they've definitely remastered and included the Wellman.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 9:48 pm
by domino harvey
starmanof51 wrote:Also added:

The Last Gangster (more Robinson)
Give a Girl A Break (between this and I Love Melvin, I think you're right about no more musicals boxes, Domino)
Give a Girl a Break is a fucking masterpiece. Warners sat on these two and released stuff like Words and Music? Barf

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 9:56 pm
by Matt
Hey! Words and Music at least has some great numbers (2 Lena Horne, June Allyson doing "Thou Swell," and "Slaughter on 10th Ave.") For musical songwriter biopic awfulness, it's hard to top Night and Day and Deep in My Heart.

I may have to blind buy Give a Girl a Break just based on the presence of the Champions, Debbie Reynolds, and Bob Fosse. I'll wait until they pack it with a few more Debbie Reynolds titles in a "Value Pak" though.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 10:03 pm
by domino harvey
I'd certainly rank Give a Girl a Break among the best musicals ever made, if that helps you along any. And while I don't rate it quite as highly as the Donen, I Love Melvin is nothing to sneeze at: Debbie Reynolds dressed up in a football costume and getting tossed around would have surely moved some units had Warners any balls

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Fri Nov 27, 2009 4:32 pm
by domino harvey
In case you didn't see it in the Bargains thread, Warner Archives is doing a 10 titles for 99.95 with free shipping through the end of the month. Finally bit the bullet and picked up a bunch of titles I'd been eying, will report back on quality later:

Above and Beyond
Gabriel Over the White House
Give a Girl a Break
I Love Melvin
Juke Girl
the Moon is Blue
the Strawberry Blonde
Thousands Cheer
Tiger Shark
Today We Live

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 12:13 am
by Frankinho007
Newest wave:
Boy with Green Hair, The (1948)
Canterville Ghost, The (1944)
Easiest Way, The (1931)
Enchanted Cottage, The (1945)
Golden Dawn (1930)
Happy Years, The (1950)
Hollywood Revue of 1929 (1929)
It's A Great Life (1929)
Next Voice You Hear, The (1950)
On With the Show (1929)
Peanuts Motion Comics: The Complete First Volume
Rio Rita (1929)
Sally (1929)
Show Girl in Hollywood (1930)
Smart Woman (1948)
Union Depot (1932)
Untamed Youth (1957)
Woman on Pier 13, The (1949)

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 12:31 am
by domino harvey
There goes any remaining hope of a fourth Bette Davis set. What a joke

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 12:37 am
by Frankinho007
domino harvey wrote:There goes any remaining hope of a fourth Bette Davis set. What a joke
Am I missing something? No Davis title has been released in this wave?

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 1:30 am
by domino harvey
Whoops. Man, you know it's been a long day when you confuse the Enchanted Cottage and Cabin in the Cotton #-o

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 1:53 am
by Matt
Ah'd lahk ta scold ya, but ah jay-ust wahshed mah hay-uh.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 2:14 am
by Jeff
Boy with Green Hair, The (1948)
Canterville Ghost, The (1944)
I can't believe these are being relegated to the Archive line, though after The Tall Target, I shouldn't be surprised at anything.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 2:30 am
by HerrSchreck
I'm waiting for someone to report in from the hospital, typing with their pinky toe that they've been brain damaged by watching Golden Dawn, probably the most disastrous musical ever made (and certainly among the--if not the--most racist). Watching the ensemble chorus chiming in behind the female lead singing My B'wana is one of the most brain-frying experiences you'll have watching cinema. Pushes the outer frontiers of bad film and Bad Taste into abstraction. The writers obliviously putting together this film is kind of like the cinematic equivalent of walking into a small child's incredibly tragic funeral service tap dancing and farting while juggling rubber tits and goosing all the ladies & tossing gags around.

In better WB Archive news, I recently saw Niblo's heartfelt The Red Lily... beautifully composed and constructed, visually... very good film, stupid ending though.

Re: Warner Brothers Archive Collection

Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 2:40 am
by The Elegant Dandy Fop
That's it. When I get paid, I'm getting Golden Dawn. Your description sold me on it.