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June '21 Digital Week II

Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
The Human Condition 
(Criterion)
Made between 1959 and 1961, Japanese director Masaki Kobayashi’s massive, three-part masterpiece is, in my humble opinion, one of the greatest films ever made. Don’t be put off by the inordinate length (nine hours—just think of it as a nine-episode Netflix series, and quite superior to all of them!) and grim subject matter (a pacifistic Japanese soldier becomes a Soviet POW during World War II): Kobayashi, a truly humanist artist, has made a powerful, transcendent character study of one man’s struggle to make sense of inhumanity that features several momentous, extraordinarily cinematic set pieces.
 
 
Tatsuya Nakadai, who gives a staggering performance, also starred in other Kobayashi (and a few Kurosawa) films. The widescreen B&W photography, so integral to the film’s forcefulness, looks luminous in Criterion’s hi-def transfer; extras include a 1993 Kobayashi interview, new Nakadai interview and an appreciation of the film by director Masahiro Shinoda. All in all, it’s a remarkable package for a remarkable film.
 
 
 
 
 
Center Stage 
(Film Movement Classics)
Taiwanese director Stanley Kwan made this intelligent 1991 biopic about Chinese silent-era actress Ruan Lingyu, who died by suicide at age 24. Kwan fascinatingly pieces together the remnants of her life, her career and her legacy by layering his film with several interviews with former colleagues, some lush recreations of scenes from her films—including titles which are lost—and discussing her artistry with Maggie Cheung, who commandingly plays her.
 
 
It’s challenging and lengthy (2-1/2 hours) but utterly absorbing, with an emotionally shattering final sequence that merges sorrowful film and personal history. There’s a first-rate Blu-ray transfer; extras include a Kwan intro and interview as well as a making-of featurette.
 
 
 
 
 
Falstaff 
(C Major)
Giuseppe Verdi’s enchanting final opera based on Shakespeare’s Merry Wives of Windsor still enchants, even in this straining-to-be-hip, updated 2018 Berlin State Opera staging by director Mario Martone.
 
 
Even though the great character of Falstaff has lost some comedic gravitas in this production, Michael Volle plays him estimably—and hilariously—and he is supported by a superlative stable of the women surrounding him, led by Barbara Frittoli’s sublimely funny Alice Ford and Nadine Sierra’s bewitching Nannetta. Daniel Barenboim ably conducts the terrific State Opera Chorus and Orchestra; both hi-def video and audio are exemplary.
 
 
 
 
 
The Snow Maiden 
(BelAir Classiques)
Would that the fairy-tale sweep of Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s lovely fantasy opera wasn’t muted by director/designer Dmitri Tcherniakov’s 2017 Paris Opera modern-dress production; at least the composer’s shimmeringly beautiful music conjures whatever the onstage action has blocked from view.
 
 
Rimsky’s score sounds gorgeous performed by conductor Mikhail Tatarnikov, the orchestra, chorus and cast—in which Aida Garifullina makes a touchingly vulnerable snow maiden. Hi-def video and audio looks and sounds superb.
 
 
 
 
 
In-Theater/Streaming/Virtual Cinema/VOD Releases of the Week 
Alain Resnais Shorts 
(OVID)
These short films (from 1950) by the great French director Alain Resnais (1922-1914) might seem slight compared to the shattering, innovative films he would make—like the short Night and Fog and features Hiroshima Mon Amour, Muriel and Love Unto Death—but are springboards to a unique cinematic oeuvre. 
 
 
Paul Gauguin is an intriguing if unexceptional look at the French painter with an appropriately dramatic score by Darius Milhaud, but Guernica (also 1950) is something else entirely: how Resnais juxtaposes and superimposes imagery from Picasso paintings as the wonderful French actress Maria Cesares speaks poet Paul Eldard’s impassioned narration about the ghastliness of war, Guernica anticipates later Resnais masterpieces.
 
 
 
 
 
The Ancient Woods 
(Sengire)
Mesmerizingly dream-like, Lithuanian director Mindaugas Survila’s astonishingly photographed documentary has been a pet project for decades, and it shows in its child-like wonder at the mysteries that pervade in nature.
 
 
Over a period of 10 years, Survila and his intrepid crew went into an old-growth forest in Lithuania and recorded life in all its forms, from the smallest ants and insects to owls, deer, wolves and other memorable creatures (even man). With no narration or music, Survila’s thrilling film is like discovering the glories of the natural world for the first time.
 
