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Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Mon Jul 10, 2023 7:05 am
by mostly asia
Matt wrote: Sun Jul 09, 2023 8:26 pm
I have zero hope of Criterion ever considering a Naruse film again.
And this reminds me that we’re still waiting on the Kinuyo Tanaka films that played theaters well over a year ago. Maybe it’s more complicated than I think since the films come from four different Japanese studios.
Carlotta Films released a wonderful box with all 6 Movies in 2022 (without english subs)
https://www.amazon.fr/Kinuyo-Tanaka-r%C ... C88&sr=8-1
Maybe Radiance Films will give us a box in 2024...
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2024 10:03 pm
by colinr0380
Since we do not have a dedicated thread for the Unearthed Films label, I'll put the news here that they will be releasing Noburu Tanaka's 1983 true crime film
Village of Doom on Blu-ray and DVD on 22nd October. Tanaka also directed a number of Nikkatsu's Roman Porno films in the 1970s, including A Woman Named Abe Sada, A Watcher In The Attic and the excellent third entry in the Angel Guts series, Angel Guts: Nami.
That is apparently going to include an audio commentary by Arne Venema and Mike Leeder, and in another in the trend of YouTube videos turning up as extra features on discs (see the PBS documentary on Criterion's upcoming edition of I Walked With A Zombie), an episode of
Dark Asia with Megan on the Tsuyama Massacre.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Wed Oct 02, 2024 7:30 pm
by colinr0380
We don't have an "All The Anime" thread either for that UK company's releases (which to be fair can mostly be accommodated under the general all encompassing "Anime" thread anyway), but it might be worth noting that they have just released details of their physical edition of Godzilla Minus One for pre-order, with a release date of 2nd December. The
limited 'Deluxe' version is going to contain UHD and Blu-ray versions of the film plus a Blu-ray of "Godzilla Minus Color", and a fourth disc dedicated to extra features (which was something that I was upset that no US or UK label ported over and translated when they released Shin Godzilla back in the day, despite the Japanese release of that film containing lots of extras)
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Oct 04, 2024 5:16 am
by feihong
There is a new blu-ray of Shunji Iwai's Swallowtail Butterfly, released in China by Welcome Music. Welcome is the company that released Suzhou River in advance of the superior Radiance disc. Swallowtail Butterfly does not have English subtitles––nor did it when it was released on blu ray in Japan 11 years ago (by now, however there are a gazillion repackaged versions of the Japanese disc with English subtitles added, for sale on different platforms).
The Pony Canyon disc from Japan was of exceptionally poor quality, even for 2013. It did better at separating colors, at image stability, and it looked sharper than Panorama DVD from Hong Kong (the last time the film had an English subtitle track), but it looked like it wasn't made from a hi-definition source. So how does the new Welcome Music disc measure up? Does it improve upon the picture quality of a poor disc, released 11 years ago?
Well...certainly not as much as one would like. There has clearly not been any new scan; Welcome is working with the same elements as Pony Canyon had. There have been some improvements, however. The best is that the color seems more saturated and cleaner in its delineation. There appears to be some...sharpening? Edge enhancement? These two things combined give us an image that seems much clearer to "read" in a movie with famously specific and challenging cinematography. The movies shot by Noboru Shinoda have always looked murky, in all sorts of different home video versions. I once read he was originally a cinematographer on documentary films, but I have never seen a listing of what those films might have been. From his filmography, it seems his first assignment as dp was Shinji Somai's Love Hotel, and that his later oeuvre included Sogo Ishii's 1/2 Man, Katsuhiro Otomo's live-action movie of the Satoshi Kon manga, World Apartment Horror, Somai's The Friends, and then he shoots all of Shunji Iwai's theatrical films starting with his first, Undo, and proceeding to the last one Shinoda lives to shoot, Hana & Alice. I've never seen one of these pictures in 35mm, so I don't have a great sense of what they're supposed to look like, but most of them include the same sorts of techniques: soft-focus photography, an emphasis and browns and blues in the image, blown-out backlighting, and restless camera mobility. A lot of this has continued in Iwai's later movies, but the Shinoda ones have the most extreme representations of this look––the only variation is in which of these different motifs gets cranked up the highest. In addition, Swallowtail itself has a lot of experimentation, with footage that has extreme color corrections, a little bit of cgi (seemingly the only time in Iwai's career?). Probably the best presentation of what this cinematography is supposed to look like is the Jpanese blu ray of Hana & Alice, and in that version, the blown-out whites are very clearly white light. Every other home video representation of these films I've seen, the blown-out white light has a blue tint to it. Maybe that comes from compression? I don't know. Suffice to say, the Welcome Music disc has a bias for blue, even in these white lights. There is a lot of middle-grey tones throughout the film. In every other version of the movie I've seen, the image is quite murky. The scene in the graveyard, for instance, has always been impossible to make out. On this disc it is much, much clearer, and you can read facial expressions on the character in the scene. Also, the sequence where one of the characters reaches into a dead man's stomach, which used to be almost completely black screen, is now visible in gut-churning glory. In general, the daytime outdoor scenes look a lot better than any of the indoor scenes. Another result of the marginally improved picture quality is that Ayumi Ito's butterfly tattoo is quite obviously a rub-on tattoo in closeup, which is, I suppose, unavoidable, but also kind of hilarious, since it's so central to the film's main themes and motifs.
