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Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 10:13 pm
by bdsweeney
To join in the fun, I second (or third) calls for earlier Edward Yang and Alan Rudolph. Also not sure how well known he is outside of Australia, but a collection of early Paul Cox (e.g. Man of Flowers, My First Wife) would be a dream come true.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 10:21 pm
by What A Disgrace
I'd like a Dovzhenko box.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 10:28 pm
by ryannichols7
What A Disgrace wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:21 pm I'd like a Dovzhenko box.
I hesitated to list anything Mosfilm related as I assume that's a no go any time soon. Dovzhenko and Eisenstein's work is largely untouched in the UK and would be great, but alas..

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 10:32 pm
by Calvin
Some others that have come to mind
- Jean-Pierre Mocky's Litan - a lot of his films have been restored and released on Blu in France sans English subtitles recently, including this one which would probably have some genre-fan crossover
- Cottafavi's Fiamma che non si spegne
- Petri's Todo Modo (goodness knows what happened to that 'Kinoglazorama' start up that was supposed to release a Blu-Ray 7 years ago)
- Staudte's The Murderers Are Among Us
- Konrad Wolf's Divided Heaven, or any other DEFA films
- Gremillon's La petite Lise
- Erice's The Quince Tree Sun
- Ekman's Girl with Hyacinths
- Koundouros' The Ogre of Athens
- Drach's On n'enterre pas le dimanche
- All of Lukas Moodyssons films

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 10:36 pm
by Calvin
ryannichols7 wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:28 pm
What A Disgrace wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:21 pm I'd like a Dovzhenko box.
I hesitated to list anything Mosfilm related as I assume that's a no go any time soon. Dovzhenko and Eisenstein's work is largely untouched in the UK and would be great, but alas..
Dovzhenko's works are owned and sold by the Dovzhenko Centre, not Mosfilm. They seem to distribute most of Ukraine's cinema heritage. My understanding is that the Dovzhenko Film Studios and Odessa Film Studios went to the Ukrainian state after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 11:04 pm
by Yakushima
I'll second more Shohei Imamura. I would especially like them to release Dr. Akagi and Warm Water Under a Red Bridge.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 11:22 pm
by senseabove
Calvin wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:32 pm - Erice's The Quince Tree Sun
Lots of great suggestions here, but yes please to this one in particular.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 11:36 pm
by criterionsnob
I would love to see some much needed DVD rescues upgraded to Blu such as:

Claire Denis (No Fear, No Die, I Can’t Sleep, Nénette et Boni, Vendredi soir, L’intrus, 35 Shots of Rum)
Weerasethakul (Tropical Malady, Blissfully Yours, Syndromes and a Century)
Béla Tarr (Almanac of Fall, Werckmeister Harmonies)
Carax (Pola X)
Moodysson (everything, especially Fucking Åmål)
Tom Kalin (Swoon)
Dardenne (L’enfant, Le fils)
Cronenberg (Spider)
Genet (Un chant d'amour)
Cassavetes (Minnie and Moskowitz)
Godard (Notre musique)
Antonioni (Zabriskie Point)

Anything unreleased on Blu from Bresson, Petzold, Edward Yang, Tsai Ming-liang, and Hou Hsiao-Hsien.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Sun May 29, 2022 11:39 pm
by Yakushima
YES to Cronenberg's Spider!

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 12:09 am
by beamish14
Yakushima wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 11:04 pm I'll second more Shohei Imamura. I would especially like them to release Dr. Akagi and Warm Water Under a Red Bridge.
Yes, please.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 12:10 am
by beamish14
bdsweeney wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 10:13 pm To join in the fun, I second (or third) calls for earlier Edward Yang and Alan Rudolph. Also not sure how well known he is outside of Australia, but a collection of early Paul Cox (e.g. Man of Flowers, My First Wife) would be a dream come true.


