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Film and the Arts

November '24 Digital Week III

4K/UHD Releases of the Week 
North by Northwest 
(Warner Bros)
One of Hitchcock’s most memorable—if also one of his most nonsensical—films, this 1959 classic contains some of his greatest set pieces and silliest plot twists, holding itself together as a grandly entertaining yarn. Cary Grant is his usual suave self as the innocent man mistaken for an FBI agent, James Mason makes a dastardly villain and Eva Marie Saint is the perfect femme fatale.
 
 
But the real star is Hitch: the wit, the thrills, the pacing of three masterly sequences (the corn field, the auction room, and Mount Rushmore) epitomize the film’s all-time status. The film’s UHD transfer looks perfect; extras comprise screenwriter Ernest Lehman’s commentary and several behind-the-scenes featurettes.
 
 
 
The Terminator 
(Warner Bros)
James Cameron’s 1984 sci-fi actioner made Arnold Schwarzenegger a superstar and Cameron an A-list director, although this feature about a murderous time-traveling cyborg who is assigned to kill an innocent woman for the future crime of giving birth to a savior is crudely, often laughably silly.
 
 
Linda Hamilton makes a sympathetic victim—she would become a femme fatale in the much more entertaining 1991 sequel—but Schwarzenegger is too robotic (even for him) and Cameron’s directing has cleverness without being particularly distinguished. The film looks splendid in 4K; extras are seven deleted scenes and three featurettes.
 
 
 
Streaming Release of the Week 
The Shade 
(Level 33)
Writer-director Tyler Chipman’s overlong psychological melodrama about a family dealing with mental illness and suicide takes an interesting germ of an idea but does little more with it than skim the surface, instead crassly visualizing the malevolence and repeating dream jump-scares, more desperately each time.
 
 
Not helping is the one-note acting by most of the cast—only Laura Benanti, as the troubled brothers’ single mom, gives an expressive, humane performance. Otherwise, this can be considered a nice try but ultimately a failed exploration of a serious subject.
 
 
 
Blu-ray Releases of the Week
Manon 
(Opus Arte)
French composer Jules Massenet’s Romantic-era opera about a young woman about to become a nun who elopes with her love became, in choreographer Kenneth MacMillan’s hands, equally lively and dramatic.
 
 
In this return to London’s Royal Ballet stage earlier this year, MacMillan’s brilliantly precise movements for the couple—embodied beautifully by Natalia Osipova and Reece Clarke—fit like a glove. Koen Kessels conducts the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House in a fine reading of Massenet’s marvelous music. Hi-def video and audio are topnotch; extras are interviews with the creative team, Osipova and Clarke.
 
 
 
Merchant Ivory 
(Cohen Media)
A longtime award-winning producer/director team, Ismail Merchant and James Ivory made films—often written by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala and scored by composer Richard Robbins—that included stories about India (Shakespeare Wallah, Heat and Dust) and historical biopics (Jefferson in Paris, Surviving Picasso). But their greatest successes were lush literary adaptations like A Room with a View, Howards End and The Remains of the Day. 
 
 
Director Stephen Soucy interviews Ivory, who speaks candidly about his and Merchant’s professional and personal relationship—they were lovers for decades—and also talks with stars like Emma Thompson, Hugh Grant, Helena Bonham Carter and Vanessa Redgrave. The result is a loving if tad too reverent portrait of these not quite first-rate artists. The film looks excellent on Blu; extras are extended interviews, Ivory and Soucy discussions and Soucy’s short, Rich Atmosphere—The Music of Merchant Ivory Films.
 
 
 
Night of the Blood Beast/Attack of the Giant Leeches 
(Film Masters)
This nearly forgotten pair of B movies from the Roger Corman producing stable, low-budget sci-fi thrillers 1958’s Night of the Blood Beast and 1959’s Attack of the Giant Leeches, are about as simplistic as their descriptive titles. Both films, which were directed by someone named Bernard L. Kowalski, are largely risible but are also effective timewasters if one is in the right mood.
 