 
 
 
 
The Real Thing 
(Film Movement)
Like his previous film A Girl Missing but on a much larger scale, Japanese director Koji Fukada has made a slowly evolving drama about a young man who rescues a strange but compelling woman when her car stalls on railroad tracks and soon finds himself drawn to her increasingly messy existence while trying to balance his own relationships—including a sometime girlfriend, who’s not thrilled with this latest intrusion.
 
 
Based on a graphic novel, Fukada’s film contains a surfeit of melodrama, which he keeps mostly in check; but at nearly four hours, The Real Thing degenerates into occasional self-indulgent messiness. 
 
 
 
 
 
Tove 
(Juno Films)
Creator of beloved children’s books about moomins, hippo-like characters having myriad adventures, Finnish illustrator Tove Jansson lived a complicated but fulfilling life as an artist and a free woman, dramatized in director Zaida Bergroth’s engrossing biopic.
 
 
Set during and after World War II—her formative years where she grew as both an artist and a woman—Tove recounts Jansson’s open marriage, relationships with other women and the growing respect she eventually won from the public and artistic community. There’s a sympathy and light touch paralleling the author’s delightful illustrations and stories, which is cemented by Alma Pöysti’s wonderfully multi-faceted performance in the lead role.
 
 
 
 
 
DVD Release of the Week 
Devil in the Flesh 
(Icarus Films; also streaming on OVID)
Marco Bellocchio’s controversial 1986 film about Andrea, a high school student who gets involved with Giulia, an older, strong-willed and—as he soon discovers—psychologically disturbed woman is typically operatic, as Bellocchio allows his characters to act out their grand drama amid sweeping emotions, radical politics and robust sexuality.
 
 
Dutch actress Maruschka Detmers—who gives a fiercely committed (in all senses) portrayal of Giulia in what is truly a performance for the ages—was apparently the first mainstream performer to partake in a non-simulated sex act onscreen, but that sequence is remarkable for its casualness and restraint. It’s too bad the transfer on DVD and streaming looks even less good than the only adequate look of the 2005 No Shame release (which at least had an interesting interview with Bellocchio).
 
 
 
 
 
CD Release of the Week
Schumann—Complete Piano Trios/Piano Quartet/Piano Quintet 
(Harmonia Mundi)
Robert Schumann’s chamber music for piano is, with his songs, his best, and this exceptional recording by Trio Wanderer comprises the composer’s three piano trios, piano quartet, piano quintet—all masterpieces.
 
 
Although their readings of Schumann’s greatest chamber works, the piano quartet and the piano quintet—which include valuable collaborations by violist Christophe Gaugué and violinist Catherine Montier—are excellent, Trio Wanderer really shines in the trios, especially the one in F-major, the most immediately accessible of the three and the one that Schumann himself felt best showed off his mastery of this medium.

June '21 Digital Week I

In-Theater/Streaming/Virtual Cinema/VOD Release of the Week 
Undine 
(IFC Films) 
Director Christian Petzold collaborated with that extraordinary actress Nina Hoss on several films, but without Hoss, he seems lost: his last film, Transit, was a disappointment, and he continues that trend with his newest, which is Petzold’s take on the mythic tale about a water spirit, here in the modern world and falling in love with an ordinary man.
 
 
He reteams his Transit costars, Paula Beer and Franz Rogowskis to middling returns: although Beer is no Hoss histrionically, she more than holds her own in a borderline ridiculous role (especially as filmed by Petzold), but Rogowski, a basically inexpressive performer, remains a disastrous cipher. Petzhold proves to have little affinity for fantasy, wasting the elegance of his visuals.
 
 
 
 
 
Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
Athena 
(Warner Archive)
One of the mildest romantic comedies of any era, this original 1954 musical is pretty much a dated relic in its story of two men, in love with two sisters, discover five more at home along with grandparents who have them all follow a strict health regimen.
 
 
Although ahead of its time in the “healthy” angle, but otherwise director Richard Thorpe doesn’t do much that’s original or interesting; despite likable performances by Vic Damone and Edmund Purdom as the guys and Debbie Reynolds and Jane Powell as their gals, the movie meanders around to tunes by Hugh Martin and Ralph Blane. There’s a superb hi-def transfer; extras are three outtake musical numbers.
 
