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DVD Extra: 'Camelot' and other Blu-ray upgrades

 

The last major film personally produced by Jack L. Warner at the studio that still carries his and his brothers' names -- it was released after the last surviving Warner sold the lot to Seven Arts -- "Camelot'' carries a special resonance for Hollywood buffs, in addition to the original Broadway musical being permanently linked with the brief, shining presidency of John F. Kennedy in the public's mind.

A commercial and critical disappointment when it was released in 1967, Joshua Logan's adaptation -- recently newly upgraded to a great-looking Blu-ray special edition -- now seems at least as appealing as George Cukor's "My Fair Lady,'' the other Lerner and Lowe stage musical produced by J.L. that won Oscar Best Picture's award three years earlier (the Blu-ray of that one, from longtime owner CBS, looks horrendous).

Logan's movie took its lumps at the time for replacing the stage Arthur and Guinevere, Richard Burton and Julie Andrews, with Richard Harris and Vanessa Redgrave. But 45 years out, that seems more like a wise choice -- and Redgrave has had an enduring off-screen relationship and marriage with Franco Nero, the Italian actor who replaced the bilious Robert Goulet as Lancelot.

Unlike Warners' 2003 DVD release that amped up the colors, the Blu-ray more faithfully reproduces the original earth-toned pallette of this melancholy romance, superbly carried by the vocals of Harris (who, let us not forget, had a huge pop hit with "MacArthur Park.''

The soundtrack of the three-hour roadshow version sounds great, and there's a bonus CD with four songs bound into the 36-page Blu-ray book. In addition to features ported over from the DVD, there's a new 30-minute featurette (in HD) and a commentary track by Stephen Farber.

Continuing to catch up with recent releases, here are some other notable titles that have received Blu-ray upgrades:

"1900'' (1977) -- Paramount has decided to license Bernardo Bertolucci's epic covering the turbulent first 45 years of the 20th Century in Italy in a fantastic-looking HD transfer to Olive Films. A seriously great-looking film shot by Vittorio Storaro, this saga of two families has a heavyweight cast including Robert DeNiro, Gerard Depardieu, Donald Sutherland, Burt Lancaster, Dominique Sanda, Alida Valli and Sterling Hayden. Cut to four hours for U.S. release, the Blu-ray presents the full five-hour cut with an English-language track -- the Italian actors are dubbed. The making-of featurettes from Paramount's 2006 release aren't carried over, but there is a 51-minute 2002 documentary on Bertolucci's career.

"Buck Privates'' (1941) -- Abbott and Costello's first vehicle, a huge hit (grossing $4 million on a reported budget of $180,000) that helped them supplant Deanna Durbin as the studio's top attraction, looks surprisingly terrific in one of Universal's official 100th Anniversary restorations, a Blu-ray/DVD combo pack packaged in book format. Like many of their early films, this is a World War II musical, and the big attraction here is The Andrews Sisters singing "Boogie-Woogie Bugle Boy'' and "Apple Blossom Time.'' When she isn't being romanced by Lee Bowman and Alan Curtis, USO girl Jane Frazee warbles "I Wish You Were Here.'' Bud and Lou join Shemp Howard, among others, for "When Private Brown Becomes A Captain.''

"To Catch a Thief'' (1955) -- I've said it many times before, but films shot in VistaVision and Technicolor make for the most mouth-watering Blu-ray classics.It's hard to say what looks better -- Cary Grant, Grace Kelly or the French Rivera -- in this sharp, superlative rendition of Hitchcock's frothy crime thriller. Copious extras are carried over from the out-of-print Centennial Collection DVD -- a line that was discontinued well before Paramount's actual 100th anniversary this year.

"A Trip to the Moon'' (1902) -- George Melies' famous 15-minute short -- painstakingly and beautifully restored from a crumbling hand-colored print discovered in Spain in the 1993 and the showpiece of last year's "Hugo'' -- gets a spectacular Blu-ray release from Flicker Alley. Besides this seminal Jules Verne knockoff with impressive 110-year-old effects, the limited-edition DVD/Blu-ray combo set includes a fascinating feature-length documentary on the film and its restoration.