 
The films look decent on Blu; extras include Mystery Science Theater 3000 episodes for both films, commentaries on both films, the academy-ratio version of Blood Beast; and featurettes. 
 
 
 
DVD Release of the Week 
A Real Job 
(Distrib Films US)
Writer-director Thomas Lilti made this amusing and often illuminating drama about a group of teachers at a typical French high school who deal with the messy everyday situations that come up involving their students, the parents and even one another, as told through the eyes of Benjamin, a young substitute teacher.
 
 
A superlative ensemble comprising Vincent Lacoste (Benjamin), Louise Bourgoin, François Cluzet and the always extraordinary Adèle Exarchopoulos, among others, makes this a sharp and penetrating look at classroom complexities in the vein of other French films like Laurent Cantet’s The Class and Nicolas Philibert’s documentary To Be and to Have.
 
 
 
CD Releases of the Week
Camille Erlanger—La Sorcière 
(B. Records)
French composer Camille Erlanger (1863-1919), a student of Leo Delibes, wrote several operas that never gained a foothold in the repertoire, possibly because their grand style seems out of step with the subject matter, like this 1912 music drama set during the Spanish Inquisition. It does have a still-relevant religious tolerance message, and Erlanger’s music has its memorable moments, yet when the storytelling gets more intimate, the music gets less interesting.
 
 
However, this performance, recorded at Victoria Hall in Geneva, is splendidly realized: there’s magnificent singing by the soloists and choir along with the estimable Orchestra of the Haute Ecole de Musique de Geneve led by conductor Guillaume Tourniaire. 
 
 
 
York Bowen/William Walton—Viola Concertos 
(SWR)
This wonderful-sounding disc features one of the best from the small repertoire of viola concertos—the lyrical yet technically thorny concerto by William Walton (1902-83), which he wrote in 1929 for soloist Lionel Tertis, who infamously called it too modern and did not premiere it—Paul Hindemith did instead.
 
This significant work is paired with the concerto by York Bowen (1884-1961), also written for Tertis (and he did premiere it, in 1908)—a much less familiar work, it has its own lilting beauty. Diyang Mei is the formidable soloist in both works, accompanied by the exceptional German Radio Philharmonic under conductor Brett Dean.  

Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Play "Body Cosmic" & More at Carnegie Hall

Ellen Reid with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. Photo by Chris Lee

At Carnegie Hall’s wonderful Stern Auditorium on consecutive nights beginning on Friday, November 22nd, I had the exceptional pleasure to attend two magnificent concerts presented by the extraordinary musicians of the celebrated Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, under the brilliant direction of the Klaus Mäkelä, whose rise internationally has been understandably meteoric.

The first evening started splendidly with a marvelous realization of Ellen Reid’s excellent, admirably orchestrated Body Cosmic, which was co-commissioned by this venue and which received its U.S. premiere with this performance. The composer has usefully commented on the work: 

Body Cosmic is a meditation on the human body as it creates life and gives birth. The first movement, Awe | she forms herself, unspools a melody against the pulse of an ostinato, reflecting the surreality of creating new life, so common and yet so astonishing. Dissonance | her light and its shadow explores the conundrum of bringing new life into the simultaneously beautiful and crumbling world, moving between big splashes of smearing brass and tumultuous percussion and moments of warmth and blazing beauty.

This piece was written in response to my own experience with pregnancy and childbirth, a period of time that coincided with my dual residency at the Concertgebouw concert hall and with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. Spending time in Amsterdam, working in the Concertgebouw’s storied halls, activated over 140 years of music making, is a looming presence in this work. Thank you to the incredible musicians of the Concertgebouw Orchestra, whose generous artistic contributions rang loudly in my mind’s ear as I wrote this piece. 

Afterwards, Reid ascended to the stage to receive the audience’s acclaim.

