That dark blue text is VERY hard to read. Is it necessary?
I have not seen
The Romantic Englishwoman. I was not even aware it was available in the UK. Tom Stoppard wrote the screenplay. I feel that Losey is very much unappreciated these days. He was a very interesting filmmaker, who made many fine films.
Here are what I consider Losey's most important films. In the brackets is who owns the DVD rights, although some of which I cannot ascertain.
The Lawless (1950, Paramount)
I have never seen it, but it sounds interesting.
The Prowler (1951, MGM/Sony)
Fine Noir with Van Heflin. Never been on home video.
M (1951, Columbia)
Totally underappreciated remake of Lang's masterpiece.
The Big Night (1951, MGM/Sony)
Excellent Hamletian 'coming-of-age' Noir.
The Sleeping Tiger (1954, ???)
Brilliant, beautifully shot psychological thriller.
Why is this not on DVD? Who owns the rights?
Time Without Pity (1957, on DVD from HVE)
Intricate murder-mystery. Solid direction from Losey.
The Gypsy and the Gentleman (1958, ???)
Custume drama pre-cursor to
The Servant.
Blind Date (1959)
Visually impressive mystery-thriller. Practically forgotten today.
The Criminal (1960, on DVD from Anchor Bay)
Raw, exilirating crime drawa with superb performances
from Stanley Baker and Sam Wanamaker.
Eva (1962, on DVD from Kino)
Neglected for years, it was finally released on DVD in 2000 by Kino.
While interesting and soildly directed, it isn't one of Losey's best.
The Damned (1963, Columbia)
Why is this not on DVD? Very frustrating. Quintessential British 60s sci-fi.
Servant (1963, on DVD from Anchor Bay / Canal in UK)
Dark, disturbing examination of social status from Losey. Beautifully shot.
King & Country (1964, on DVD from VCI / BHE in UK)
Brilliant anti-war drama set in First World War.
Accident (1967, on DVD from Anchor Bay / Canal in the UK)
Slow, meditative, absorbing study in hubris and
middle-aged dissatisfaction. Great performances.
Figures in a Landscape (1970, coming soon from Paramount)
Massively underrated, almost-forgotten allegorical masterpiece from Losey.
Strange, sweaty atmosphere. I am so glad it is coming to DVD,
as I'll finally been able to see the Panavision framing.
The Go-Between (1970, Columbia)
Excellent adaptation. Sorely needed on DVD.
The Romantic Englishwoman (1975, on DVD in the UK from Odyssey Video)
As I say, I have not seen it, but I will.
Monsieur Klein (1976, on DVD from HVE)
Awesome study in identity with a terrifying reversal of fortune for Alain Delon.
Beautiful production design and shot in contrasting styles of decadence and despair.
Great film. Should have been upgraded to a Criterion, I feel.
La Truite (1982, on DVD from HVE)
I haven't seen this one - is it good?
There are definately a few films there that sorely need a DVD edition.