I'll post some shot comparisons later, but I wanted to share it here, just because, when do you get a new release of Swallowtail Butterfly? Once a decade, maybe. What will it ever take to see this film closer to the way it was meant to be seen? This version is much more enjoyable to watch than the Pony Canyon disc, but at the same time, the characters all look flat, waxy, and very pale. What depth there might be in the image has never been very visible. So it's at once an improvement and a disappointment.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Mon Oct 07, 2024 8:14 pm
by Stefan Andersson
G. I. Samurai starring Sonny Chiba, 4K restoration, upcoming from Carlotta Films, France, no English subs:
https://laboutique.carlottafilms.com/co ... emorabilia - UHD+Blu+memorabilia
https://laboutique.carlottafilms.com/co ... osei-saito - UHD
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Mar 21, 2025 4:25 pm
by dwk
Marc Walkow posted on Bluesky that Shochiku announced they are releasing Kinji Fukasaku’s Black Lizard and Black Rose Mansion on Blu-ray in June.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Mar 21, 2025 5:18 pm
by Peacock
Finally! Hope these two make their way over to Arrow or Radiance soon after.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Mar 21, 2025 5:25 pm
by Finch
Black Lizard is great news. Been on my own wishlist forever!
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Sat Apr 12, 2025 1:07 pm
by Elizabeth Corday
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Thu May 15, 2025 12:33 pm
by DJBillyMac
Don't know if it's already been posted but Cult Epics is doing four Obayashi films this year.
https://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=35933
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Thu May 15, 2025 2:39 pm
by Michael Kerpan
I wonder how different these will be from the Third Window set?
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Thu May 15, 2025 3:02 pm
by andyli
At least they could improve The Little Girl Who Conquered Time with a transfer that matches the Japanese reissue. But speaking of which, a genuine 4K restoration is in the making. With any luck, Cult Epics might issue a 4K UHD of it.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Mon Jun 02, 2025 4:06 am
by beamish14
Has Koji Yamamura’s Dozens of Norths received a Blu-Ray release anywhere? A shake it has never received any distribution in North America
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Jun 06, 2025 12:18 am
by dadaistnun
GKids has picked up Linda Linda Linda for its 20th anniversary. “The film will be released in in theaters across North America and on home entertainment platforms in 2025.”
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Jun 06, 2025 1:34 am
by Michael Kerpan
I hope this means we get a better-than-DVD release of LLL at last. Of course, a higher quality release might make a few short scenes look even worse (given that they were shot with a low-grade early home video camera).

Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Thu Dec 18, 2025 11:08 am
by andyli
Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence 4K UHD coming from TCE next June. Also announced are two Oshima blu-ray box sets that cover similar ground as the Radiance one.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Apr 24, 2026 2:03 pm
by yoloswegmaster
Toho have announced that Rodan, The Mysterians, Gorath, Atragon, and Mothra are arriving on 4K. Hopefully this means we will see a U.S. release from Criterion soon.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Apr 24, 2026 2:29 pm
by andyli
andyli wrote: Thu Dec 18, 2025 11:08 am
Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence 4K UHD coming from TCE next June. Also announced are two Oshima blu-ray box sets that cover similar ground as the Radiance one.
In case people didn't know and got excited, these releases were scrapped entirely.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Fri Apr 24, 2026 10:29 pm
by hearthesilence
Bummer. I hope the cancellation of the Oshima boxes isn't for reasons that would impact any plans Radiance might have as well.
I'm still not sure what the
Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence restoration really looks like, but the current Arrow Blu-ray looks great and the color matched what I saw on a 35mm print at Metrograph. (
And if this is indeed the 4K restoration, the color looks way, WAY off.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Sat Apr 25, 2026 12:33 am
by Michael Kerpan
Wow, that version looks awful.
Re: Japanese Films on DVD/Blu-ray
Posted: Sat Apr 25, 2026 7:24 am
by andyli
Yes, the 4K restoration has both color grading and grain management issues.