The renowned soloist Lisa Batiashvili then joined the artists to expertly play Sergei Prokofiev’s terrific Violin Concerto No. 2 in G Minor, Op. 63, from 1935, in which the elegant ethos and sensibility of the composer’s scores from that period—like that for his incredible ballet of Romeo and Juliet—is discernible. Prokofiev provided some enlightening background on the work:

In 1935, a group of admirers of the French violinist [Robert] Soetens asked me to write a violin concerto for him, giving him exclusive rights to perform it for one year. I readily agreed, since I had been intending to write something for the violin at that time and had accumulated some material. As in the case of the preceding concertos, I began by searching for an original title for the piece, such as “Concert Sonata for Violin and Orchestra,” but finally returned to the simplest solution: Concerto No. 2. Nevertheless, I wanted it to be altogether different from No. 1 both as to music and style.

The variety of places in which [the Second Violin Concerto] was written is a reflection of the nomadic concert-tour existence I led at that time: The principal theme of the first movement was written in Paris, the first theme of the second movement in Voronezh, the orchestration I completed in Baku, while the first performance was given in Madrid in December 1935.

The violin begins the initial, Allegro moderato movement soulfully, quickly echoed by the ensemble, but the music soon becomes lively—its lyricism is tempered with astringency—and the movement closes abruptly. The ensuing Andante assai is enchanting—and is the loveliest of the movements—although again the composer’s irony is apparent. The Allegro ben marcato finale is more overtly comic in inspiration, but with some darker undercurrents, and ends forcefully. Enthusiastic applause elicited an exquisite encore from the musicians, including Batiashvili: Johann Sebastian Bach’s Chorale Prelude on "Ich ruf’ zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ" (arranged for Violin and Strings by Anders Hillborg).

The second half of the concert was possibly even stronger: a stunning account of Sergei Rachmaninoff’s glorious Symphony No. 2 in E Minor, Op. 27. In his fine notes for the program, Jack Sullivan educatively reports on the circumstances under which the piece was created: “He resigned from his position as conductor of the Imperial Grand Opera in Moscow, as well as from piano engagements, and moved to Dresden for two years to devote himself exclusively to composition.” He adds: “Freed from distractions and buoyed by an apparently happy marriage, Rachmaninoff completed his Second Symphony, conducting the successful premiere in St. Petersburg in 1908; during his first American tour in 1909, he conducted the work with The Philadelphia Orchestra, with whom he later premiered his Symphonic Dances.”

The first movement’s Largo introduction is somewhat lugubrious but also has a dreamy quality; the Allegro moderato main body is at times spirited but much of it is solemn—it builds to a brief climax. In the Allegro molto that follows there is some urgency that intensifies later and the movement concludes suddenly. The succeeding Adagio features a famous melody that is rapturously beautiful—the movement could scarcely be overpraised—while the Allegro vivace finale is often exuberant but with moody passages—it concludes powerfully and affirmatively. A standing ovation was rewarded with another delightful encore: the "Hopak" from Modest Mussorgsky’s Sorochintsï Fair (arranged by Anatoly Liadov).

The second concert was at least comparably memorable, beginning with a superlative version of Arnold Schoenberg’s 1943 revision of his Verklärte Nacht, which I’ve written elsewhere is “one of the masterpieces of late Romanticism.” Sullivan offers a valuable summary:

Verklärte Nacht was originally written for chamber ensemble and expanded for string orchestra in 1917. The narrative behind the notes, based on a poem from Richard Dehmel’s Weib und Welt (Woman and World), depicts two lovers in a moonlit forest. In anxiety and remorse, the woman confesses that she is pregnant by a previous lover; though she fears her current lover’s reaction, she hopes that motherhood will at least instill a purpose in life. The man’s reaction is unexpected: The beauty of the forest inspires him to rise to the occasion and proclaim that love will unite them and make the child genuinely their own. At the end, he embraces her and they continue their nocturnal walk.

Even more remarkable was the second half of the evening: an enthralling rendition of Gustav Mahler’s awesome Symphony No. 1 in D Major—is any composer’s first symphony greater than this one? Schoenberg himself has said about it:

“Everything that will characterize him is already present … Here already his life-melody begins, and he merely develops it. Here are his devotions to nature and his thoughts of death.”