 
 
 
 
La bohème 
Cosi fan tutte 
(Opus Arte)
Two towering operas are given new life by terrific performers starring in Royal Opera House (London) stagings. In a 2020 performance of Puccini’s La bohème, Bulgarian soprano Sonya Yoncheva is a terrifically appealing Mimi and American tenor Charles Castronovo an equally fine Rodolfo who embody the tragically youthful romance of the story.
 
 
Mozart’s best opera, Cosi fan tutte, in director Jonathan Miller’s modern update—seen at a 2010 performance—is more a clever lark than a seriously comic exploration of relationships and their ambiguities, but the half-dozen cast members give it their all, led by the redoubtable Thomas Allen as Don Alfonso. Both discs have first-rate hi-def video and audio; Bohème has brief interview extras.
 
 
 
 
 
Escape from Fort Bravo 
(Warner Archive)
The American Civil War is the backdrop for this tidy 1953 western set in a Union prison camp in in the desert lands of the Arizona Territory: when a woman named Carla (Eleanor Parker) visits, Union camp commander Roper (William Holden) falls for her, not realizing she’s in cahoots with the Confederate prisoners, led by their leader Marsh (John Forsythe).
 
 
Efficiently directed by John Sturges and superbly shot in the rugged confines of Monument Valley and Death Valley, the colors of Escape look bright and sharp on Blu-ray.
 
 
 
 
 
Romeo and Juliet 
(Opus Arte)
Sergei Prokofiev’s ballet, one of the greatest ever created, is a masterly demonstration of how music is as powerful as Shakespeare’s own words in telling the timeless tragic tale of the “star-cross’d lovers.”
 
 
The 2019 revival of choreographer Kenneth MacMillan’s classic production—filmed at London’s Royal Opera House—is highlighted by the wonderfully agile Juliet of Yasmine Naghdi and the tough but tender Romeo of Matthew Ball; their dancing, along with the glorious playing of the Opera House Orchestra under conductor Pavel Sorokin, makes this a must for all ballet and Prokofiev fans. Hi-def video and audio are excellent; extras are short interviews.
 
 
 
 
 
The Tender Trap 
(Warner Archive)
In the mid ‘50s, Frank Sinatra was a heartthrob with chart-topping songs and movies to his credit: this 1955 comedy, based on a routine stage play, relies on his charm to put across this tired tale of a bachelor who finally falls for a woman (Debbie Reynolds) but realizes it will end his single lifestyle.
 
 
The supporting cast—including David Wayne, Celeste Holm and Carolyn Jones—prods this along into watchable territory, and Sinatra and Reynolds are good if not combustible together, but in director Charles Walters’ hands, this never becomes anything more than competent and occasionally amusing. The film looks great on Blu; extras comprise Frank in the Fifties featurette and The MGM Parade excerpts.
 
 
 
 
 
DVD Release of the Week 
Frida Kahlo—Exhibition on Screen 
(Seventh Art Productions)
The latest entry in this invaluable art series surveys the path-breaking Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, who was unafraid to put her own physical and psychological difficulties on canvas—subtlety and softness be damned.
 
 
As director Ali Ray juxtaposes her paintings—awash in blood, dead bodies, and other uncomfortable images—with details of her eventful, too short life, Kahlo’s artistry in all its daring nakedness is intelligently displayed. It’s too bad that another Exhibition on Screen release isn’t on Blu-ray; hi-def would really show off her art in all its vividness and complexity.
 
 
 
 
 
CD Releases of the Week
Walter Braunfels—Orchestral Works 
(Capriccio)
Although Walter Braunfels (1882-1954) wrote a memorable opera, The Birds, that was so popular upon its 1920 premiere that, for awhile, he was the most performed opera composer in Germany after Richard Strauss, he’s nearly forgotten today, despite labels such as Capriccio recording much of his repertoire in recent years.
 
 
The latest Capriccio release collects four of his works for orchestra written between 1910 and 1930, and they make up a fine overview of his style: attractively scored, heartfelt and Romantic with a capital R. His 1929 Divertimento even shows hints of American jazz with the presence of two saxophones. Gregor Buhl leads the ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra in marvelous performances of these winning works. 
 