Paul Cox is a fantastic suggestion. You can’t purchase many for non-institutional use. He’s an amazing artist in the pantheon of Australian and Dutch cinema

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 12:13 am
by beamish14
Maltic wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 9:43 pm
beamish14 wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 8:08 pm
I’ve accepted the fact that Remember My Name will never happen, but I really don’t know what the hell is holding up Choose Me
Remember My Name does seem to often turn up on lists of cursed or semi-cursed films, like Hellzapoppin, The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond, The Heartbreak Kid, A City of Sadness, Bullet in the Head, The Mission (Johnnie To)...

Nothing Lasts Forever (1984), The Fixer (1969), Play it as it Lays, Bill Gunn’s Stop, Little Darlings, Looking for Mr. Goodbar

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 1:16 am
by therewillbeblus
beamish14 wrote: Mon May 30, 2022 12:13 am Bill Gunn’s Stop... Looking for Mr. Goodbar
Enthusiastically seconded

Also, if KL isn't going to do it, somebody needs to put out Mekas' magnum opus As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty on blu already (not sure how their other Mekas blu double feature has fared but I'm not holding my breath)

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 1:28 am
by beamish14
criterionsnob wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 11:36 pm I would love to see some much needed DVD rescues upgraded to Blu such as:

Claire Denis (No Fear, No Die, I Can’t Sleep, Nénette et Boni, Vendredi soir, L’intrus, 35 Shots of Rum)
Weerasethakul (Tropical Malady, Blissfully Yours, Syndromes and a Century)
Béla Tarr (Almanac of Fall, Werckmeister Harmonies)
Carax (Pola X)
Moodysson (everything, especially Fucking Åmål)
Tom Kalin (Swoon)
Dardenne (L’enfant, Le fils)
Cronenberg (Spider)
Genet (Un chant d'amour)
Cassavetes (Minnie and Moskowitz)
Godard (Notre musique)
Antonioni (Zabriskie Point)

Anything unreleased on Blu from Bresson, Petzold, Edward Yang, Tsai Ming-liang, and Hou Hsiao-Hsien.


KinoLorber Insider said that there was some issue currently preventing Minnie and Moskowitz from getting a Blu-Ray. I’d love to find out what happened with the footage Universal cut out of it shortly after its original release. It seems like they actually went behind Cassavetes’ back and hacked up the original camera negative, which is crazy

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 2:26 am
by swo17
Here is my ultimate dreamlist, in something like chronological order, irrespective of rights, adequate materials, practicality, etc. I've limited myself to 105 directors and three films per director, but I would generally welcome any other films by these directors, or any other films in general. I like films.