About the work’s 1889 premiere, Sullivan records that:

Mahler provided a detailed program for this version of the piece. In addition to the “Titan” subtitle (after a Jean Paul novel) for the entire symphony, the first movement was called “Spring Without End” (the long pedal introduction evoking “the awakening of nature at early dawn”), the second “Under Full Sail,” the third “Funeral March in the Manner of Callot,” and the finale “From Inferno to Paradise.” Mahler also included another movement called “Blumine,” but later suppressed it. In addition, the symphony was divided into two parts, “From the Days of Youth” and “The Human Comedy.”

The initial movement opens softly, even mysteriously, with an extended introduction preceding lovely, joyous, pastoral music, a mood that is sustained and elaborated throughout it. The subsequent movement is mainly comprised of an effervescent, vigorous Ländler; its Trio is also dance-like, if more serene. The haunting third movement—which was inspired by Moritz von Schwind’s satirical 1850 woodcut, The Huntsman’s Funeral—features an adaptation—in “gloomy and uncanny colors” according to the composer—of the children’s song, “Frère Jacques,” as a funeral march that is more than once interrupted by sardonic Klezmer music; the movement closes very quietly. The finale, which starts with extreme force in what Mahler called a “sudden outburst of a deeply wounded heart,” is more agitated than the other movements although there are numerous subdued—indeed even diffuse and inchoate—passages, but it ultimately acquires an exultant and heroic character—punctuated by exhilarating fanfares—and an accelerating forward momentum that achieves a thrilling climax. The artists were again—deservedly—enthusiastically acclaimed by the audience.

Berliner Philharmoniker Present Rachmaninoff & More at Carnegie Hall

Photo by Rob Davidson

At Carnegie Hall’s exceptional Stern Auditorium, on two consecutive days beginning on the afternoon of Sunday, November 17th, I had the enormous pleasure to attend two extraordinary concerts of late Romantic music presented by the outstanding musicians of the Berliner Philharmoniker, under the brilliant direction of its Chief Conductor, Kirill Petrenko.

The first event started marvelously with a highly accomplished reading of Sergei Rachmaninoff’s haunting and magnificent The Isle the Dead, Op. 29, from 1909–which is one of the composer’s greatest works, arguably comparable in achievement to his Second and Third Symphonies. In a useful note on the program, Jack Sullivan provided some useful background on the piece:

Rachmaninoff’s hypnotic tone poem was also directly inspired by Arnold Böcklin’s painting Die Toteninsel (The Isle of the Dead), depicting a small boat carrying a coffin and a mysterious figure in white arriving at a sinister island. This painting, which Böcklin called a “dream image,” was enormously popular, with reproductions appearing across Europe. Rachmaninoff saw the painting in Paris in 1907; it was still vividly in his mind when he got around to composing The Isle of the Dead in 1909, conducting the premiere in Moscow himself. What he originally saw was a black-and-white reproduction, but when he viewed the color original, he was dismayed: The spell was broken, so much so that he commented, “If I had seen first the original, I probably would have not written my Isle of the Dead. I like it in black and white.”

(One version of Böcklin’s amazing painting is on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art as a part of its permanent collection.)

An excellent soloist, Vilde Frang—here replacing the celebrated Hilary Hahn—then entered the stage for a thrilling—indeed, probably the finest I have yet heard—performance of Erich Korngold’s superb and undervalued Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 35, from 1945. The annotator again offered some informative remarks:

Korngold called movies a new form of opera. He believed that at its best, film scores could hold up as concert pieces, and many of his finest concert scores are based on his film music, the most popular today being his sensuous Violin Concerto, which borrows material from JuarezAnthony AdverseThe Prince and the Pauper, and Another Dawn.

