Re: 'Forthcoming' Lists Discussion and Random Speculation
Posted: Fri May 01, 2009 4:52 pm
I hope Criterion does a blu-ray on Picnic At Hanging Rock and Andrei Rublev.... [-o<
https://test.criterionforum.org/forum/
For those who haven't seen Homicide, it's great. Maybe my favorite Mamet.Jon Mulvaney wrote:Hi Mark,
Thanks for your email! Though we do not have any plans to release THE SPANISH PRISONER, David Mamet's HOMOCIDE will be released later this year. We do try to announce our upcoming titles (both DVD and BD) as far in advance as possible, so please check our 'coming soon' section and e-newsletter for updates. I hope this helps!
Sincerely,
Jon Mulvaney
I've been "this" close to ordering the R2 version many many times. Even had it in my amazon uk shopping cart. Phew.The Elegant Dandy Fop wrote:For those who haven't seen Homicide, it's great. Maybe my favorite Mamet.Jon Mulvaney wrote:Thanks for your email! Though we do not have any plans to release THE SPANISH PRISONER, David Mamet's HOMOCIDE will be released later this year. We do try to announce our upcoming titles (both DVD and BD) as far in advance as possible, so please check our 'coming soon' section and e-newsletter for updates. I hope this helps!
Sincerely,
Jon Mulvaney
This is also what I voted for.HistoryProf wrote:this was my vote...it is in most need of being remastered/revisited. the extant disc is pretty piss poor. Kwaidan isn't as bad, so it can waitpsufootball07 wrote:Picnic at Hanging Rock so they finally get around to a re-release for people not upgrading to HD.![]()
No, it's only missing about 40 minutes of the film or so....HistoryProf wrote:Kwaidan isn't as bad, so it can wait
What, no jokes about Mulvaney's (possibly Freudian?) deficiencies in the spelling department?David Mamet's HOMOCIDE
In my e-mail I also wrote this:Jon Mulvaney wrote:Thank you for your email! Currently, we do not have plans to release BARCELONA.
Did we ever receive hard confirmation on The Last Days of Disco? I can't remember. If not, perhaps we can read his ignoring this portion of my e-mail as confirmation and perhaps that Image trailer on YouTube is the real deal.It seems that my dreams of The Last Days of Disco coming to the Collection are coming to fruition (if the rumors are to be believed and your near acknowledgment of them).
I asked about The Wedding Banquet and Ride with the Devil, both from Focus Features. One of the titles could also be Pushing Hands, which probably reverted back to Focus like The Wedding Banquet. It's interesting that Mulvaney said "titles" indicating more than one film. I know Ang Lee probably isn't popular here but it's good news to me. I would bet that The Wedding Banquet and Pushing Hands are mostly likely to be the titles.Jon Mulvaney wrote:Thank you for your email! We cannot confirm titles yet, but we do hope to work with Ang Lee again before too long. I hope this helps, and feel free to email me again should you have further questions!
Possible clue that Edward Yang's A Brighter Summer Day and Joseph Losey's Accident are both forthcoming titles?Though primarily a celebration of the best of today’s world cinema, the Cannes Film Festival has for some time now also been making room for the past, with its sidebar Cannes Classics. A program of restored and rediscovered films, Cannes Classics is in its sixth edition, this year overseen by honorary president Martin Scorsese and headlined by a new print of Powell and Pressburger’s Technicolor dance masterpiece The Red Shoes, restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive (in association with the British Film Institute, the Film Foundation, ITV Global Entertainment Ltd., and Janus Films). The stellar lineup also includes Edward Yang’s A Brighter Summer Day, Joseph Losey’s Accident, and a number of other Criterion titles: L’avventura, Eyes Without a Face, M. Hulot’s Holiday, and Pierrot le fou.
I'll clutch at both those straws, thanks. Those films are no-brainers for Criterion, and the Janus involvement with Red Shoes suggests a high profile theatrical re-release followed by a spruced-up DVD / Blu edition. There was a very vague suggestion of more Yang some time back, as I recall, but I don't remember Losey ever being mentioned (amybe nobody's asked).ianungstad wrote:Also, Clyde; a poster on .com noticed this bit from the current:
Possible clue that Edward Yang's A Brighter Summer Day and Joseph Losey's Accident are both forthcoming titles?Though primarily a celebration of the best of today’s world cinema, the Cannes Film Festival has for some time now also been making room for the past, with its sidebar Cannes Classics. A program of restored and rediscovered films, Cannes Classics is in its sixth edition, this year overseen by honorary president Martin Scorsese and headlined by a new print of Powell and Pressburger’s Technicolor dance masterpiece The Red Shoes, restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive (in association with the British Film Institute, the Film Foundation, ITV Global Entertainment Ltd., and Janus Films). The stellar lineup also includes Edward Yang’s A Brighter Summer Day, Joseph Losey’s Accident, and a number of other Criterion titles: L’avventura, Eyes Without a Face, M. Hulot’s Holiday, and Pierrot le fou.
Well the office is a-shakin' like an Ed Wood set with the bottom cut off, at any rate.HerrSchreck wrote:I was going to say, before I saw you replied to this, that the whole Pacific Rim is going to rumble when you read about the Yang. An upgrade from the LD is just another long overdue sin.
It probably didn't sell enough to warrant full-blown Criterion editions of the rest of his films, but I daresay most of us would be very happy with an Eclipse set (so long as it includes The Terrorizers, for me).domino harvey wrote:I think however well Yi Yi sold is the biggest factor, and I'm not under the impression that it was much of a moneymaker
Definitely. Yiyi is the only Edward Yang film I’ve seen but this and the articles on him and his films in Film Comment would make an R1 or R2 DVD announcement of any of his movies welcome news!zedz wrote:It probably didn't sell enough to warrant full-blown Criterion editions of the rest of his films, but I daresay most of us would be very happy with an Eclipse set (so long as it includes The Terrorizers, for me).