Lumière Brothers: something like the old Japanese laserdisc set that contained 365 of their actualities
Giovanni Pastrone: Il fuoco, The War and the Dream of Momi
Mauritz Stiller: Love and Journalism, the Thomas Graal films
Victor Sjöström: The Outlaw and His Wife (not sped up like the Kino DVD), He Who Gets Slapped, The Wind
Teinosuke Kinugasa: A Page of Madness, Crossroads
Pál Fejős: Sonnenstrahl
Jean Grémillon: The Lighthouse Keepers, Maldone, La Petite Lise
King Vidor: The Crowd
Erich von Stroheim: Greed
Arthur Robison: Der Student von Prag
Luis Buñuel: Las Hurdes, Los olvidados, Él
Edward Cahn: Afraid to Talk, Radio Patrol, Law and Order
Yasujirō Ozu: Record of a Tenement Gentleman
Kenji Mizoguchi: Portrait of Madame Yuki
Mikio Naruse: Ishinaka
Georges Franju: Thérèse Desqueyroux, Thomas l'imposteur, short films
Bruce Conner: A Movie, Cosmic Ray, Breakaway
Peter Kubelka: Schwechater, Arnulf Rainer, Unsere Afrikareise
Allan Dwan: Silver Lode, Slightly Scarlet
Jerry Lewis: The Ladies Man, The Patsy, The Family Jewels
Karel Kachyňa: Long Live the Republic
Jim Davis: Light Reflections, Impulses, Fathomless
Tomu Uchida: Fugitive from the Past
Kihachi Okamoto: The Human Bullet
Claude Chabrol: Les Bonnes Femmes, The Unfaithful Woman, This Man Must Die
Kijū Yoshida: A Story Written with Water, The Affair, Flame and Women
Nagisa Ōshima: Night and Fog in Japan, Boy, Diary of a Shinjuku Thief
Jean-Luc Godard: JLG/JLG
Michel Deville: Ce soir ou jamais, The Bear and the Doll, L'Apprenti salaud
Maurice Pialat: La Maison des bois
Manoel de Oliveira: The Satin Slipper, Os canibais, The Convent
Miklós Jancsó: Jesus Christ's Horoscope
Shadi Abdel Salam: The Night of Counting the Years
Mircea Veroiu & Dan Pița: The Stone Wedding
Glauber Rocha: Black God White Devil, Der Leone Have Sept Cabeças
Otar Iosseliani: Once Upon a Time There Was a Singing Blackbird, Brigands Chapter VII, Winter Song
Andy Warhol: Empire
Pat O'Neill: The Decay of Fiction and other works
Jerzy Skolimowski: Barrier
Yuri Ilyenko: A Well for the Thirsty, The Eve of Ivan Kupalo, The White Bird Marked with Black
R.W. Fassbinder: Das Kaffeehaus, Nora Helmer, Women in New York
Michael Snow: Wavelength
Roy Andersson: commercials and shorts
Kira Muratova: The Asthenic Syndrome, Chekhovian Motifs, Melody for a Street Organ
Mitsuo Yanagimachi: Godspeed You Black Emperor, The Nineteen Year Old's Map, Fire Festival
Antonio Mercero: La cabina and other works
Mani Kaul: Uski roti, Duvidha
Theo Angelopoulos: The Hunters, Landscape in the Mist, The Suspended Step of the Stork
Carlos Saura: The Hunt, Deprisa deprisa
Mark Rappaport: The Scenic Route
Alan Pakula: Starting Over
Raúl Ruiz: City of Pirates, Manoël on the Island of Marvels, Mammame
Tian Zhuangzhuang: The Horse Thief
Hou Hsiao-hsien: A City of Sadness, Good Men Good Women, Goodbye South Goodbye
Sogo Ishii: Angel Dust, August in the Water, Labyrinth of Dreams
Lejf Marcussen: The Public Voice and other works
Aleksei German: My Friend Ivan Lapshin, Trial on the Road
Aleksei German Jr.: The Last Train, Paper Soldier, Under Electric Clouds
Aleksandr Sokurov: Days of Eclipse, The Second Circle, Mother and Son
György Fehér: Twilight
Víctor Erice: The Quince Tree Sun
José Luis Guerín: Train of Shadows, The Academy of Muses, De una isla
David Lynch: Industrial Symphony No. 1 and other more obscure works
Michel Gondry, Spike Jonze, Chris Cunnigham, etc.: something like the Palm label Directors Series devoted to music videos, but updated, more comprehensive, and on Blu-ray
Ernie Gehr: Serene Velocity, Rear Window, Side/Walk/Shuttle
Mohsen Makhmalbaf: The Cyclist, A Moment of Innocence, Salam Cinema
Tsai Ming-liang: The Hole, What Time Is It There?, The Wayward Cloud
Heddy Honigmann: Crazy, The Underground Orchestra
Claire Denis: US Go Home, Nénette et Boni, The Intruder
Lidia Bobrova: Hey You Geese, In That Land
Lukas Moodysson: Fucking Åmål, Lilya 4-Ever
Todd Solondz: Happiness, Wiener-Dog
Fred Kelemen: Frost
Nicolas Provost: Gravity, Papillon d'amour, Storyteller
Ben Russell: The Red and the Blue Gods, the Trypps films, The Twenty-One Lives of Billy the Kid
Peter Hutton: Study of a River, Skagafjördur, At Sea
David Gordon Green: All the Real Girls
Jia Zhang-ke: Pickpocket, Platform, Unknown Pleasures
Zhang Hanyi: Life After Life
Adam Curtis: The Century of the Self, All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace, Can't Get You Out of My Head
Dardenne Brothers: Le Fils, L'Enfant
Carlos Reygadas: Battle in Heaven, Silent Light, Our Time
Eugène Green: Le Monde vivant, Le Pont des Arts, The Portuguese Nun
Lav Diaz: Evolution of a Filipino Family, Heremias, From What Is Before
Amir Naderi: The Runner, Water Wind Dust, Sound Barrier
Aleksei Balabanov: Cargo 200, Morphine
Cristi Puiu: Sieranevada
Sergei Loznitsa: My Joy, Austerlitz, Babi Yar - Context
Elia Suleiman: Divine Intervention, The Time That Remains, It Must Be Heaven
Mohammad Rasoulof: The White Meadows, Goodbye
Ruben Östlund: Involuntary, Incident by a Bank, Play
Yorgos Lanthimos: short films
Viktor Kossakovsky: Svyato, ¡Vivan las Antipodas!, Gunda
Paul Clipson: Bend Sinister, Union, Spectral Ascension
Guy Maddin: The Green Fog
Joaquín Cociña & Cristóbal León: short films
Alice Rohrwacher: Lazzaro felice
Emmanuel Mouret: Fais-moi plaisir!, Caprice, The Things We Say The Things We Do
Philippe Lesage: Les Démons, Genesis
Mikhaël Hers: Amanda
Mariano Llinás: Extraordinary Stories, La flor
Jazmin López: If I Were the Winter Itself
Peter Rose: Towards a Six-Dimensional Cinema and other 3D works

