Last week here in Chicago I went to a screening of SKIDOO ( which atrracted a rather large crowd) with Mr Hirsch introducing the film and after the film a question /answer session. The movie is a fascinating train wreck of a movie!!!!
Mr Hirsch said that we were seeing the only print in existence and it was flown in from London from the BFI.
He also said that Mrs Preminger hates the film and wants it destroyed. Additionally for the upcoming "Otto Preminger Film Retrospective" in New York, she refuses for SKIDOO to be shown there as she lives in New York.
Very interesting!!
I told Mr Hirsch about SKIDOO on TCM in January. He was pleased to hear about it.
I also think those Paramount Preminger films should be a part of an Eclipse Collection. As bad as a few of those films are....they would fascinating fun to watch and own!
Bitchy Widows of Famous Directors Syndrome
- Lino
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 10:18 am
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Preminger's widow must be friend with Welles'. From here:
- Cinephrenic
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 6:58 pm
- Location: Paris, Texas
Mrs. Kubrick, and her defending of her husband's wish to not release his early shorts (Flying Padre, Day of the Fight & The Seafarers) and first feature attempt, Fear and Desire. I don't know why, they are shorts and early work afterall. They are not masterpieces, but what do you expect from a perfectionist master. I mean look at how neat his filmography is.
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm
Though this is surely a clear case of the surviving spouse perpetuating what was explicitly her partner's wish? I don't know if the same can be said for Mylene's suppression of Les affaires publiques.Cinephrenic wrote:Mrs. Kubrick, and her defending of her husband's wish to not release his early shorts (Flying Padre, Day of the Fight & The Seafarers) and first feature attempt, Fear and Desire. I don't know why, they are shorts and early work afterall. They are not masterpieces, but what do you expect from a perfectionist master. I mean look at how neat his filmography is.
In many cases it seems clear that the actions of the heirs aren't doing the legacies they're overseeing any favours, but shouldn't we respect Kubrick's wishes, even if we'd personally love to see the suppressed films? I remember being appalled by Crispin Glover's response ("wow, I'd love to see that, that sounds cool!") on a Herzog commentary to Herzog's very serious explanation that he never wants Game in the Sand to be shown.
But going back to the Beatrice end of the scale (Mrs Kubrick scoring only a single Beatrice, in my opinion), Oshima's sister is apparently also rather unhelpful when it comes to official releases of the titles over which she has control (the ATG ones, I believe), so we're seeing one of the great modern film careers slowly sink into obscurity, or worse, into understandable "what was all the fuss about" confusion when somebody finally sees Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence. (6 Beatrices)
And, to pip MichaelB at the post, Zdenek Liska's widow seems determined to frustrate any chance of her husband being acknowledged as one of the greatest film composers of all time. (7 Beatrices, 10 being the maximum, except for Beatrice herself, who goes up to 11)
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 10:20 pm
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Indeed - and a friend of mine even doorstepped her once just to make sure it was really her saying "no" to everything and not some overzealous agent...zedz wrote:And, to pip MichaelB at the post, Zdenek Liska's widow seems determined to frustrate any chance of her husband being acknowledged as one of the greatest film composers of all time.
...but it definitely was - all he'd say about the encounter was that "she was quite unpleasant about it".
Which is why I plug LiÅ¡ka's music every time I get the opportunity, be it Sight & Sound reviews of The Cremator and Marketa Lazarová, or a special feature on the BFI's Å vankmajer DVDs that lets you play just the LiÅ¡ka-scored films. It's not much, but hopefully it helps get the word out.
- malcolm1980
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She's following her late husband's wishes. I think she would happily release the films if her husband didn't tell her not to. She did consent to a few seconds of Fear and Desire and Day of the Fight to be featured in that Kubrick documentary. Kubrick is a well-known perfectionist. He probably looked back at his early work and didn't want people to see it. So him asking his wife not to release his early work isn't far-fetched.Cinephrenic wrote:Mrs. Kubrick, and her defending of her husband's wish to not release his early shorts (Flying Padre, Day of the Fight & The Seafarers) and first feature attempt, Fear and Desire. I don't know why, they are shorts and early work afterall. They are not masterpieces, but what do you expect from a perfectionist master. I mean look at how neat his filmography is.