 
 
 
 
Lisette Oropesa— Ombra Compagna: Mozart Concert Arias 
(Pentatone)
She’s already shown off her golden voice in starring roles in Mozart operas, so this new recording by Cuban-American soprano Lisette Oropesa is a no-brainer for her to tackle: a series of standalone arias penned by Mozart, all shaped for the specific singers he had in mind to perform them. In spans of 8 to 15 minutes, Mozart poured everything he had into these pieces, turning them into vocal showcases as virtuosic as they come.
 
 
Oropesa dives into these arias unafraid of their torturous twists and turns, especially the stunning “Ah lo previdi,” easily the emotional high point of the album. Oropesa’s gorgeous singing is wonderfully accompanied by the Il Pomo d'Oro ensemble, led by the estimable Antonello Manacorda.

May '21 Digital Week III

In-Theater/Streaming/Virtual Cinema/VOD Releases of the Week 
When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit 
(Greenwich Entertainment)
Caroline Link last dramatized a family fleeing Hitler’s Germany in the ‘30s before it was too late in her 2001 Oscar-winning Best Foreign Film, Nowhere in Africa. Link returns to the Nazi era with this touching look at the early life of Judith Kerr, who survived the war when her family left  Germany, first for Switzerland, then Paris, and finally to London: later Kerr would go on to write the hugely popular children’s book, also titled When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
 
 
Link’s affinity with child actors is apparent in the affecting and natural performance by newcomer Riva Krymalowski, who plays the young Judith. Marinus Hohmann as her brother Max is not far behind, and the parents—are beautifully enacted by Oliver Masucci (father) and Carla Juri (mother). 
 
 
 
 
 
New Deal for Artists 
(Corinth Films)
This 1981 PBS documentary about how FDR’s presidency literally saved many artists and their careers through valuable cultural initiatives is a sober recounting by director Wieland Schulz-Keil. 
 
 
He got so many luminaries to discuss their personal histories of the era—from the just-deceased Norman Lloyd, Howard da Silva and John Houseman to Studs Terkel, the renowned historian and writer who opens the film—and the chief New Deal alumnus himself, Orson Welles, to narrate, that it now feels more like an historical document than a mere film. 
 
 
 
 
 
Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
Carmen
Pagliacci/Cavalleria Rusticana 
(Naxos)
In this 2009 Paris staging of Bizet’s Carmen, one of the seminal female roles in opera is taken by the Italian singer Anna Caterina Antonacci, who gives an intelligent performance that fatally lacks any eroticism; John Eliot Gardner conducts his Orchestre Revolutionnaire et Romantique and Monteverdi Choir in a fine reading of the famous score. 
 
 
The famous duo of 1890s Italian one-acts by Mascagni (Cavalleria Rusticana) and Leoncavallo (Pagliacci), staged in reverse order by Robert Carsen in Amsterdam in 2019, have tuneful scores that beat out the awkward modern settings; American soprano Ailyn Perez shines in Pagliacci. Both discs have first-rate hi-def video and audio.
 
 
 
 
 
Cosi fan tutte
Ariodante 
(Unitel)
Mozart’s classic opera Cosi fan tutte—a romantic chamber comedy for six characters—achieves a new intimacy in this 2014 semi-staging in Vienna led by renowned conductor Nikolas Harnoncourt (who died in 2016), among his final stamps on some of the great works he most admired. 
 
 
Handel’s overlong baroque drama Ariodante, the novelty of director Christof Loy’s 2017 Salzburg staging is in superstar soprano Cecilia Bartoli playing the title hero with a fake beard and a vividly animated performance. Both operas sound and look great on Blu-ray; lone Mozart extra is a 52-minute documentary about Harnoncourt’s approach to Mozart.
 
 
 
 
 
Drunken Master II 
(Warner Archive)
Even by Jackie Chan’s standards, the fighting sequences in this fast-paced and often hilarious action flick are astonishing to behold and at times unbelievable to watch. Director Lau Ka Leung, together with Chan, has choreographed a stunning array of battles, culminating in a splendidly over-the-top finale that includes the star turning himself into a blowtorch. 
 
 
There’s an excellent Blu-ray transfer; there are also three audio options—the original Cantonese, Chinese, and an English dub—along with the original, sometimes humorously misspelled English subtitles accompanying the Cantonese dialogue.
 