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 2:32 am
by joshua
Are there issues that have kept Georges Franju's Thérèse Desqueyroux, Thomas the Impostor, and The Demise of Father Mouret from being released on Blu ray? I'd like to see those in a proper way sometime.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 2:58 am
by criterionsnob
swo17 wrote:György Fehér: Twilight
Seconded.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 3:09 am
by soundchaser
Was Simeoni responsible for bringing L’amour d’une femme to Arrow? If so, yes, please more Grémillon.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 6:59 am
by pianocrash
Move (Rosenberg)
Northern Lights (Hanson/Nilsson)
Nothing Lasts Forever (Schiller)
Golden Eighties (Akerman)
An Ambush Of Ghosts (Everett Lewis)
Broken English (Gleason)
Taking Off (Forman)
Elvira Madigan (Widerberg)
The Bite (Mukai)
Pound (Downey Sr.)
Georgia (Grosbard)
A Pool Without Water (Wakamatsu)
Eureka (Aoyama)
Dadetown (Hexter)
Under The Skin (Carine Adler)
Burning Snow (Tam)
The Railroad Man (Germi)
Konstantin Lopushansky (Dead Man's Letters, A Visitor To A Museum, etc.)
Alain Tanner (Le Salamandre, In The White City, Jonah Who Will Be 25 In The Year 2000, etc.)
Gakuryu Sogo Ishii (The Crazy Family, August In The Water)
Angelopoulos, Erice, Llinas, Moodysson, etc.

Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 7:04 am
by MichaelB
beamish14 wrote:More Francophone Canadian films would be fantastic. I’d love to have both cuts of Kamouraska and Leolo was already restored (actually, so was Night Zoo)
An uncut Léolo is impossible in the UK without the abolition of both the 1937 Cinematograph Films (Animals) Act and the 1978 Protection of Children Act, which obviously isn’t going to happen.

