Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol. 6
- movielocke
- Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2008 4:44 am
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Best month in quite a while, two new releases I've wanted to see for ages, two overdue upgrades I've been avoiding buying the dvds because I've been waiting on them, the best eclipse since Czech new wave, and friends of Eddie Coyle as a bonus, I'll be buying every release, and it's been a long time since that happened.
- Gregory
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:07 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
How is an Eclipse that replicates an inexpensive BFI set, but is missing an interesting Ozu fragment and a Rayns feature, a better Eclipse set than the Grémillon, Kobayashi, Kinoshita etc.?
I don't begrudge Criterion getting their remaining Ozu titles released on disc, but I also don't really understand the view that it's the best Eclipse set in three years or whatever.
Glad to see the line is still around and I hope the next one is the long-overdue Czech New Wave 2.
I don't begrudge Criterion getting their remaining Ozu titles released on disc, but I also don't really understand the view that it's the best Eclipse set in three years or whatever.
Glad to see the line is still around and I hope the next one is the long-overdue Czech New Wave 2.
- SpiderBaby
- Joined: Wed Dec 15, 2010 10:34 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Agreed.TMDaines wrote:Christ, what an utterly shite month. A bit more originality and pushing the envelope would be nice. In the grand scheme of the home video world, Criterion are becoming less and less essential by the month.
- Drucker
- Your Future our Drucker
- Joined: Wed May 18, 2011 1:37 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Quite frankly, I only plan on buying Coyle soon. I'll go for the BFI and MOC equivalents if I pick up the Melville and Ozu titles. My wallet's a bit light right now, and I have a huge kevyip from the last few months. On top of that, with the excellent Q1 slate for MOC and BFI boxes of Dreyer and War Trilogy coming out, I'm more than happy not to have too much to buy right now!
- JimmyTango
- Joined: Thu Mar 08, 2012 4:51 am
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Instead of simply licensing films that were already adequately available I wish that Criterion would return to form and seek out important but neglected films that haven't been released in any format. I strongly dislike the new iPad era minimalist cover designs and I chalk it up as merely a fad that will hopefully pass shortly, however it's trickling down to even MGM http://i.imgur.com/TTTxIyB.png?1" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; The formula is easy, merely choose a backing color and then apply a poorly drawn element from the film and slap it on to eliminate any thought to nuance. With Watership Down marking the debut in animation think of all the archivist possibilities from various countries consisting of lesser known materials that could be released in the future. A box set similar to Rossellini's War Trilogy but devoted to early animation would be more than welcome. I say use the Criterion name value to dig deep all over the world and unearth something that slipped through the cracks.
- movielocke
- Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2008 4:44 am
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
I'll never go multiregion, my wife would divorce me; besides I have 148 blind buys yet to watch (many of them eclipse actually), and over 300 region 1 titles I've bought but haven't actually watched yet, at best it's a long way to go before it is even possible to begin contemplating purchasing films unavailable in region 1, and before I do that, I plan on watching a metric ton of the hulu films criterion has up, including the rest of the Ozu catalog. though I am impressed at the couple dozen people on this forum who have managed to exhaust region 1 and go multiregion, you're living the dream, guys.Gregory wrote:How is an Eclipse that replicates an inexpensive BFI set, but is missing an interesting Ozu fragment and a Rayns feature, a better Eclipse set than the Grémillon, Kobayashi, Kinoshita etc.?
I don't begrudge Criterion getting their remaining Ozu titles released on disc, but I also don't really understand the view that it's the best Eclipse set in three years or whatever.
Glad to see the line is still around and I hope the next one is the long-overdue Czech New Wave 2.
Eclipse has had some excellent sets of late, few and far between that they are, but the Czech new wave is the pinnacle of the series and Ozu is one of my favorite directors, so a release of his films trumps the other releases, for me. I also hope the Czech New Wave 2 is forthcoming, based on Altman's recent podcast interview asserting the next Eclipse set was in his opinion one of the line's most impressive achievements it certainly seemed like it would be the next czech set.
