Best Release (1-5, in order of preference)
1. 3 Films by Roberto Rossellini Starring Ingrid Bergman
2. Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project #1
3. Things To Come
4. A Man Escaped
5. Charulata
Best Eclipse Set
38 Kobayashi Against The System
Best Non-Eclipse Box Set
3 Films by Roberto Rossellini Starring Ingrid Bergman
Best Reissue
Autumn Sonata
Best Blu-ray Upgrade
Tokyo Story
Best R1 Rescue (for title already available in R1 and re-released by Criterion)
The Devil’s Backbone
Best (Re)Discovery
La Notte
Most Disappointing Release (for Criterion's treatment, not the film itself)
Judging by the strength of feeling here, and due to having no real issues with any Criterion release this year (apart from a general grumble about the lack of commentaries and extras across the board) I would have to go with the Earrings of Madame De… reissue!
Best Commentary
David Kalat on Things To Come, turning that release into an essential accompaniment to the UK disc
Best Bonus Film +
Best Non-Bonus Film Supplement
1. Michael Almereyda on Babette’s Feast
2. Christopher Frayling on Things To Come
3. The three additional films on Shoah, along with the Lanzmann interview relating to them
4. The Essence of Forms on A Man Escaped
5. The Coward on The Big City
(& a number 6 : the offering of the different aspect ratios on On The Waterfront!)
Best Cover
1. Nashville
Runners up:
2. The Big City/Charulata
3. On The Waterfront
4. Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion
5. The Devil’s Backbone
Best Packaging
Zatoichi: The Blind Swordsman (of course, but the World Cinema Foundation packaging is so gorgeous that I ummed and ahhhed about it a little!)
Member of the Year
warren oates, for the lively debates!
Best Non-Criterion Releases:
1. Polish Cinema Classics Volume II (Second Run)
2. The Big Parade (Warner)
3. Lost and Found: Treasures From The New Zealand Film Archive (Image)
4. California Trilogy (German Filmmuseum)
5. Le Pont du Nord (MoC)
5. Intolerance (Cohen Film), & Cohen Film in general for its excellent choices of rarer films supplemented by thoughtful extras (The Damned (1947) and Two Men In Manhattan)
6. Ikarie XB-1 (Second Run)
7. The White Dove and Josef Kilián (Second Run)
8. Knightriders (Arrow) & The Fury (Arrow)
9. Underground (BFI)
10. Comment ca va? / Keep Your Right Up (Olive Films)
11. Crystal Lake Memories: The Complete History of Friday The 13th (1428 Films)
12. Eyes of the Spider / The Serpent's Path (Third Window)
13. Steel: A Century of Steel Making on Film (BFI)
14. The Ealing Studios Rarities Collection Volumes 1-8 (Network) (ongoing series)
15. A Boy and His Dog / Lifeforce / Night of the Comet (Shout! Factory) - Three films that I loved during my early teens getting wonderful Blu upgrades. Great work from Shout! Factory (and Arrow for Lifeforce too!). The long interview between LQ Jones and Harlan Ellison has to be my favourite 'crotchety old guys chewing the fat' extra feature of the year!
I also want to throw a word of praise in for the Sokurov: Early Masterworks set from Cinema Guild, which came out in December last year.
A very interesting and eclectic year. Great to be able to put Warners back on the list for
doing something non-archive related with their older films too!
My one to watch which I think have not been much discussed on the forum is Network's wonderful ongoing series "Ealing Studios Rarities". I have the first eight volumes and it is a treasure trove of obscure and uncharacteristic works from the studio. Each set comprises four films (in a variety of appropriate ratios - even 1.19:1 for the very early 30s films!) on 2 DVDs in a thin-pack case for under £10, which is cheap enough to take a risk on. Most excitingly Network seem to have branched out with a new release called "British Musicals of the 30s" using the same kind of publishing strategy. Hopefully there will be more volumes of both series!
Finally, I haven’t got them yet, but I want to add my appreciation to Third Window Films for taking the time to release Tokyo Fist and Bullet Ballet on Blu! Amazing, seminal films which I'm looking forward to upgrading - Tokyo Fist is an essential work and
I think Bullet Ballet is one of the best films of the 90s!
And just for the hell of it:
Best Video Game:
A tie between
The Stanley Parable and
Gone Home. If you want more in-depth discussions of these games I would highly recommend the Errant Signal videos on both
Gone Home (which makes a great case for Gone Home being a video game equivalent of Young Adult fiction - domino you should try and play this!) and
The Stanley Parable.