"Fort Apache'' (1948) -- The first part of John Ford's "cavalry trilogy'' (with John Wayne, Henry Fonda and Shirley Temple) gets the best-looking Blu-ray I've seen derived from a black-and-white RKO feature from this era. Blacks are crisp and there's enough of a grain patina to give a film-like experience.

"Chinatown'' (1974) -- Roman Polanski's neo noir classic is another high-def upgrade from Paramount's defunct Centennial Collection line. The film looks great, and the copious extras carried over include a Robert Towne-David Fincher commentary track, as well as an illuminating feature-length documentary on the movie's historical background.

"A Streetcar Named Desire'' (1951) Alex North's jazzy score is brilliantly represented in this upgrade of Elia Kazan's taboo-busting adaptation of the Tennesee Williams play, which also highlights Harry Stradling Sr.'s shadowy black-and-white cinematography.

"Pillow Talk'' (1959) Another landmark film and another of Universal's official 100th anniversary restorations. The color levels, which had faded notably for this Eastmancolor title, have been pumped up for its Blu-ray debut -- sometimes to garish levels, especially in the many split-screen scenes. Still, it's hard not to like the first of the Doris Day-Rock Hudson comedies, especially when wolfish Hudson (who was gay in real life) pretends to be gay so Day can "cure'' him.

 

The Warner Archive Collection it taking pre-orders for King Vidor's "Billy the Kid'' (1930), starring Johnny Mack Brown in the title role, Wallace Beery and Kay ("Madam Satan'') Johnson. Also scheduled for June 5 is WAC's third volume of Monogram westerns -- eight of 'em made between 1943 and 1951, and all starring Brown.

The TCM Vault Collection continues dipping into the Universal catalogue for "The 1930s Rareties Collection,'' which offers the very welcome DVD debuts of Eddie Cline's "Million Dollar Legs'' (1932) starring W.C. Fields and Jack Oakie; Raoul Walsh's "Artists and Models'' (1937) with Jack Benny and Ida Lupino; and Henry Hathaway's "Souls at Sea'' (1937) starring Gary Cooper and George Raft. Rounding out the set is Leo McCarey's 1934 Mae West vehicle "Belle of the Yukon,'' briefly available on DVD from Image back before the end of the last century.

Also due on Aug. 7, from Olive Films, are the Blu-ray debuts of Nicholas Ray's never-on-DVD "Johnny Guitar'' (1954) starring Joan Crawford, Sterling Hayden and Mercedes McCambridge, as well as an upgrade for John Ford's "Rio Grande'' (1950), the first teaming of John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara.

 

 

 

 

 

 

About the Authors

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    LOU LUMENICK

    Lou Lumenick, a native of Astoria, Queens who's been covering movies since 1981, is The Post's chief film critic. He's covered the Cannes, Toronto, Sundance and New York Film Festivals many times. Lou co-curated the Turner Classic Movies film series "Shadows of Russia'' and has appeared on the network as an on-air guest programmer. He will introduce "Design for Living'' on April 29 at the TCM Classic Film Festival in Hollywood. Columnist Archives

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    KYLE SMITH

    Kyle Smith has been a film critic for the Post since 2005. He also contributes book reviews and columns on current affairs to the Sunday Post and is the author of the novels "Love Monkey," which was adapated into a CBS TV series, and "A Christmas Caroline." He is a graduate of Yale University. Columnist Archives

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    V.A. MUSETTO

    V.A. Musetto is a film critic. His specialty is indie and foreign movies, with an emphasis on Asian. He is a member of the New York Film Critics Circle and frequents film festivals from Tokyo to Rotterdam to Transylvania.

  • REED TUCKER

    Reed Tucker writes movie features for the Sunday paper. He didn't like "The Love Guru" either. He is a graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill.

  • SARA STEWART

    Sara Stewart is a features writer who majors in movies and minors in books, women's issues, health, fitness, science, music and any sort of participatory journalism that doesn't involve being on a boat.

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