- EddieLarkin
- Joined: Sat Sep 08, 2012 2:25 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
A lot of people use this argument but I never understood it. I don't think anyone who has gone multi region has "exhausted" their own region, rather they merely want access to everything so they can pick the best of the best. I certainly don't buy more titles being region free than I would if I was locked, rather I substitute some of the lesser Region B/2 titles I would have gotten with Region A/1 discs I want a lot more.
- movielocke
- Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2008 4:44 am
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
My self control is inadequate when faced with the problem, the terror, of unlimited choice. Not to mention the immense quantities of lost time attempting to follow an orders of magnitude larger marketplace. Plus, I don't think it's a problem to not have access to everything all the time. Waiting is fine and usually preferable to indulging my every whim, I can just watch something else.
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Exactly. If that's the way you're collecting, you're doing it all wrong.EddieLarkin wrote:A lot of people use this argument but I never understood it. I don't think anyone who has gone multi region has "exhausted" their own region, rather they merely want access to everything so they can pick the best of the best. I certainly don't buy more titles being region free than I would if I was locked, rather I substitute some of the lesser Region B/2 titles I would have gotten with Region A/1 discs I want a lot more.
The three main principles of buying internationally (for me, at least) are:
1) Selection - Absolutely essential films (for me) that aren't available in R1 (let's just assume I'm in the USA and not a country where practically no worthwhile films get a local release). This isn't a case of "Criterion hasn't got around to them yet": there are thousands of absolute masterpieces that Criterion (and / or any other American label) will never release. And I bet there are hundreds of fantastic films among them that movielocke would like much, much more than the 400-something unwatched R1 titles he's accumulated.
2) Quality - Films available in R1 may be available in a clearly superior edition (HD, better elements,additional features) overseas. Why would you choose to own a second-rate version of one of your favourite films when there's a first-rate one readily available?
3) Price - In an extremely large number of cases, an international edition is going to be cheaper. This is particularly likely if you're talking about a Criterion edition, and it's a veritable certainty when, say, Twilight Time is involved. MoC, BFI and Arrow releases are routinely cheaper than Criterions, and of late they've had
better quality control, too.
For me, choosing to remain region-locked is like deciding to go and buy clothes, but once you get to the mall, making an arbitrary decision to only shop at the three or four stores on the southeast side of the foodcourt (because that's the side closest to your house), even though the other stores across the way have better quality clothes that are cheaper and which you look better in.
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 5:20 pm
- Location: New England
- Contact:
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
I refused to buy a DVD player until I could find a (cheap) multi-region one. I will go to the ends of the earth for the things I really want -- for everything else, there's Netflix (or the library or whatever).
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Unless you're literally buying everything released onto the US market (are you now or have you ever been domino harvey?) you're already being selective among a vast number of options. Nobody follows every potential release in every country, but just keeping up with this board should do a lot of the research for you. Switching out, say, Criterion's The Big Chill and Tootsie for Arrow's Borowczyk set would be a smart use of anybody's money. You can pick up Criterion's just-announced Ozu Gangster Eclipse set in its BFI guise (with an extra Ozu film and a special feature, and probably a superior booklet) right now for $US12 from amazon.uk. The Eclipse set will never be that cheap. That's one decision you can make on its own merits. You can get MoC's Silence de la Mer for under $US10. That's another. Even if you're just doing comparisons for the R1 releases you're already intending to buy, you can come out way ahead. Why not save all that money?movielocke wrote:My self control is inadequate when faced with the problem, the terror, of unlimited choice. Not to mention the immense quantities of lost time attempting to follow an orders of magnitude larger marketplace. Plus, I don't think it's a problem to not have access to everything all the time. Waiting is fine and usually preferable to indulging my every whim, I can just watch something else.