 
 
 
 
The Ghosts of Versailles 
(Chateau de Versailles)
John Corigliano’s sumptuous Mozartean/Rossinian riff had its premiere at the Metropolitan Opera in 1991—the first new opera by an American composer to have its first performance there in a quarter-century—but this staging, at Versailles itself, is equally significant. 
 
 
Corigliano’s musical pastiche is eminently tuneful, and the Orchestra de l’Opera Royal and Glimmerglass Festival Choir and chorus, under conductor Joseph Colaneri, make the best possible case for it. The singers are first-rate; the costumes and sets are, of course, lovely. There are also a DVD of the performance and two CDs of the audio recording; lone extra is Of Rage and Remembrance, a documentary about Corigliano’s Symphony No. 1, a personal account of the AIDS epidemic that won a 1991 Grammy Award.
 
 
 
 
 
Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House 
(Warner Archive)
The punning title of this mild 1948 Cary Grant comedy about a businessman whose plans to build a new suburban home for himself and his family are constantly beset by problems also refers to the movie itself. 
 
 
A bloated, bland movie, it floats for long stretches on Grant’s charm, costar Melvyn Douglas’ constant putdowns and Myrna Loy’s sturdy wife and mother. Director H.C. Potter doesn’t do much to help, and although it’s always watchable, amazingly it’s only marginally better than The Money Pit, the pointless 1986 Tom Hanks-Shelley Long remake. The B&W visuals look appealing on Blu; extras are two (!) radio adaptations with Grant and a funny—and relevant—classic cartoon, The House of Tomorrow.
 
 
 
 
 
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex 
(Warner Archive)
It’s ludicrous history but grand entertainment: Bette Davis and Errol Flynn butt heads as Queen Elizabeth I and Robert Devereaux, the Duke of Essex, in this superior melodrama filled with romance, intrigue, colorful characterizations—Olivia de Havilland, Vincent Price, and Donald Crisp are among the large supporting cast—and a swelling Erich Wolfgang Korngold score. 
 
 
Director Michael Curtiz marshals his forces for a most engrossing ahistorical Hollywood spectacle; on Blu-ray, the restored transfer of the Technicolor film looks gorgeous. Extras include a vintage featurette and Warner Night at the Movies, hosted by Leonard Maltin, which recreates what viewers would have sat through if they saw this movie in its 1939 theater run.
 
 
 
 
Supernatural—The Final Season 
(Warner Bros)
Not many cult dramas last 15 seasons, but Supernatural has been able to retain its popularity for so long among certain segments of the viewing public: probably the cover image of the four men—featuring the series’ leads, the Winchester brothers Sam and Dean—goes a long way toward explaining that fact. 
 
 
Still, the show is entertaining, and its creators cannily allow certain throwaway bits to illuminate their fantasy fight between good and evil—even if, in the series-ending episodes,  the brothers’ final fight is against God Himself—such as the haunting use of the Dire Straits’ classic song “Brothers in Arms.” These final; 20 episodes look exceptional on Blu; extras include featurettes, deleted scenes and a gag reel. 
 
 
 
 
 
Tom & Jerry—The Movie 
(Warner Bros)
As features based on classic cartoons go, Tom & Jerry is certainly not the worst, but this frantic blend of animation and live-action is also certainly among the most forgettable. 
 
 
Director Tim Story is content to let his cat and mouse take over Manhattan among a collection of the least interesting humans to be in a movie like this: Colin Jost, Chloe Grace Moretz, Michael Pena, Rob Delaney and Ken Jeong all look properly embarrassed, and even the often diverting visuals are unable to carry the day for 101 very long minutes. There’s an excellent hi-def transfer; extras include a gag reel and featurettes.
 
 
 
 
 
DVD Release of the Week 
The Sound of Silence 
(IFC Films)
As a sound man who tracks and fixes ambient sounds from the dwellings and lives of affected New Yorkers, Peter Saarsgaard gives a perfectly-pitched portrayal of an insular man whose emotional well-being is of a piece with his work, while Rashida Jones nicely underplays the woman whose “sound” he works on and who might coax him out of his internalized shell. 
 
 
This is certainly an original idea for a film, but director Michael Tyburski—who cowrote with Ben Nabors—paints himself into a corner and has his protagonist’s story abruptly end, without confronting his emotional instability. Lone extra is an on-set featurette.
 