The initial, Moderato nobile movement— which is at times incredibly beautiful—opens lyrically, quickly becoming more playful and animated—it features an impassioned cadenza—and closes triumphantly. The Andante Romance that follows has a hushed, even mysterious beginning and is more inward in character but is not without emotional intensity or free of eccentricities; it ends softly. The often dazzling and exuberant Finale, marked Allegro assai vivace, has some subdued passages and concludes jubilantly. Enthusiastic applause elicited a wonderful encore from the violinist: the lively, ultimately enchanting Giga (Senza Basso) from the Violin Sonata in D Minor by the Italian Baroque composer Antonio Montanari.

The second half of the event was similarly transporting, consisting of a sterling realization of Antonín Dvořák’s amazing Symphony No. 7 in D Minor, Op. 70, also possibly the best I have yet encountered in the concert hall. Sullivan reports that: 

Donald Francis Tovey set the Seventh alongside the C-Major Symphony of Schubert and the four symphonies of Brahms as “among the greatest and purest examples of this art form since Beethoven.”

Dvořák himself regarded the piece as a breakthrough work. It was commissioned by the Philharmonic Society of London (now the Royal Philharmonic Society), which in 1884 invited Dvořák to become an honorary member in return for a new symphony. This was Dvorak’s only symphonic commission, and it clearly inspired him. He set about the composition with great seriousness, determined to create a symphony “capable of moving the world” and conducting the premiere himself in 1885. 

The piece has developed a reputation as a “tragic” symphony, though the emotional variety does not really justify this label. Certainly, it has tragic elements in the first and last movements, perhaps attributable to Dvořák’s sadness over the recent death of his mother. The formal sophistication and largeness of design were more deliberate, an attempt to move beyond the folkloristic, “Bohemian” perspective of his earlier (and immensely popular) works. As Dvořák himself admitted, the D-Minor Symphony represented his bid to become “respectable” in the European music world.

Dvořák’s apparent model in the symphony was Brahms, whom he deeply admired and whose Third Symphony he had heard Brahms play on the piano.

He adds:

Tovey said it best when he commented that despite the work’s unusual formal strength, it offers the supreme specimen of Dvořák’s unique syntax: “The long meandering sentence that ramifies into countless afterthoughts.”

The first, Allegro maestoso movement, which is often dynamic, is brooding if exciting at the outset, while much of it has a pastoral quality; it finishes gently. The ensuing slow movement—marked Poco adagio—which, according to Sullivan, has a reference to Richard Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde of 1859, is largely graceful and dance-like, becoming more expansive and then more forceful, although with almost bucolic moments; it too closes quietly. The thoroughly captivating Vivace Scherzo is ebullient and charming but not lacking in weight; the Poco meno mosso Trio is more tentative in expression but the movement ends powerfully. The Finale opens solemnly but is nonetheless melodious and exhilarating, although there are reflective interludes; it has a noble conclusion. 

The next evening’s concert was also stellar—it was an unforgettable account of the original version of Antonio Bruckner’s glorious Symphony No. 5 in B-flat Major. Annotator Janet E. Bedell explains that, “This is the only symphony Bruckner begins with a formal slow introduction,” marked Adagio, which creates an almost religious atmosphere. Portentous music inaugurates the Allegro movement’s main body which then acquires a certain urgency that pervades it, although the emergence of its tertiary theme projects a recurring sense of serenity. Wagnerian echoes can be perceived here and the movement finishes dramatically. 

The succeeding, song-like Adagio has some of the work’s most exquisite passages; on the whole, it radiates grace but tension builds across this movement, which ends suddenly and very quietly. The Molto vivace Scherzo is energetic, even rambunctious, and not without extravagance even, and the influence of Ludwig van Beethoven is most clearly discernible here; its contrasting Ländler theme is bewitching while the delightful Trio entrances as well. The Finale—which the composer called his “contrapuntal masterpiece”—recapitulates much of the motivic material from earlier in the symphony, mockingly answered by the clarinet; it is miraculous in its fugal intricacy and has a tremendous, stunning, inexorable climax. The artists deservedly received a standing ovation.

