Re: Recent Film Restorations
Posted: Mon Apr 18, 2022 7:38 pm
He must be referring to the arrangement or the recording rights - there's no way the song itself is still in copyright.
Interesting. The old Capitol LP soundtrack lists "The Eyes of Texas Are Upon You" as the end title music. Saw Giant in a revival theater many years ago, but no idea what the end music might have been back then.hearthesilence wrote: Mon Apr 18, 2022 7:25 pmI would imagine so. Regardless, I found this published in September 2008, written by Jonathan Rosenbaum:MichaelB wrote: Mon Apr 18, 2022 6:41 pm Presumably the problem was with the performance/recording rather than the mid-19th-century song?
"...the once-memorable and semi-audacious use of “The Yellow Rose of Texas” over the final credits — a very significant reprise of a song that plays over a climactic fistfight provoked by anti-Mexican behavior in the movie’s penultimate sequence — is no longer part of the movie on the DVD, presumably because the owners of the song rights demanded too much money."
Maybe Rosenbaum got the song title wrong?Fred Holywell wrote: Fri Apr 22, 2022 9:37 pmInteresting. The old Capitol LP soundtrack lists "The Eyes of Texas Are Upon You" as the end title music. Saw Giant in a revival theater many decades ago, but no idea what the end music might have been back then.hearthesilence wrote: Mon Apr 18, 2022 7:25 pmI would imagine so. Regardless, I found this published in September 2008, written by Jonathan Rosenbaum:MichaelB wrote: Mon Apr 18, 2022 6:41 pm Presumably the problem was with the performance/recording rather than the mid-19th-century song?
"...the once-memorable and semi-audacious use of “The Yellow Rose of Texas” over the final credits — a very significant reprise of a song that plays over a climactic fistfight provoked by anti-Mexican behavior in the movie’s penultimate sequence — is no longer part of the movie on the DVD, presumably because the owners of the song rights demanded too much money."
easily the biggest news here being The Trial, restored from the original camera negative. one hopes Criterion is working with Canal on bringing out a loaded edition of my favorite Welles movie, possibly with what remains of Filming 'The Trial' as well as the usual scholarly contributions from Rosenbaum/Naremore, Callow, McBride, and others. looking forward to this!
Agreed. I'm also hoping the new restoration doesn't include the superimposed text credits at the end (as the current Studio Canal Blu-ray has) which are not only redundant (given that Welles is reading the credits for you on the soundtrack), but cause cognitive dissonance since they do not appear on-screen in synch with Welles' narration. I have no idea if the French version of the film ("Le Procès") had these on-screen credits when the film was released in 1962, but they look newly-created (as does the title) on the Blu-ray.ryannichols7 wrote: Mon May 02, 2022 4:24 pmeasily the biggest news here being The Trial, restored from the original camera negative. one hopes Criterion is working with Canal on bringing out a loaded edition of my favorite Welles movie, possibly with what remains of Filming 'The Trial' as well as the usual scholarly contributions from Rosenbaum/Naremore, Callow, McBride, and others. looking forward to this!

A number of his films have already been restored by ABS-CBN and the Asian Film Archive, but I don't think there have been any physical releases anywhere yet. I'm hoping that Kani Releasing gets some out, following their great release of Brocka's Cain and Abel.tenia wrote: Tue May 03, 2022 5:07 pm This bit is actually what got me the most excited : "This presentation is a preview of the French release of Mike De Leon’s entire restored body of work, slated 2022-2023."
For God’s sake, make it the originally released version and not the cut that’s about 8 minutes shorter. The re-release looked spectacular in 35mm, but it wasn’t even billed as being a recutCalvin wrote: Wed May 04, 2022 6:10 pm One from the Heart is next up on American Zoetrope's to-do list
Probably should've assumed it, but I didn't know Coppola'd recut this one. Can't find much about it, though, beyond discussion of the extras on previous releases, and those are mixed about the history (e.g. mondo digital describes it as the original, but the BD.com review describes it as an "early" version, which seems to imply unused alternate). Was the recut done during the restoration in the early oughts/for home video release? Has the original cut ever had a home video release, and is there any more detailed delineation of the differences?beamish14 wrote: Wed May 04, 2022 9:06 pm For God’s sake, make it the originally released version and not the cut that’s about 8 minutes shorter. The re-release looked spectacular in 35mm, but it wasn’t even billed as being a recut
senseabove wrote: Wed May 04, 2022 9:26 pmProbably should've assumed it, but I didn't know Coppola'd recut this one. Can't find much about it, though, beyond discussion of the extras on previous releases, and those are mixed about the history (e.g. mondo digital describes it as the original, but the BD.com review describes it as an "early" version, which seems to imply unused alternate). Was the recut done during the restoration in the early oughts/for home video release? Has the original cut ever had a home video release, and is there any more detailed delineation of the differences?beamish14 wrote: Wed May 04, 2022 9:06 pm For God’s sake, make it the originally released version and not the cut that’s about 8 minutes shorter. The re-release looked spectacular in 35mm, but it wasn’t even billed as being a recut