 
 
 
 
CD Release of the Week
Beethoven/Schnittke Violin Concertos 
(BIS)
Vadim Gluzman brings the same passionate frenzy to his playing in two works written nearly 175 years apart, binding them together by choosing to play Beethoven’s towering Violin Concerto (composed in 1806) with Soviet composer Alfred Schnittke’s own cadenzas for the piece, which are a prime example of Schnittke’s remarkable synthesis of modernist techniques and classical idioms. 
 
 
After hearing Beethoven/Schnittke, the latter’s own Violin Concerto No. 3 (composed in 1978), a thorny yet thoroughly accessible work, won’t seem too alien to the listener despite the 175 years separating these masterpieces. James Gaffigan conducts the Luzerne Symphony Orchestra in a sympathetic reading that underscores how both composers regarded the orchestral players as important as the soloist.

May '21 Digital Week II

Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
Fast Times at Ridgemont High 
(Criterion)
One of the most iconic titles to join the Criterion Collection, Amy Heckerling’s 1982 comedy set in a suburban high school not only has clusters of memorable lines and scenes but also several future stars in leading roles, from Jennifer Jason Leigh and Phoebe Cates to Judge Rinehold and Sean Penn, whose Spicoli is laugh-out-loud funny—plus there’s the great Ray Walston as the bemused but unamused teacher Mr. Hand.
 
 
Screenwriter Cameron Crowe, who got his start in Hollywood here, in some ways never equaled the combined innocence, cynicism and acute observation throughout. The film looks superb in a new 4K transfer; extras include a 1999 Heckerling/Crowe commentary; new Heckerling/Crowe interview; 1999 making-of documentary; and the re-edited network TV version, with several deleted and alternate scenes.
 
 
 
 
 
Bachelor in Paradise 
(Warner Archive)
When Bob Hope was in his prime, he could shoot off zingers with the best of them—when you watch one of his movies, you can see his influence on Woody Allen’s jokey patter—and even movies he made later, like Jack Arnold’s silly 1961 comedy about a writer who poses as a bachelor in a new suburban community to research a new book, has moments of sublime comedy only Hope could pull off.
 
 
Too bad the rest is so disjointed and unfocused: Lana Turner, as Hope’s romantic interest, is mercilessly wasted, while Janis Paige deserves more screen time as the resident cougar. The film looks quite good on Blu.
 
 
 
 
 
The Cool Lakes of Death 
(Cult Epics)
When Cult Epics recently released two films by Nouchka van Brakel on Blu-ray—The Debut and A Woman Like Eve—it was like discovering a female director almost criminally neglected if not outright forgotten. But a third release, this stunning 1982 adaptation of a novel about a 19th century bourgeois woman whose confused sexuality spirals her into drugs, adultery, poverty and prostitution, shows van Brakel as a major filmmaker.
 
 
Renee Soutendijk—who was so memorable in the Dutch films The Fourth Man and Spetters—is heartbreaking in the lead, and her fearless performance dominates van Brakel’s daring as she turns the historical drama on its head. The film looks fine on Blu; lone extra is a vintage newsreel.
 
 
 
 
 
The Go-Gos 
(UMe/Polygram)
In her documentary about the first all-female group that play its own instruments and write its own songs to be hugely successful, director Allison Ellwood tells an engrossing musical story that doesn’t stint on the many pitfalls faced by the band members, individually and collectively: sexism in the business, plentiful drugs, and personal and psychological problems.
 
 
Ellwood unearths a lot of vintage footage of the band pre-fame, and the fab five—Belinda Carlisle, Kathy Valentine, Charlotte Caffey, Jane Wiedlin and Gina Schock—are all upfront about their careers together and apart. There’s first-rate hi-def video and audio.
 
 
 
 
 
It Happened Tomorrow 
(Cohen Film Collection)
French director Rene Clair went to Hollywood in the mid-‘40s and turned out some enjoyable if slight fantasies: 1942’s I Married a Witch with Veronica Lake and this 1944 feature with Dick Powell as a newspaper reporter who gets advance copies of the paper that allow him many scoops—until he sees his own death is foretold.
 
 
Powell and Linda Darnell are wonderfully frisky together and Clair makes this offbeat subject—which predates Rod Serling’s Twilight Zone by 15 years—delightfully modest in its telling; after all, it’s simply an elaborate comic conceit. There’s a sparkling hi-def transfer. 
 