Back in the 1990s, the BBFC bent over backwards to be lenient, but a couple of shots were so blatantly illegal that they couldn’t let them through.
joshua wrote:Are there issues that have kept Georges Franju's Thérèse Desqueyroux, Thomas the Impostor, and The Demise of Father Mouret from being released on Blu ray? I'd like to see those in a proper way sometime.
The latter is out on BD in France, but without English subtitles.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 10:13 am
by ryannichols7
Glowingwabbit wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 1:56 pm It would be nice to see him dip his toes back into Iranian cinema specifically with more Mohsen Makhmalbaf (Calvin mentioned him already). I know the Arrow set didn't sell well but those weren't titles he's well known for so they kind of set themselves up to fail (even though the set is absolutely wonderful). Hell even the films by the rest of the Makhmalbaf family would be great.
I didn't mention Iran but this would be great too, Kiarostami, Panahi, and Farhadi still remain the big names in the west but those three Makhmalbaf films they put out are still the only ones on English-friendly BDs I'm pretty sure. Criterion will hopefully release Chess in the Wind soon so we should be getting some Iranian stuff this year on disc.
MichaelB wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 3:09 pm In all seriousness, it might be well worth poring through the now nearly 17-year-old Second Run suggestions thread, because quite a few of those have yet to appear anywhere.

(Doubtless for reasons more complicated than UK/US labels not fancying them, but still.)
it's amazing to read that thread as so much of it was from the early days of SR when it wasn't fully established what they were going for. I got a hoot seeing Billy Wilder's name mentioned in there...but that was such a different time, who would know?

also amazing to see just how many of the suggestions Second Run has put out over the years in phenomenal editions. hopefully Fran is able to do the same with our off the wall requests.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 10:32 am
by Glowingwabbit
Radiance Films tweeted that Tom Mes will be producing for them:
Delighted to announce more partnerships being cemented. The ever brilliant Tom Mes @midnightmes will be producing with us across his range of expertise, which is far more than just Japan!

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 10:42 am
by FrauBlucher
Fran popped on to the bluray.com forum. If you can’t wait for him to come on here you can read his post Here

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 11:03 am
by rapta
ryannichols7 wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 9:50 pm
Spoiler
sabbath wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 5:01 pm Some of my dream releases that could have been released through Arrow Academy, but not anymore--

- Anything from Mikio Naruse
- Anything from Yasuzo Masumura, especially--

 The Wives of Yasuzo Masumura:
 · A Wife Confesses (1961)
 · The Husband Witnessed (1964)
 · Seisaku's Wife (1965)
 · The Wife of Seishu Hanaoka (1967)
 · Two Wives (1967)

- Anything from Shinji Sōmai

- A Fugitive from the Past (1965, Tomu Uchida)
- Pandemonium (1971, Toshio Matsumoto)
- Shinji Aoyama's Kitakyushu Saga:
 · Helpless (1996)
 · Eureka (2000)
 · Sad Vacation (2007)
ditto to ALL of these. though as I address below, I wouldn't be surprised if Jasper Sharp keeps Masumura at Arrow, which is fine as long as the films come out!!
What A Disgrace wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 4:38 am Realistically speaking, they'll probably try to acquire more commercially saleable genre titles before (or in conjunction with) acquiring more obscure art house and classical fare. It's getting harder and harder to figure out what those actually are, of course, with Arrow and co. attacking those angles aggressively in the UK market. I could see them releasing some Spanish horror, though, which remains conspicuously unexplored in the UK. The work of Narciso Ibáñez Serrador, for example, and the many films of Paul Naschy. Perhaps some 70s US oddities like Blue Sunshine and Let's Scare Jessica to Death?
yeah I'm not entirely against them releasing genre titles - this is clearly what sells, and as you see more labels buy more into this (Arrow and Eureka especially), it totally makes sense and I understand why. there's such a big market for this stuff but the problem is that so much is being devoted to it, the "riskier" deep cut titles aren't getting any love. but I remain optimistic - Fran knows how to run this stuff and pre-Zavvi Arrow really did a good job of covering both. I'm pleased to see a lot of people on BRcom speaking up on horror being well covered in the market - it really is, and I feel so much else is being left by the wayside. there's UHDs of so much schlock out there and it sells but then you have people at other labels telling me a Bluray of TWO of Yasujiro Ozu's films (that have never been released on Bluray in the West) aren't "financially viable" or whatever, even with 4K restorations available from Shochiku. but anyway, that's all for another thread.

