Re: BFI (British Film Institute)
Posted: Mon May 10, 2010 2:44 pm
BFI DVD Publishing has announced its plans for the next few months:
Stating the obvious, everything above is subject to change.7 June
Kurosawa Samurai Collection (1954-1962)
This 5-disc DVD box-set brings together Throne of Blood, The Hidden Fortress, Yojimbo, Sanjuro and one of the BFI’s all-time best-selling titles, Seven Samurai.
21 June
The Adelphi Collection: Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary (1953) & My Wife’s Lodger (1952)
The Adelphi Collection showcases long-neglected works produced by this family-run British film studio. This second release is a double-bill of rare, early Diana Dors comedies. Also starring Sid James. Dual Format Edition
Black Jack (Ken Loach, 1979)
DVD premiere of this visually stunning feature film from one of Britain’s most celebrated filmmakers, adapted from Leon Garfield’s children’s novel, set in 1750s York.
19 July
The COI Collection Volume 3: They Stand Ready (1946-76)
To help paint a positive picture of life in the Services, the Central Office of Information produced these morale-boosting documentaries, propaganda items and recruitment films. DVD
Secrets of Nature (1922-1933)
Launched in 1922, this series pioneered ground-breaking techniques of slow-motion, time-lapse and microscopic photography in films exploring the wondrous worlds of animal, plant and insect life. DVD
The films of Yasujiro Ozu – an extensive new BFI DVD project launching in Dual Format Editions
- Tokyo Story (1953) & Brothers and Sister of the Toda Family
- Late Spring (1949) & The Only Son
- Early Summer (1951) & What did the Lady Forget?
23 August
Loving Memory (Tony Scott, 1970) Now one of Hollywood's most bankable UK ex-pats (The Hunger, Top Gun, True Romance, Enemy of the State and many more), the then 26 year-old Tony Scott's first feature is set on the Yorkshire moors and follows the story of a brother and sister living alone with their memories and a macabre secret. Dual Format Edition
A Zed & Two Noughts (Peter Greenaway, 1985)
This extraordinary tale of obsession, scored by Michael Nyman, is provocative, funny and stylish. Blu-ray
The Edge of the World (Michael Powell, 1937)
A Blu-ray debut for the film which established the daring techniques and experimentation that would become familiar hallmarks of Michael Powell’s esteemed career
The Innocents (Jack Clayton, 1961)
Deborah Kerr gives the performance of her career in one of the greatest of all ghost stories on film – an intensely unsettling experience. Blu-ray
13 September
BFI Flipside 012 & 013 released on Dual Format Editions:
Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush (Clive Donner, 1968)
A long-awaited release for this lively comedy following the sexual exploits of the irrepressible teenager Jamie (Barry Evans), full of adolescent energy and angst in 1960s Stevenage
Bronco Bullfrog (Barney Platts-Mills, 1969)
This leading cult film of the late 1960s is one of the finest records of Mod culture in British cinema
Prostitute (Tony Garnett, 1980)
Gritty and ground-breaking film about sex-workers in the Midlands. Dual Format Edition
Enid Blyton’s Famous Five
Volume 1: Five on a Treasure Island (1957) – Close to the spirit of the perennially popular first Famous Five novel, this eight part series is full of adventure, mystery and lashings of ginger beer.
Volume 2: Five Have a Mystery to Solve (1964) – This second series follows Julian, Dick, Anne, George and Timmy the dog on an adventure to Whispering Island. DVD