I don't think she qualifies as a 'bitch'.
- MichaelB
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I took some flak for the BFI's Quay Brothers DVD not being a complete edition - but when the filmmakers themselves don't want work included, what can you do? (In fact, they wanted their oldest surviving film Nocturna Artificialia suppressed too, but they had no control over the rights - though I did agree to tuck it away on the extras disc)malcolm1980 wrote:Kubrick is a well-known perfectionist. He probably looked back at his early work and didn't want people to see it. So him asking his wife not to release his early work isn't far-fetched.
For the record, this was screened as part of the NFT's complete Bresson retrospective in late 1999, which is where I saw it - but Bresson was still (just) alive at the time.zedz wrote:I don't know if the same can be said for Mylene's suppression of Les affaires publiques.
- tavernier
- Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2005 11:18 pm
But didn't he also want his films released on home video in full-frame versions without any accompanying bells and whistles?malcolm1980 wrote:She's following her late husband's wishes.
I guess she's only selectively following her late husband's wishes: special editions of 2001, et al, are more lucrative than a release of Padre or Flight would be. If she and her brother thought that a set of the shorts and Fear and Desire would make money, I'm sure they'd put them out too.
But I wouldn't call her a "bitch" either.
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Solaris
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2005 7:25 am
- Location: Australia
Les affaires publiques recently screened at a BFI Bresson retrospective. http://www.mastersofcinema.org/bresson/TheNews.html
May I ask how old is Mylene? Is there a website or something with information on her?The most thrilling moments, away from Bresson's films themselves, revolved around Mylene Bresson's gracious and deeply illuminating introductions to Le Procès de Jeanne d'Arc and Lancelot du Lac. She peppered fascinating anecdotes with powerful insights into Bresson's process and intentions. Perhaps the most memorable concerned her discussion of Lancelot as Bresson's most enigmatic character.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm
No.zedz wrote: In many cases it seems clear that the actions of the heirs aren't doing the legacies they're overseeing any favours, but shouldn't we respect Kubrick's wishes, even if we'd personally love to see the suppressed films?
Once a film is released, it ceases to belong solely to the artist, and should not be suppressed down the line when the greater good is served by having it made available.
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 10:20 pm
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This depends on how you define "belong". Clearly, in this day and age it's next to impossible to prevent physical copies from circulating (especially if they've been telecined and digitised), but in a legal sense the rights remain the property of the copyright holder, and anyone seeking to do anything with the films legally has to respect this.domino harvey wrote:Once a film is released, it ceases to belong solely to the artist, and should not be suppressed down the line when the greater good is served by having it made available.
(True, the copyright holder usually isn't the original artist, but that's another issue altogether!)
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
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David Ehrenstein
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- kaujot
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- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
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- kaujot
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- MichaelB
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- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm
Re:
What's the story behind this? Oshima seems alive, and the films are finally coming out.zedz wrote:Oshima's sister is apparently also rather unhelpful when it comes to official releases of the titles over which she has control (the ATG ones, I believe), so we're seeing one of the great modern film careers slowly sink into obscurity, or worse, into understandable "what was all the fuss about" confusion when somebody finally sees Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence. (6 Beatrices
- The Elegant Dandy Fop
- Joined: Thu Dec 09, 2004 7:25 am
- Location: Los Angeles, CA
Re: Bitchy Widows of Famous Directors Syndrome
From what I've always understood, the ATG films have been a pain to get as ATG was a coalition of directors and artists that had their films distributed via Toho, so clearing the rights was a very difficult issue.