Fran, when you come back to this forum, welcome back - I always enjoyed your posts in the past. you did ask for title requests and I tried to be within reason for mine..stuff I know is available to license, stuff that is in new restorations, etc. my tastes do lean more Asian, and I think classic Hollywood titles in need are pretty well requested. more modern Japanese movies I think usually go Third Window, and I think I have a grasp of what stuff Second Run goes for. I also scoured your Letterboxd profile for stuff I like that doesn't have that doesn't have a UK disc (sorry if this went next level!) but without further ado...

Floating Weeds (1959, Yasujiro Ozu): the MOC BD is long OOP and I doubt they renewed the rights. you worked with Kadokawa at Arrow and they have restored this film in 4K, even releasing it in Japan on Bluray, but without English subtitles unfortunately. I don't know if Criterion grabbed the rights to this in the UK, but I think Ozu has only gotten more popular since MOC's original release. having the only English-friendly release of the 4K restoration I think would be really successful, I doubt CC will get to it any time soon so you'd get plenty of importers from the US as well I'm sure. there is an existant Roger Ebert commentary, and I'm sure getting Ozu champions like David Bordwell, Tony Rayns, or Jonathan Rosenbaum would be lovely.

films by Kon Ichikawa: should be some restorations if I'm not mistaken - The Burmese Harp is Nikkatsu and way too big a title to not be in print on BD, among his other works.

anything from Masahiro Shinoda: Pale Flower is coming to the UK (albeit not in its new restoration), but I think that's still his only movie available on BD in the English speaking world. a crime.

anything by Mikio Naruse: I know this is challenging because most of Naruse's films are held by Toho, who is more difficult to work with (totally public knowledge - see the Godzilla Criterion box, MST3K, etc), but I have to throw in this hail mary as I doubt any of the labels currently would touch these films as new masters become available.

more by Shohei Imamura: I say more because that Survivor Ballads boxset was incredible (though I haven't even gotten to watch it yet, just having it in hand is great), though I admit I'm aware it probably didn't sell that well. I would love to see the 50s and 60s films that MOC released come back into print (Profound Desires of the Gods if I had to pick one), but the biggest priority for me is 1997's The Eel, which has long been out of print! and it was a Palme d'Or winner (which it shared with Taste of Cherry) on top of that. I've wanted to see the film for years (but admittedly in googling it just now I found it online so I guess I know what I'm watching later..though it's very dated looking) and lack of a good copy prevented that. as far as I can tell, Shochiku is the rightsholder, and I know they're generally more cooperative too, restoring the works of both Ozu and Oshima alike within the last few years. but I'll take any of Imamura's works.

the works of Hiroshi Shimizu: as requested up thread, and on BRcom as well (there's interest!!). Shimizu has just so many films, long neglected, and they do largely seem to be with Shochiku.

more by Yasuzo Masumura: I'm sure Jasper Sharp would rather keep these over at Arrow (Masumura is a good crossover director as he does have many films like Blind Beast and Red Angel that fit their mold well), but if Kisses (very un-Arrow), Manji, and the wife series above aren't coming from AV, I'd love to see them come from Radiance.

anything by Hiroshi Teshigahara: another complicated one since he's Toho, but I believe his films crossover well enough to sell too.

