Indicator
Columbia Noir #5: Humphrey Bogart
Dead Reckoning | Knock on Any Door | Tokyo Joe | Sirocco | The Family Secret | The Harder They Fall
Licensor Information
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Directed by: John Cromwell, Nicholas Ray, Stuart Heisler, Curtis Bernhardt, Henry Levin, Mark Robson
Featuring: Humphrey Bogart, John Derek, Lizabeth Scott, George Macready, Alexander Knox, Marta Toren, Lee J. Cobb, Rod Steiger, Morris Carnovsky, Allene Roberts, Florence Marly, Jody Lawrence, Jan Sterling, Charles Cane, Candy Toxton, Sessue Hayakawa, Everett Sloane, Mike Lane, William Prince, Mickey Knox, Jerome Courtland, Gerald Mohr, Erin O'Brien-Moore, Santos Ortega, Max Baer, Marvin Miller, Barry Kelley, Gordon Jones, Zero Mostel, Henry O'Neill, Jersey Joe Walcott, Wallace Ford, Teru Shimada, Nick Dennis, Carl Benton Reid, Edward Andrews, James Bell, Hideo Mori, Onslow Stevens, Peggy Converse, Harold J. Stone, George Chandler, Charles Meredith, Ludwig Donath, Jean Alexander, Carlos Montalban, Lora Lee Michel, David Bond, Dorothy Tree, Nehemiah Persoff, Rhys Williams, Whit Bissell, Felice Orlandi, David Bauer, Raymond Greenleaf, Herbie Faye, Rusty Lane, Jack Albertson
A fifth foray into the film noir output of Columbia Pictures, but, this time, with a twist. Not only does this volume bring together six more gems from the studio’s archives, but it also serves as a showcase for the great Humphrey Bogart.
Having established his stardom in the gangster pictures of the 1930s, Bogart fit easily into the world of film noir, where he was equally at home playing troubled servicemen, slick-talking lawyers, black marketeers, gambling den owners, or hard-up journalists.
Columbia Noir #5: Humphrey Bogart brings together five of the iconic actor’s starring vehicles: John Cromwell’s Dead Reckoning, Nicholas Ray’s Knock on Any Door, Stuart Heisler’s Tokyo Joe, Curtis Bernhardt’s Sirocco, and Mark Robson’s The Harder They Fall, plus Henry Levin’s The Family Secret, a rarity starring Lee J Cobb and John Derek that was produced by Bogart’s Santana Pictures, an outfit that regularly delved into the seedy, shadowy world of noir.
Featuring a stunning 4K restoration of The Harder They Fall, and with Sirocco and The Family Secret appearing on Blu-ray for the first time anywhere in the world, this stunning collection includes newly recorded commentaries and critical appreciations, archival documentaries and short films, and a 120-page book. Strictly limited to 6,000 numbered units.
Having established his stardom in the gangster pictures of the 1930s, Bogart fit easily into the world of film noir, where he was equally at home playing troubled servicemen, slick-talking lawyers, black marketeers, gambling den owners, or hard-up journalists.
Columbia Noir #5: Humphrey Bogart brings together five of the iconic actor’s starring vehicles: John Cromwell’s Dead Reckoning, Nicholas Ray’s Knock on Any Door, Stuart Heisler’s Tokyo Joe, Curtis Bernhardt’s Sirocco, and Mark Robson’s The Harder They Fall, plus Henry Levin’s The Family Secret, a rarity starring Lee J Cobb and John Derek that was produced by Bogart’s Santana Pictures, an outfit that regularly delved into the seedy, shadowy world of noir.
Featuring a stunning 4K restoration of The Harder They Fall, and with Sirocco and The Family Secret appearing on Blu-ray for the first time anywhere in the world, this stunning collection includes newly recorded commentaries and critical appreciations, archival documentaries and short films, and a 120-page book. Strictly limited to 6,000 numbered units.
Details by Film
Dead Reckoning
Year: 1947
Time: 100
Aspect Ratios
1.37:1
Audio
English PCM Mono 1.0
Streaming Options
12069.
