Re: Synapse Films
Posted: Sun Nov 22, 2009 4:52 pm
Among other things, Synapse will be releasing 27 Nikkatsu roman-pornos next year.
Not wanting to go too off topic, but dear god this has to be seen to be believed. Yes, Charles Hawtrey does get involved (as a comedy accountant) along with Patricia Hayes (as a charlady) which must count as genuinely odd casting.colinr0380 wrote: The Terrornauts – an incredibly bizarre looking British sci-fi film from Amicus, featuring Charles Hawtrey of all people battling an alien invasion and featuring actual space battles, seemingly conducted on a Doctor Who sized budget! It looks charmingly rough around the edges.
et voilaDr Amicus wrote:What's the trailer like?
I've the the other 42nd Street Forever releases and we just got the Alamo Draft one in at work. I'll be sure to check it out ASAP. If you haven't checked out Message from Space, do it now! It's so cheesy, but I can't deny the amounts of fun I had watching it. Not the best Fukasaku, but certainly one of his strangest.colinr0380 wrote:Message From Space – the Kinji Fukasaku sci-fi samurai film with great looking practical special effects, spaceships in the form of galleons with their crews in naval garb (seemingly channelling Space Battleship Yamato), annoyingly cute robots (described in the commentary as looking good in the trailer but moving in the film itself just as if you “threw a trashcan down the stairs”), glowing walnuts of destiny and a pissed off looking Vic Morrow (“I buried my career….in orbit!”). This would be a shoe-in for Lino’s Space Opera list. It certainly looks cheesier, and therefore more fun, than the Star Wars films! Like a sci-fi paperback cover come to life.
Putney Swope directed by Robert Downey Snr. – not much to be gleaned from the pimple cream parody song used as the trailer. According to the commentary the film itself is about a truthful advertising company which sounds interesting, although I remember feeling the same way about the Dudley Moore film Crazy People before I saw it, and look how that turned out!
They did. The picture sags a bit in the middle, and the characters are all cardboardy, but the visuals are consistently stunning from beginning to end. Here's part of the review from Locus Online:colinr0380 wrote:The Fabulous World of Jules Verne – a strange Czech film combining live action and animation to seemingly create the effect of woodcut prints come to life. I'd love to see if they could have pulled this technique off for a whole picture.
The dubbed version of the film is available from Movies Unlimited http://www.moviesunlimited.com/musite/p ... c=director. I've only seen the film in 16mm, but from what I've read the DVD's visual quality isn't bad. In any case, this movie is nowhere as well known as it should be, given that it's one of the most impressive animation-live action hybrids ever made. Zeman continued with this technique in Baron Prásil, aka The Fabulous Adventures of Baron Munchausen, which some say puts even Jules Verne to shame. I haven't seen it yet but have ordered a gray-market copy--I eagerly await its arrival.Zeman lets out all the stops. This is a live-action black and white movie — but it uses every camera trick and every form of animation known in 1958... Methods include stop-motion, paper cutout, drawing and painting animation, drawn foregrounds and backdrops, dissolves, miniatures and models, double exposure (probably in-camera and superimposition), still images, traveling and stationary mattes — they're all here. There were at least eight people watching; someone yelled out at one point "There are at least seven different things going on in this scene!" (I counted eight.) And all this before the invention of blue screens!
What impresses most about the film is the sheer fanatical devotion to detail, of the meticulous composition of so many diverse elements in a single shot that occasionally puts even such painstaking stop-motion giants as Willis O'Brien, Ray Harryhausen and Nick Park to shame. In terms of black and white trick photography, you'd have to reach back to films like Buster Keaton's Sherlock Jr. to find anything even remotely comparable, and this is easily an order of magnitude more sophisticated.
There are lines drawn on sets, and even on people, to keep the original steel-engraving feel. The scenes of ships of the water have been treated with some sort of light, striped screen (probably cloth, probably double-exposed) that makes the moving waves of real water take on the appearance of the engraved lines in a 19th century drawing of the sea. There's a scene of a train coming down a track — the train is drawn; the wheels and the tracks are animated; the (real) engineer stands on an open platform in the engine's cab and (real) people lean out of the (drawn) passenger car. (It's so simple and powerful it takes your breath away.) Actors walk through back-projected sets; at the same time they're walking behind animated full-sized paper cutouts of spinning flywheels and meshing gears, all this in front of a painted set in the middle-background. For maybe five seconds of screen time. There's a scene of an animated shark attacking a real diver in a model set with painted water. We could go on...
Synapse Films is finally entering the Blu-ray arena. The first title from the independent studio, scheduled for December is Vampire Circus, a 1972 horror title from Hammer Film Productions directed by Robert Young and set in a 19th-century village visited by a traveling carnival whose performers are bloodsuckers. Video will be presented in 1080p and 1.66:1, while audio will be monoaural DTS-HD Master Audio.
Special features include:
* The Bloodiest Show on Earth: Making Vampire Circus: all-new documentary featuring interviews with filmmaker Joe Dante, Hammer documentarian Ted Newsom, Video Watchdog editor/author Tim Lucas, author/film historian Philip Nutman and David Prowse
* Gallery of Grotesqueries: A Brief History of Circus Horrors: retrospective featurette
* Visiting the House of Hammer: Britain's Legendary Horror Magazine retrospective on the popular British publication featuring Nutman
* Vampire Circus interactive comic book, featuring artwork by Brian Bolland
* Poster and stills gallery
* Original theatrical trailer
In 2011, Synapse will release Twins of Evil, Hands of the Ripper and the TV series Hammer House of Horror, although at the time it is not known if all will come out in high definition.
Nope. The restoration work required is MUCH more extensive than we thought. Next week, I have to go through the only decent existing print of the short version to hopefully fix a couple scene that had splices in the long version. It's exciting, but extremely time consuming and I want to do it right, so, it's taking much more time than anticipated.
Maybe Synapse also picked up Tenebrae and PhenomenaThe flu makes you do crazy things... Like tease announcements and such for upcoming Synapse Films titles. Yep. Coming in 2013.
Extras have been in the works for months now (it's been INCREDIBLY difficult to keep this secret).
We will also be correcting the incorrect black levels and the botched day-for-night shots that have plagued other versions. Other things, too. More info as we go along.
Perhaps there will be multiple audio options? Perhaps.