Paramount first released Play It Again on DVD back in 2001. It was barebones, which frankly most Woody Allen DVDs have been anyway, but at least it was anamorphic widescreen. They released it the next year in the UK, and reissued it here in the US in 2017, but apart from the British disc being PAL, it's always been the same disc. It was fine for the time, but it's been feeling pretty creaky for the past decade. And finally, 2025 was the year. It was restored in 4k and released on blu in the US by Kino and Australia by Imprint. I see a lot of people went with the Imprint because it comes with a bonus documentary, but I went Kino. I'll get into why below.
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2001 Paramount DVD top; 2025 Kino Lorber BD bottom. |
Paramount's DVD offers the original mono track in Dolby 2.0 with optional English subs and a mono French dub. Kino keeps the subs and bumps the audio up to DTS-HD, but dumps the dub.
As I said, Paramount's DVDs were all barebones, but the blu-rays give us something. First of all, both include their own expert audio commentaries. I've only heard Kino's, but I can tell you it's a solid mix of informative and fun. Critic Justin Humphreys is joined by writer/ director Alan Spencer (Sledge Hammer, Tomorrow Man). There's some joking around but they're also prepared to break down the differences between this and the original play and well researched historical info (you'll be surprised who was originally intended to star in this... it wasn't always Woody Allen). Kino also located the original theatrical trailer (which neither Paramount nor Imprint have) and threw on some bonus trailers. Both blus also come in slipcovers. But as I mentioned earlier, Imprint does have one thing Kino doesn't...
2011's Woody Allen: A Documentary was directed by Robert B. Weide, who produced the Marx Bros doc In a Nutshell (which, you may recall, is the one that features an interview with Woody Allen), this is a made for TV, three and a half hour film that originally aired on PBS in two parts. There's also a cut-down theatrical version that lost over an hour of material, but fortunately, every home video release seems to be the full TV edit, so we can forget all about that hatchet job these days. This is essentially a career overview, it's not especially biographical, and definitely not interested in his scandals. They do spend a lot of time with Woody, revisiting his old neighborhood and stopping by the set of his then latest film, You Will Meet a Tall, Dark Stranger; but this mostly consists of interviews with practically all of his collaborators over the years: Diane Keaton, Jack Rollins, Scarlett Johansson, Tony Roberts, Mariel Hemingway, Martin Scorsese, Louise Lasser and so many more. This is the documentary we'd all hoped we were getting when Allen handed us us Wild Man Blues.
Docurama first released this in a nice, 2-disc DVD set in 2012. It has special features and everything. But the doc did air in HD, so us die-hards naturally wanted a blu-ray. And fortunately, there were a couple of import options who had our backs. I went with the UK blu from Soda Pictures because it had an additional, exclusive interview. And now, of course, it's available as a special feature on Imprint's Play It Again blu, but the doc must be in SD, if they're squeezing all 3 and a half hours onto the same disc with the feature and the other extras.
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2012 Docurama DVD top; 2012 Soda BD bottom. |
The DVDs give you an option between a 5.1 and 2.0 mix with optional English subtitles. Soda just gives us the 5.1 (which is fine, as that's the actual original mix, and it'll just down mix on your stereo TV anyway) in lossless DTS-HD, also with optional English subs.
Docurama's set includes five deleted scenes/ featurettes ranging from an interview with Weide, 12 questions with Woody to the shortest, a 45-second clip of Allen's mother. It's not massive, under half an hour's worth of stuff, but any Allen fan who enjoyed the doc will appreciate these. And these core extras are featured on just about every Woody Allen: A Documentary release, including Soda's and even Imprint's Play It Again blu.
But Soda goes further, with two additional featurettes. The first is called Woody's Favourite Actor, an interview between Weide and John Doumanian, the actor who's actually been in more of Allen's films (sixteen!) than anyone else. And the other is a a 16-minute pre-screening Q&A with Weide. It covers a lot of the same ground as the first director's interview, but hey, I'll take it. Obviously the Doumanian interview is the bigger prize. And you won't find either of these on the Docurama set or the Imprint disc. Soda's blu also includes a bonus trailer for Eames: The Architect and the Painter.
So Imprint's doc is a nice bonus for many viewers, but if you're serious about it, you need the Soda blu anyway. And at that point, you might as well get whichever Play It Again blu is easier to obtain in your region. I suppose, if you're really hardcore, you might even want both for the two commentaries. But they're just experts and presumably cover most of the same ground. So I'd recommend the Kino/ Soda route, it's how I went myself, but if you're just mildly interested in the doc, I'm sure you'll be more than satisfied with the Imprint and saving the extra cash.
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