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm
Re: Re:
This is all just idle gossip of course, but after a series of strokes Oshima probably isn't much involved, and I believe it's his sister who's administering things. The films we're seeing finally being released are the non-ATG ones, licensed from studios.knives wrote:What's the story behind this? Oshima seems alive, and the films are finally coming out.zedz wrote:Oshima's sister is apparently also rather unhelpful when it comes to official releases of the titles over which she has control (the ATG ones, I believe), so we're seeing one of the great modern film careers slowly sink into obscurity, or worse, into understandable "what was all the fuss about" confusion when somebody finally sees Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence. (6 Beatrices
The Art Theatre Guild was, as the Elegant Dandy Fop notes, an artist's collective, and when it disbanded I understand the rights for individual films returned to their makers (though maybe Toho still has a finger in the pie?). The Oshima ATG films were: Death by Hanging, Boy, The Man Who Left His Will on Film, The Ceremony and Dear Summer Sister. By any measure, that's a massive chunk of Oshima's legacy in limbo. I think New Yorker may have had R1 rights to some of these before they crashed. Now, who knows?
Only a tiny handful of ATG titles are currently available with English subs (Funeral Parade of Roses, Double Suicide - is that it?), and I'd argue that it represents such a concentrated body of crucial work that it's impossible to understand modern Japanese cinema without seeing those films, so the sooner somebody - anybody - gets those missing Hanis, Imamuras, Terayamas, Tsukomotos, Okamotos and Jissojis out the better.
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm
Re: Bitchy Widows of Famous Directors Syndrome
Thanks very much both. That is a real rough situation, hate the idea of missing Imamuras in my life. Hopefully things get better though.
- The Elegant Dandy Fop
- Joined: Thu Dec 09, 2004 7:25 am
- Location: Los Angeles, CA
Re: Re:
Did New Yorker ever release any of the post-Shochiku Oshima works? I'm not sure, but I thought I read that they put out "Dear Summer Sister". I could always be wrong.zedz wrote:This is all just idle gossip of course, but after a series of strokes Oshima probably isn't much involved, and I believe it's his sister who's administering things. The films we're seeing finally being released are the non-ATG ones, licensed from studios.knives wrote:What's the story behind this? Oshima seems alive, and the films are finally coming out.zedz wrote:Oshima's sister is apparently also rather unhelpful when it comes to official releases of the titles over which she has control (the ATG ones, I believe), so we're seeing one of the great modern film careers slowly sink into obscurity, or worse, into understandable "what was all the fuss about" confusion when somebody finally sees Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence. (6 Beatrices
The Art Theatre Guild was, as the Elegant Dandy Fop notes, an artist's collective, and when it disbanded I understand the rights for individual films returned to their makers (though maybe Toho still has a finger in the pie?). The Oshima ATG films were: Death by Hanging, Boy, The Man Who Left His Will on Film, The Ceremony and Dear Summer Sister. By any measure, that's a massive chunk of Oshima's legacy in limbo. I think New Yorker may have had R1 rights to some of these before they crashed. Now, who knows?
Only a tiny handful of ATG titles are currently available with English subs (Funeral Parade of Roses, Double Suicide - is that it?), and I'd argue that it represents such a concentrated body of crucial work that it's impossible to understand modern Japanese cinema without seeing those films, so the sooner somebody - anybody - gets those missing Hanis, Imamuras, Terayamas, Tsukomotos, Okamotos and Jissojis out the better.
Geneon has released a great output of ATG films in Japan including Okamoto's "Nikudan", the Oshima films, Yoshishige's films and a few more. Finding fan subs for those releases aren't too difficult and the transfers are decent (they could certainly be improved), but they suffice in the mean time.
The only other ATG films that I can think of are Mishima's "Patriotism" (and they only distributed it, not produced it so the rights reverted to his estate) and Juzo Itami's "The Funeral".
I know someone who works for a DVD company that's been struggling to get the rights to the Terayama films, but he said the main problem is coming from Toho.
- Peacock
- Joined: Mon Dec 22, 2008 11:47 pm
- Location: Scotland
Re: Bitchy Widows of Famous Directors Syndrome
Call me out on this if i'm wrong, but I presumed New Yorker only had the theatrical rights to the ATG Oshima's (the same, I'm guessing, goes for the Eustache films) with the home video rights being too complicated to get?
Anyway hasn't New Yorker restarted again, which makes it unlikely that if the home video rights of these titles do get sorted out that Criterion will get them.
Anyway hasn't New Yorker restarted again, which makes it unlikely that if the home video rights of these titles do get sorted out that Criterion will get them.