+6051
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Knock on Any Door
Year: 1949
Time: 100
Aspect Ratios
1.37:1
Audio
English PCM Mono 1.0
Streaming Options
No streaming options currently available for this title in your region.
Tokyo Joe
Year: 1949
Time: 88
Aspect Ratios
1.37:1
Audio
English PCM Mono 1.0
Streaming Options
Sirocco
Year: 1951
Time: 98
Aspect Ratios
1.37:1
Audio
English PCM Mono 1.0
The Family Secret
Year: 1951
Time: 85
Aspect Ratios
1.37:1
Audio
English PCM Mono 1.0
Streaming Options
No streaming options currently available for this title in your region.
The Harder They Fall
Year: 1956
Time: 109
Aspect Ratios
1.85:1
Audio
English PCM Mono 1.0
Release Information:
Technical Specifications
Format:
Blu-ray
Discs:
BD-50 (5 Discs)
BD-25 (1 Disc)
Total: 6 Discs
Regions:
B (Blu-ray)
Aspect Ratio:
1.37:1
1.85:1
Audio Options:
English PCM Mono 1.0
Resolution:
1080p/24
Subtitles:
English
Supplements
Types of Supplements Included: , Booklet
- Audio commentary with film scholar and preservationist Alan K. Rode on Dead Reckoning (2022)
- Audio commentary with writer and film historian Pamela Hutchinson on Knock on Any Door (2022)
- Audio commentary with writer and film historian Nora Fiore on Tokyo Joe (2022)
- Audio commentary with film historians Alexandra Heller-Nicholas and Josh Nelson on Sirocco (2022)
- Audio commentary with professor and film scholar Jason A. Ney on The Family Secret (2022)
- Audio commentary with critics and writers Glenn Kenny and Farran Smith Nehme on The Harder They Fall (2022)
- Limited edition exclusive 120-page book with a new essay by Imogen Sara Smith, extensive archival articles and interviews, new writing on the various short films, and film credits
- The Negro Sailor (1945): documentary short film, inspired by the success of The Negro Soldier, directed by Henry Levin
- The South Bank Show: ‘Bogart: Here’s Looking at You, Kid’ (1997): episode of the British arts television series devoted to the iconic actor
- Tony Rayns on ‘Dead Reckoning’ (2022): appreciation by the writer and film programmer
- Geoff Andrew on ‘Knock on Any Door’ (2022): the critic and programmer discusses Bogart and Nicholas Ray
- Bertrand Tavernier on ‘Tokyo Joe’ (2017): archival appreciation by the celebrated filmmaker and critic
- Christina Newland on ‘The Harder They Fall’ (2022): the critic and writer talks Bogart, boxing and Budd Schulberg
- Watchtower Over Tomorrow (1945): documentary short film about the formation of the United Nations, directed by John Cromwell
- Tuesday in November (1945): documentary short on the US presidential campaign of 1944, on which Nicholas Ray served as assistant director
- Tom Vincent on Sessue Hayakawa (2022): the film archivist looks at the career and stardom of the Tokyo Joe actor from the silent film era through to his Oscar-nominated role in The Bridge on the River Kwai
- Image gallery
- Max Baer on Super 8: home cinema presentations of boxing matches featuring the prize fighter who acted in The Harder They Fall, including his famous bout with Primo Carnera that he would recreate in the film
- The Big Moment (1954): short film produced by the United Jewish Appeal starring Knock on Any Door and The Family Secret actor John Derek
- Image gallery
- Theatrical trailer
- 1948 Second Unit Photography
- That Justice Be Done (1945): documentary short on the Nuremberg Trials, written by Budd Schulberg
- Image gallery
- Image gallery
- The Negro Soldier (1944): WWII documentary film intended as a recruitment drive for African American enlistees, directed by Stuart Heisler and now preserved by the National Film Registry for its cultural and historical significance
- Image gallery
- Jim Pines on ‘The Negro Soldier’ (2010): audio presentation by the author and lecturer, recorded following a screening of the film at London’s BFI Southbank
- Image gallery
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Dead Reckoning
Knock on Any Door
Tokyo Joe
Sirocco
The Family Secret
The Harder They Fall
Picture
Audio
Supplements
Artwork