- matrixschmatrix
- Joined: Wed May 26, 2010 3:26 am
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Yeah, Twilight Time alone would justify a multi-region player for me, even if I literally only wanted to buy titles available in R1- like, I wanted to buy Oliver!, The Driver, Sexy Beast, Zulu, Wild at Heart, and others- and I would have spent probably $200 on those titles here, whereas they're probably only $50 between them through Amazon.uk.
- EddieLarkin
- Joined: Sat Sep 08, 2012 2:25 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Yeah I'm not sure how any quality conscious American can sit down to watch the Region A versions Nosferatu (both versions), Rabid Dogs, The Fury, Madame De, Harakiri et al without being bothered by the vastly superior versions available in Europe (and of course, there's even more examples for region locked Europeans).
- Gregory
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:07 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
The French Madame De blu is actually region-free, so one could go ahead and order that (among many other imports) without having to commit to a region-free player. I do wonder whether Criterion will ever improve it's currently awful Madame De blu-ray.EddieLarkin wrote:Yeah I'm not sure how any quality conscious American can sit down to watch the Region A versions Nosferatu (both versions), Rabid Dogs, The Fury, Madame De, Harakiri et al without being bothered by the vastly superior versions available in Europe (and of course, there's even more examples for region locked Europeans).
Can't figure why they released it in the first place.
- FrauBlucher
- Joined: Tue Jul 16, 2013 12:28 am
- Location: Greenwich Village
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Movielocke, your best argument against; is your wife divorcing you. Other than that, region free opens up all sorts of options. When AE starts to release the Tarkovsky's on blu, won't you feel a slight bit wishful that you are region free? I clearly expect their releases to be head and shoulders over anything that Kino has or will do in regards to Tarkovsky.
- danieltiger
- Joined: Wed Apr 16, 2014 12:48 am
- Location: San Francisco, CA
- Contact:
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
I've heard bad things about the quality of region free Blu-Ray players. Not an issue?
- Drucker
- Your Future our Drucker
- Joined: Wed May 18, 2011 1:37 pm
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Case-by-case. I have an Oppo and have never (knock on wood) had a problem.
- Finch
- Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2008 9:09 pm
- Location: United States
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Case in point for international releases being cheaper: Amazon UK is currently selling MoC's La Silence de la Mer for £8.19. (edit: just noticed zedz mentioned it in his own post, apologies!)
Also, what zedz says. I've gone multi-region for the same reasons since there are almost certainly as many films unreleased in European territory or the UK at least that are available in the US or Asia/Russia.
Also, what zedz says. I've gone multi-region for the same reasons since there are almost certainly as many films unreleased in European territory or the UK at least that are available in the US or Asia/Russia.
- colinr0380
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 8:30 pm
- Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
I'd agree with all of the above. I went multi-region back in the early 2000s for lots of reasons: to get horror films unedited that were cut to pieces or unreleased in the UK (which doesn't happen quite so often these days, although Human Centipede 2 was a recent US disc that recaptured that dangerous importation frisson for me!); to get films with extra features unreleased in the UK and from labels that weren't international such as Criterion (Flesh For Frankenstein was my first Criterion purchase, which combined both reasons for importing due to being an unavailable in the UK at the time horror and including the commentary track!); and in order to pick up newly released US films six or more months before their UK release, sometimes months before they were even released in the cinema over here.
All of these reasons for importing or not fluctuate over time with changes in release patterns. Sometimes I might not need to pick up anything from the US and instead buy lots of UK releases, other times the opposite. Being tied into one region can arbitrarily restrict your choices based on arcane, delicate and balancing act rules that are primarily designed for the needs of the rightsholders and companies involved more than the consumer. Completely understandable reasons of not having the resources to do a worldwide home video release, or only being able to license for a specific territory, or needing to stagger a release of a film in order to schedule doing a publicity tour for its release, and so on, but reasons that (while interesting to know about) are frankly are not my concern as a consumer who just wants to access a film in the best presentation in its best version.
