374 Bicycle Thieves

Discuss releases by Criterion and the films on them. Threads may contain spoilers!
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ellipsis7
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 5:56 pm
Location: Dublin

Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#201 Post by ellipsis7 »

The plus of the Arrow is Robert Gordon's commentary track - he also wrote the BFI Classic monograph on the film... Nevertheless, I'll be double dipping for the Criterion transfer...
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FrauBlucher
Joined: Tue Jul 16, 2013 12:28 am
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Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#202 Post by FrauBlucher »

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tenia
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Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 3:13 pm

Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#203 Post by tenia »

Chris, your Bicycle Thieves main page indicates the movie is directed by Les Blank et licenced from RLJ Entertainment.
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cdnchris
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Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#204 Post by cdnchris »

Thanks! When I get a chance I will correct that.
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Minkin
Joined: Fri Aug 07, 2009 3:13 am

Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#205 Post by Minkin »

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Brent Reid
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Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#206 Post by Brent Reid »

I own the Italian BD, which is reputedly superior to the Eureka. To help decide if it's worth me picking up the Criterion, does anyone own both or know of any online comparisons?
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djproject
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Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#207 Post by djproject »

Just picked it up today and saw it. It looks amazing apart from any issues due to its source (that flicker during one of the crossfades about 10 minutes, probably due to an error in the optical printing the first time around). Apart from the higher resolution scan giving it the huge image improvement, the Blu-ray source was a fine-grain master positive from the original nitrate negative whereas the DVD was just from an duplicate negative. No encoding issues and definitely no windowboxing =D

Same features as the DVD with no changes and you all know what the packaging looks like =].

As for the film itself, I never considered it one of my all-time favourites (that does not mean I am not moved by it ... far from it). But at the same time, it definitely see it as a cinematic milestone and I highly appreciate it, even celebrate it, for that alone. For me, this is my "before/after" film for cinematic history because I think without this film, you wouldn't have had the European cinema of the 1950s going into the French New Wave and then, of course, the New Hollywood. This was also a favourite film for Satyajit Ray and I can see what Ray drew from Ladri di biciclette into Pather Panchali (another point to make the case for this being the demarcation point). While one can make the case for Rome, Open City as the demarcation point, that film still feels like a constructed melodrama that was shot on location (albeit a well-constructed one ... and an honest one) whereas this feels like "real life created the drama". You could say that if de Sica and Zavattini were able to make a film with just those elements, what else could you make? In other words, romantic realism does not have to be the only style for cinema.

P.S. Yes, Mark Cousins informed my view of cinematic history =]
Costa
Joined: Fri Sep 03, 2010 9:10 pm

Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#208 Post by Costa »

Watched this yesterday for the first time (not the Criterion release) and it left me completely cold.
Pity because i'm frustrated when i cannot connect to a highly and universally acclaimed film.
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aox
Joined: Fri Jun 20, 2008 4:02 pm
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Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#209 Post by aox »

The CC BD doesn't have any known technical issues, does it?
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ellipsis7
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 5:56 pm
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Re: 374 Bicycle Thieves

#210 Post by ellipsis7 »

70 years on, new resto screening @ Cannes Classics 2018...
...il restauro realizzato dal laboratorio L'Immagine Ritrovata, promosso da Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna e Compass Film di Stefano Libassi, in collaborazione con Arthur Cohn, Euro Immobilfin, Artedis, e con il sostegno di Istituto Luce-Cinecittà.
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