November '24 Digital Week II

4K/UHD Releases of the Week 
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice 
(Warner Bros)
It only took 36 years for the sequel to Tim Burton’s winsomely offbeat supernatural black comedy to finally arrive, and if it doesn’t reach the giddy heights of the original, it still has the potent satirical presence of Michael Keaton in the title role as well as the welcome return of both Winona Ryder and Catherine O’Hara as daughter and mother.
 
 
Additionally, the disarming and winning Jenna Ortega plays Ryder’s daughter, and she, Keaton and Burton are enough to make this watchable. There’s an excellent UHD transfer; extras include Burton’s commentary and several behind the scenes featurettes. 
 
 
 
Blazing Saddles 
(Warner Bros)
The ultimate western parody is definitely not Mel Brooks’ best film—it has more dry patches and juvenile jokes than many of his other films—but the fact that this came out the same year (1974) as what is his best film, Young Frankenstein, is a miracle in itself.
 
 
And, of course, it’s stuffed with legendary comic moments courtesy of Cleavon Little, Gene Wilder, Harvey Korman, Slim Pickens and Madeline Kahn. The film looks sparkling in 4K; extras include Brooks’ scene-specific commentary and several featurettes and additional scenes.
 
 
 
Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
Der Freischütz 
(Dynamic)
German composer Carl Maria von Weber (1786-1826) created this masterpiece of German romantic opera in 1821; even its rickety fairy-tale plot including the supernatural and a magic bullet doesn’t put a pall on it. This colorful production, on the lake at Austria’s Bregenz Festival this past summer, pulls together great musicmaking, singing and staging for a memorable viewing.
 
 
The ace performances are led by sopranos Nikola Hillebrand and Katharina Ruckgaber, while Philipp Stölzl’s direction and set design are unimpeachable. The exemplary Vienna Philharmonic and Bregenz Festival Choir are led by conductor Enrique 
 
 
 
The Red Light Bandit 
(Severin)
Brazilian maverick director Rogério Sganzerla was part of the late 1960s’ Cinema Marginal movement, and this often dazzling 1968 entry about a celebrated Sao Paolo thief (based on a real-life incident) who steals from the rich, makes fools of the police and charms the public is a real hoot, despite the crudeness expected of a 21-year-old filmmaker.
 
 
But it’s so energetic and confident—and the acting of Paulo Villaça and Helena Ignez is so winningly persuasive—that falling in with its rhythms is easy. Too bad there’s not a great print available, but even in this merely OK transfer, the startling B&W imagery comes through. Extras include an Ignez interview, several Sganzerla shorts and an interview with film conservationist Paulo Sacramento. 
 
 
 
Roseland 
(Cohen Film Collection)
One of director James Ivory, producer Ismael Merchant and writer Ruth Prawer Jhabvala’s lesser collaborations was this slight, almost amateurish 1977 omnibus film about several people, mainly older women and younger men, who meet and dance at the famed dance hall in midtown Manhattan.
 
 
There are nicely observed scenes (notably in the first section with a wonderful Teresa Wright), but even though actors like Geraldine Chaplin and a young Christopher Walken try their hardest, there’s not much to this character study that works now as a time capsule of late ’70s NYC. The film looks decent on Blu; lone extra is a recent Ivory interview.
 
 
 
Speak No Evil 
(Universal)
The latest Blumhouse scarefest pillages Danish director Christian Tafdrup’s 2022 film to tell the story of a naïve family—mom, dad, teenage daughter—befriended by a strange couple and their mute son who are unable to leave when they visit and discover murder is in the offing.
 
 
Director-writer James Watkins has softened the original’s nihilistic worldview (similar to the U.S. remake of that seminal psychological horror film The Vanishing) by dutifully putting these people through their paces until a bloody but obvious climax. James McAvoy, Mackenzie Davis, Aisling Franciosi and Scoot McNairy as the adults and Alix West Lefler and Dan Hough as the kids are fine but can’t transcend the material. There’s a first-rate hi-def transfer; extras include behind the scenes featurettes and interviews.

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