Il Posto (1961, Ermanno Olmi): you did Tree of Wooden Clogs at Arrow, and this film has a gorgeous 4K restoration that can even be watched on the Criterion Channel. now let's get it to disc, shall we?

films by Theo Angelopoulos: another Palme d'Or winner but this dude's movies are really hard to come by in general. wonder what's going on with them? Greek cinema is woefully under-represented anyway, I'm glad Yorgos Lanthimos is making a name for himself out there but I think we can go beyond that. this would be a great start, but I do admit I have no idea what the rights/restoration situation is here.

anything by Hou Hsiao-Hsien, Tsai Ming-Liang or Edward Yang not released in the UK, but especially Hou's Millennium Mambo and Yang's Taipei Story: I'm part Taiwanese so I'm pretty passionate about these three, my biggest link to that heritage of my life. the two films I requested do have new restorations and no UK disc, and if you were able to enlist Tony Rayns to do a track on Taipei Story (which I believe is his favorite of Yang's films), I'd pay basically any price for it. Tsai I think may be working with Second Run though since they did Goodbye Dragon Inn and Mehelli Modi did speak of how he wanted Tsai to get more of his movies on disc, but just in case. anyway, That Day on the Beach and Terrorizers from Yang and Summer at Grandpa's, A Time to Live and a Time to Die, and Dust in the Wind from Hou should be available in new scans too, they have BDs elsewhere. Goodbye South Goodbye I have no idea the status on, but it would be a dream.

literally anything from less loved countries at all that don't have a new startup label entirely devoted to backing them (shoutout Mawu): Greece, Romania, Bulgaria, Estonia, Finland, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Egypt, and even India, Germany, Korea, and China could stand to have more "deep cuts" mined, I feel like we see the same few directors for each.

two last things that aren't title requests:

1. can you please do spine numbers? as Indicator and Second Run show, people are way more likely to blind buy and be completionists if you have these I think.

2. can I contribute to this label at all please, with absolutely zero experience whatsoever and despite not even living in the UK? this is the only time I could ever boldly ask this. thank you for reading this anyway if you do.
Agreed with this whole post, and especially the mention of Japanese directors like Teshigahara, Imamura, Shinoda, Ichikawa, and whether unlikely or not at this point, Ozu, Naruse or Shimizu (I agree that Arrow will probably stick with Masamura for the time being). And also Taiwanese directors like Hou, Tsai and Yang, who are underrepresented on Blu-ray (especially frustrating knowing their films have been restored).
criterionsnob wrote: Sun May 29, 2022 11:36 pm
Spoiler
I would love to see some much needed DVD rescues upgraded to Blu such as:

Claire Denis (No Fear, No Die, I Can’t Sleep, Nénette et Boni, Vendredi soir, L’intrus, 35 Shots of Rum)
Weerasethakul (Tropical Malady, Blissfully Yours, Syndromes and a Century)
Béla Tarr (Almanac of Fall, Werckmeister Harmonies)
Carax (Pola X)
Moodysson (everything, especially Fucking Åmål)
Tom Kalin (Swoon)
Dardenne (L’enfant, Le fils)
Cronenberg (Spider)
Genet (Un chant d'amour)
Cassavetes (Minnie and Moskowitz)
Godard (Notre musique)
Antonioni (Zabriskie Point)

Anything unreleased on Blu from Bresson, Petzold, Edward Yang, Tsai Ming-liang, and Hou Hsiao-Hsien.
I think the Weerasethakul might still be coming from Second Run once they're restored (apparently they're in the process). Well, I'd be surprised if they didn't get them again for Blu-ray as they're probably some of their most-requested upgrades.

Agreed with many of these, especially Denis, Dardenne, Cronenberg, Cassavetes, Antonioni, Bresson, Petzold, Yang, Tsai, Hou. Not sure how likely they all are - Curzon Artificial Eye may still have some of them, for example - but you never know. Surprised Eureka didn't do some Yang and more Hou but maybe their Hou titles didn't sell as well as they'd hoped? Frustrating the lack of Petzold on UK Blu-ray actually (I only have Phoenix, as Transit was DVD-only and Undine hasn't even made it to disc). BFI are doing three Bresson titles this year which is exciting, finally able to upgrade from my old Artificial Eye DVDs.

Re: Radiance Films

Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 11:07 am
by Maltic
Nice list, swo.

A Sokurov box set to jump-start this new label would be... bold!