But I can understand that it can be a big move to start importing, especially when there is a lot of content in the home market. For example I haven't really explored too much beyond UK and US releases yet, though I have done a couple of German Filmmuseum orders. Hopefully one day I'll expand my own scope further too!
On the other hand, while it can be disappointing to see single territory companies serving only their own region such as Criterion or Masters of Cinema (and especially frustrating to see duelling releases!), I would not complain that loudly about those labels taking that focus for business or market reasons. Expanding your horizons beyond a single territory is an extremely worthwhile thing to do, but with that expansion also comes the need to recognise that you are often going to run into situations in which you've already got a film in a better quality release from another territory. Personally speaking it might be a waste of time and resources in having yet another edition of the film on the world market when there are tons of films that have not even got a single shot at a home video release; but beyond myself I can understand why it happens, why it is easier to pull something like that off the shelf from pre-existing or shared masters, and why it is done to serve a local market.
This for me is where extra features are so important and why it is a shame that commentary tracks and the suchlike (which, and I'm worried that I'm leaving myself open to canny exploitation by admitting this, I will always buy another edition of a film for, just to hear what someone says about a film at length!) seem to be becoming a rarity. I'd love it if Criterion put a little bit more emphasis not just on presenting the films but also presenting a debate around the films on their discs, especially in the form of commentary tracks. Plus while were are on this subject, I find it unforgivable when a major international company (Disney, Warner Bros, 20th Century Fox, those kinds of companies) drop extra features on their releases between territories, although that was a bigger problem a number of years ago than it appears to be these days, but I'll always understand when a single territory company such as Criterion or Masters of Cinema have different extra features to distinguish their own releases from each other. Even if it can be annoying as a multi-region user to sometimes need to buy both!
All of these reasons for importing or not fluctuate over time with changes in release patterns. Sometimes I might not need to pick up anything from the US and instead buy lots of UK releases, other times the opposite. Being tied into one region can arbitrarily restrict your choices based on arcane, delicate and balancing act rules that are primarily designed for the needs of the rightsholders and companies involved more than the consumer. Completely understandable reasons of not having the resources to do a worldwide home video release, or only being able to license for a specific territory, or needing to stagger a release of a film in order to schedule doing a publicity tour for its release, and so on, but reasons that (while interesting to know about) are frankly are not my concern as a consumer who just wants to access a film in the best presentation in its best version.
But I can understand that it can be a big move to start importing, especially when there is a lot of content in the home market. For example I haven't really explored too much beyond UK and US releases yet, though I have done a couple of German Filmmuseum orders. Hopefully one day I'll expand my own scope further too!
On the other hand, while it can be disappointing to see single territory companies serving only their own region such as Criterion or Masters of Cinema (and especially frustrating to see duelling releases!), I would not complain that loudly about those labels taking that focus for business or market reasons. Expanding your horizons beyond a single territory is an extremely worthwhile thing to do, but with that expansion also comes the need to recognise that you are often going to run into situations in which you've already got a film in a better quality release from another territory. Personally speaking it might be a waste of time and resources in having yet another edition of the film on the world market when there are tons of films that have not even got a single shot at a home video release; but beyond myself I can understand why it happens, why it is easier to pull something like that off the shelf from pre-existing or shared masters, and why it is done to serve a local market.
This for me is where extra features are so important and why it is a shame that commentary tracks and the suchlike (which, and I'm worried that I'm leaving myself open to canny exploitation by admitting this, I will always buy another edition of a film for, just to hear what someone says about a film at length!) seem to be becoming a rarity. I'd love it if Criterion put a little bit more emphasis not just on presenting the films but also presenting a debate around the films on their discs, especially in the form of commentary tracks. Plus while were are on this subject, I find it unforgivable when a major international company (Disney, Warner Bros, 20th Century Fox, those kinds of companies) drop extra features on their releases between territories, although that was a bigger problem a number of years ago than it appears to be these days, but I'll always understand when a single territory company such as Criterion or Masters of Cinema have different extra features to distinguish their own releases from each other. Even if it can be annoying as a multi-region user to sometimes need to buy both!