 
 
 
 
Merrily We Go to Hell 
(Criterion)
The year 1932 brought daringly adult treatments of taboo subjects than Hollywood was unable to create a few years later thanks to the strict motion picture code, which codified tame dramatic treatments for decades. Dorothy Arzner, an all but forgotten director of the pre-code era, made this fascinating melodrama about an upper-crust couple torn apart by his alcoholism and womanizing; she soon decides to allow him to sow his wild oats, as long as she can too.
 
 
Frederic March and Sylvia Sidney make a volatile pair in Arzner’s frank look at high-class hypocrisy. Criterion’s new hi-def transfer is impressive; extras include a video essay about Arzner and a 1983 documentary about the director, Dorothy Arzner: Longing for Women.
 
 
 
 
 
S#!%House 
(IFC Films)
Insufferably self-indulgent, first-time writer-director-star Cooper Raiff’s relationship dramedy about a college freshman and sophomore who hit it off one night—which he takes to be more special than she—has scant insight or wit in 100 increasingly desperate minutes.
 
 
There’s a surfeit of cleverness in Raiff’s script that tries to pass itself off as something more, but the dialogue is devoid of personality or originality, and Raiff’s Alex is singularly unappetizing. Dylan Gelula, as Maggie the sophomore RA, is better at constructing a character, but even she can’t elevate such mundane material. There’s an excellent hi-def transfer; extras are deleted scenes and Raiff’s hour-long feature, Madeline & Cooper, which preceded this one.
 
 
 
 
 
They Won’t Believe Me 
(Warner Archive)
Marcus Welby, M.D. fans may not recognize Robert Young in this taut 1946 film noir about a conniver who leeches off his wealthy wife and juggles two other women—and when his murder plot is thwarted, fate intervenes and he’s accused of a crime he hasn’t committed.
 
 
Young is excellent in a hugely unsympathetic role, and the women in his life are superbly played by Rita Johnson (wife), Jane Greer (other woman #1) and Susan Hayward (other woman #2). Irving Pichel bluntly directs Jonathan Latimer’s cynical script, which ends with a twisty denouement that’s blatant but effective. The gritty B&W movie looks terrific on Blu.
 
 
 
 
 
The Yearling 
(Warner Archive)
One of the most beloved animal movies ever made, this 1946 tale of a young frontier boy and his devoted deer, based on Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings’ Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, is unabashedly sentimental but tempers that with an unflinching view of living on the frontier, as director Clarence Brown does not prettify things.
 
 
Of course, the skillful color photography makes nature look colorfully realistic, and young Claude Jarman Jr. is about as natural as one can get playing opposite a fawn. Gregory Peck and Jane Wyman give fine, workmanlike portrayals of the boy’s bemused parents. The hi-def transfer of the bright color film looks luminous; extras comprise a radio adaptation starring the same cast and the classic cartoon Cat Concerto.
 
 
 
 
 
VOD/Virtual Cinema/In-Theater/Streaming Releases of the Week
The Man in the Hat 
Gravitas Ventures)
Composer/musician Stephen Warbeck makes his directorial debut with this bit of forced whimsy, an awkwardly shapeless comedy that tries too hard to approach a Jacques Tati-like flow to its visual comedy and physical grace but only partially succeeds.
 
 
This tale of an anonymous character on a journey in France has moments of nicely understated musical pleasure—notably a sequence starring British tenor Mark Padmore—but Warbeck runs out of ideas halfway through the 95-minute running time. A game cast is led by Ciarán Hinds, and it’s always nice to see French actresses like Maïwenn and Brigitte Roüan, but they (and many others) have little to do.
 
 
 
 
 
The Perfect Candidate 
(Music Box) 
In her intelligent study of how the old Saudi guard might lose its grip on power, Haifaa al-Mansour follows Maryam, a female doctor who decides to run for local office after her pleas for the government to pave the horrible road outside her clinic go unanswered.
 
 
She soon finds herself as a celebrity of sorts—taken seriously by some, brushed off by others and seen as dangerous by those who feel she should keep quiet—but perseveres, as much for her own well-being as that of the memory of her beloved late mother. Mila Al Zahrani’s winning portrayal of Maryam helps smooth over some of the bumps in her director’s script, which turns didactic and obvious at times.
 
