Re: Kino Lorber Studio Classics Acquisitions
Posted: Sun Sep 05, 2021 5:04 pm
In June of 2020, Bressonaire guessed Criterion wouldn't release Hail for about a year, so I'm expecting it any day now
Brand New Dolby Vision HDR Master from a 4K Scan of the Original Camera Negative!
Coming November 30th on Blu-ray & DVD!
https://www.kinolorber.com/product/freu ... on-blu-ray
https://www.kinolorber.com/product/freu ... assion-dvd
Freud (1962)
• NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historian Tim Lucas
• TRAILERS FROM HELL with Howard Rodman
• Theatrical Trailer
• Optional English Subtitles
B&W 140 Minutes 1.85:1 Not Rated
From the legendary John Huston, the director of The Maltese Falcon, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, The African Queen, Moby Dick, The Misfits and Prizzi’s Honor, comes this compelling biopic starring the incomparable Montgomery Clift (Indiscretion of an American Wife) as the renowned Austrian neurologist Sigmund Freud. The film follows Freud’s descent into a region almost as black as Hell itself—man’s unconscious—as he develops the notion that neurosis stems from sexual repression. By treating patients with various issues, including a woman haunted by recurring dreams (Susannah York, The Killing of Sister George) and a man with an Oedipus complex (David McCallum, The Great Escape), Freud experiences epiphanies that lead to the birth of modern analysis, despite the scorn his theories initially receive from his colleagues. Garnering Oscar nominations for its score by Jerry Goldsmith (Lonely Are the Brave) and screenplay by Charles Kaufman and Wolfgang Reinhardt (its original script was by French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre), and featuring evocative black-and-white cinematography by Douglas Slocombe (Raiders of the Lost Ark), Freud also-known-as Freud: The Secret Passion delivers a penetrating character study of the father of psychoanalytical psychiatry.
Did Kino Lorber actually implement the replacement program?senseabove wrote: Tue Apr 27, 2021 5:28 pmShockingly, KLInsider skipped the angry dismissal round and went straight to announcing a replacement program. Maybe .com should go down for a few days more often?dwk wrote: Wed Apr 21, 2021 3:34 pm Looks like Kino fucked up their Lust, Caution release by omitting all the location and date title cards
Here it is: Lust, Caution (replacement program USA/Canada only)kekid wrote: Wed Sep 08, 2021 3:38 amDid Kino Lorber actually implement the replacement program?senseabove wrote: Tue Apr 27, 2021 5:28 pmShockingly, KLInsider skipped the angry dismissal round and went straight to announcing a replacement program. Maybe .com should go down for a few days more often?dwk wrote: Wed Apr 21, 2021 3:34 pm Looks like Kino fucked up their Lust, Caution release by omitting all the location and date title cards
If so, can someone please give details of how to obtain the replacement?
Thank you.
Thanks!sabbath wrote: Wed Sep 08, 2021 4:02 amHere it is: Lust, Caution (replacement program USA/Canada only)kekid wrote: Wed Sep 08, 2021 3:38 amDid Kino Lorber actually implement the replacement program?senseabove wrote: Tue Apr 27, 2021 5:28 pm
Shockingly, KLInsider skipped the angry dismissal round and went straight to announcing a replacement program. Maybe .com should go down for a few days more often?
If so, can someone please give details of how to obtain the replacement?
Thank you.
Quote:
Coming Soon!
Golden Earrings (1947) Starring Marlene Dietrich & Ray Milland – Shot by Daniel L. Fapp (The Great Escape) – Screenplay by Abraham Polonsky (Force of Evil), Frank Butler (Road to Morocco) & Helen Deutsch (Lili) – Directed by Mitchell Leisen (Death Takes a Holiday).
Coming Soon on Blu-ray!
Brand New 4K Master!
The Horse Soldiers (1959) Starring John Wayne, William Holden & Constance Towers – Shot by William H. Clothier (The Alamo, Shenandoah) – Directed by John Ford (Stagecoach, Fort Apache, The Searchers).
The Long Goodbye (1973)
• Brand New Master – 4K Scan of the Inter-positive
• NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historian Tim Lucas
• Rip Van Marlowe: Featurette with Robert Altman and Elliott Gould
• Vilmos Zsigmond Flashes THE LONG GOODBYE: Featurette
• David Thompson on Robert Altman: Featurette
• Tom Williams on Raymond Chandler: Featurette
• Maxim Jakubowski on Hard Boiled Fiction: Featurette
• American Cinematographer 1973 Article with Animation
• TRAILERS FROM HELL with Josh Olson
• Radio Spots
• TV Spot
• Two Theatrical Trailers
• Reversible Art
• Limited Edition O-Card Slipcase
• Optional English Subtitles
This is the should be the feature on the 4K and the movie itself should be the bonus feature
As long as they don't make it a habit.Adam X wrote: Mon Sep 20, 2021 7:52 pm Looking to make things difficult for captveg's rigorous tracking of OOP titles, Kino's doing a ltd re-release of Peter Hyams' Busting on 7th Dec, now with extra cardboard.
Broken Lullaby (1932)
• Brand New 2K Master
• NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historian Joseph McBride, author of How Did Lubitsch Do It?
• Trailers
B&W 77 Minutes 1.37:1 Not Rated
From Ernst Lubitsch, the iconic director of Trouble in Paradise, The Merry Widow, Angel, Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife and Ninotchka, comes the Pre-Code drama Broken Lullaby, the most emotionally powerful film in the master’s extraordinary oeuvre. French violinist Paul Renard (Phillips Holmes, An American Tragedy) has returned from World War I triumphant, but is haunted by the death of a German soldier at his hands. Determined to make amends, he travels to the dead man’s hometown and meets his former fiancée, Elsa (Nancy Carroll, The Kiss Before the Mirror), and grieving father (Lionel Barrymore, Duel in the Sun). Rather than reveal his true identity, Paul tells the two that he was a former friend of the deceased soldier. As Elsa and Paul draw closer and the family embraces him as one of their own, Paul’s conscience is torn between revealing his past guilt and embracing a future he never knew possible. While Lubitsch put his sophisticated touch on many of filmdom’s greatest comedies, he also showed his brilliant command of drama with the beautifully crafted, profoundly moving Broken Lullaby.