- Finch
- Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2008 9:09 pm
- Location: United States
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
I also like getting new films early which almost invariably means the Region A discs. For example, I can see myself getting the US BD of The Duke of Burgundy as it's probably going to be out two months ahead of the UK equivalent, due to the film opening in the US first (same with Force Majeure, Clouds of Sils Maria, Wild Tales etc). This is even more so the case with HK/Chinese and Japanese titles like Johnnie To's brilliant Drug War. I like that I can go see a film theatrically and then get the US disc a month or two later. One of the more extreme cases would be Takahata's Tale of the Princess Kaguya which is already getting a US BD release in February and it's not opening in Scotland and the rest of Britain until late spring (if the import BD comes out ahead of a UK theatrical release, I don't bother buying a ticket). Of course, it can work the other way round, too, with titles like Berberian Sound Studio and The Guest. So, I guess, for me, at least 90% of contemporary releases are imported whereas catalogue titles are now 50% Criterion/Shout/major studios and 25% Arrow and 25% MoC/other UK or French labels.
(The only DVDs I buy nowadays are Second Run and leftover stock from Hongkong Legends)
(The only DVDs I buy nowadays are Second Run and leftover stock from Hongkong Legends)
-
Zot!
- Joined: Wed Jan 20, 2010 4:09 am
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
My collection is very small (less than 100 bds), but choice is tantamount. In order to say collect a single director (like Wong Kar Wai). You need to be region free. Other things will never make it over here., like the more obscure Ozus on BD that BFI have made available. Instead of letting Criterion curate my tastes, I'm buying what I actually love, without restriction, but within my modest budget. My OCD would also explode if I couldn't get a watchable presentation of the original theatrical m. Hulot's holiday.
- Cinephrenic
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 6:58 pm
- Location: Paris, Texas
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Hitchcock's The Lodger is appearing on Blu-ray.com with a Hulu cover. Anyone know anything of this? Is it even on Hulu?
- Minkin
- Joined: Fri Aug 07, 2009 3:13 am
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
It (along with a few other titles that Criterion doesn't own streaming rights - thus I guess they can only sell the movie itself as digital on Amazon/Itunes) was posted as available at Itunes awhile back. Young & Innocent + Sabotage + Downhill are also on Amazon/Itunes from Criterion. Secret Agent and Number 17 are also possibly with Janus. The Pleasure Garden, and Easy Virtue are the other "Hitchcock 9" that are with ITV (not Studio Canal), thus they will most likely be in play as well.Cinephrenic wrote:Hitchcock's The Lodger is appearing on Blu-ray.com with a Hulu cover. Anyone know anything of this? Is it even on Hulu?
They've been doing one Hitchcock title a year for the past (four?) years, I wonder what it will be this year (anything match up with the New Year's Clue?)
Sorry, this was confusing even myself. So as follows
Available on Amazon/Itunes:
Downhill
Lodger
Sabotage
Young and Innocent
Quite a few films are on Amazon/Itunes but not on Hulu (I'll add them to my forthcoming list
Thus, in addition to the above, there's (perhaps someone can check Itunes, as I can't figure out how to find Criterion on there):
A Master Builder
Madeline (1950)
The Seventh Veil (1945)
Tiger Bay (1959)
Here's Your Life (1966)
The Passionate Friends (1949)
Evergreen (1934)
Man of Aran (1934)
Rocking Horse Winner (1949)
- Lowry_Sam
- Joined: Mon Jul 05, 2010 7:35 pm
- Location: San Francisco, CA
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Any chance of Criterion snatching Paris Is Burning from Miramax?
- ordinaryperson
- Joined: Fri Feb 28, 2014 8:18 pm
- Location: Earth, Solar System, Milky Way Galaxy, Universe
Re: Forthcoming Lists Discussion and Random Speculation Vol.
Since "In Cold Blood" is screening at the Berlin film festival do you think it will get a Criterion release?