 
 
 
 
Rockfield—The Studio on the Farm 
(Abramorama)
Who knew that a farm in Wales was the bucolic setting for the recording of much memorable popular music in the past half-century? Hannah Berryman’s breezily diverting documentary about Rockfield, the studio that’s hosted everyone from Black Sabbath and Queen to Robert Plant and Oasis, introduces a galley of colorful characters, including the studio’s founders, brothers Charles and Kingsley Ward, as well as chatty artists from Ozzy to the always sour Liam Gallagher.
 
 
Only caveat: too much time is given to more recent occupants like Coldplay at the expense of seminal acts from the ‘70s and ‘80s.
 
 
 
 
 
DVD Releases of the Week 
Atlantic Crossing 
(PBS Masterpiece)
Whether or not it’s accurate in its depiction of the relationship between FDR and the Crown Princess of Norway, who arrived in D.C. with her children to convince the reluctant but charmed president to help her troubled country against the Nazis, this eight-part miniseries compellingly recreates the behind the scenes skirmishing during a fraught period in history.
 
 
Although Kyle MacLachlan is not my idea of Roosevelt—he’s far too laidback—Harriet Harris is a colorful Eleanor and, in the lead, Sofia Helin is a three-dimensional Martha, the princess who must face her real feelings for the powerful leader of the free world as well as for her loving husband, the prince, and their young children. 
 
 
 
 
 
Beverly Hills—The Ultimate Collection 
(CBS/Paramount)
The smash-hit series Beverly Hills 90210—which ran for 10 full seasons from 1990 to 2000—made household names out of Jason Priestley, Shannen Doherty and even Tori Spelling, and became the blueprint for other nighttime soap operas aimed at younger audiences.
 
 
This colossal set of 74 discs not only includes all 293 episodes of the original series but also the entire first season of the latest reboot, 2019’s BH90210, which I doubt will have the staying power of its predecessor. Among the extras are behind-the-scenes featurettes, interviews, season recaps and a gag reel from the set of BH90210.
 
 
 
 
 
CSI: NY—The Complete Series 
(CBS/Paramount)
One of the most successful CSI spinoffs, the New York City version ran for nine years (2004-13) and 197 episodes, all of which are present and accounted for on this 55-disc set.
 
 
Led by a no-nonsense Gary Sinise for its entire run, CSI: NY also starred a solid cast of rotating detectives and profilers including Melina Kanakaredes, Vanessa Ferlito and Sela Ward, and had an array of guest stars like Peter Fonda, Josh Groban, Edward James Olmos, Katharine McPhee, Kid Rock, Shaline Woodley, Judd Nelson and car racer Danica Patrick. Many extras include deleted scenes, audio commentaries, behind-the-scenes featurettes and gag reels.
 
 
 
 
 
Nina Wu 
(Film Movement)
Actress Wu Kei-Xi cowrote the script of this explosive drama about an actress dealing with exploitative and sexist behavior on the set of her latest film, which director Midi Z unflinchingly shows in a final, disturbing sequence.
 
 
Wu is sensational as the young actress navigating sudden notoriety and ongoing abuse, although the movie’s middle with a melodramatic subplot about Nina’s close relationship with another actress who enjoys working locally—she’s in a family-friendly staging of The Little Prince—instead of following in Nina’s footsteps toward a popular career. Surprisingly, this visually striking film has not been released on Blu-ray, only DVD; extras are several on-set featurettes.
 
 
 
 
 
CD Release of the Week 
Liszt—Benjamin Grosvenor
(Decca)
When pianist Benjamin Grosvenor tackles the difficult piano music of Franz Liszt, he really goes all out: he starts this densely-packed recital disc—it’s nearly 85 minutes, which is the longest I’ve ever seen a CD last—with Liszt’s monumental Sonata in B Minor; and it is, as Grosvenor says himself in the program notes, “a wild ride,” but one that the performer is in complete control of throughout.
 
 
After that imposing mountain of a work, you’d think Grosvenor would take it easy, but instead he approaches the other pieces on this disc—which include three movements from Liszt’s colossal Annees de pelerinage, his “grand fantasy” on Bellini’s opera Norma and his “Ave Maria” transcription—with the same vigor and musicality, making this CD one of the only times I felt like I actually “got” Liszt.

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