Showing posts with label 101 Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 101 Films. Show all posts

The Stone Tape On Disc

Admittedly, the upgrade potential was low for this one.  Nigel Kneale's The Stone Tape was shot entirely on, appropriately, tape.  But I've still been eagerly awaiting the day I could replace my DVD with a blu, and this Christmas, we got it.  101 Films has released a fancy, boxed special edition, as part of their Black Label series.
One of the treats of a Kneale story is that the pseudoscience isn't just meaningless exposition to rush through as quickly as possible to justify your set pieces; it's fascinating material to enjoy in its own right.  The debate here over whether a ghost is self aware, and thus presumably trapped in perpetual self torment, is a sad, relatable notion on its own terms, not just the motivation needed to push the drama between the main characters along.  Another trademark Kneale quality is his rich, witty ensemble casts.  The Quatermass serials may be titled "Quatermass," but he's always got a team of strong characters who contribute just as much, sometimes more, to the resolution of the story.  And those qualities are never stronger than they are here, one of his best works, and a sort of off-brand Ghost Story for Christmas (it's a ghost story, made for the BBC and aired on Christmas, but lacks the official on-screen branding).
The BFI first released The Stone Tape on DVD in 2001.  It was then reissued by 101 Films in 2013, both as a stand-alone and a double-bill with Ghostwatch.  Now, in the case of Ghostwatch, 101 rather notoriously dropped all the extras from BFI's special edition, so the prevailing wisdom was to stay away from the 101 disc.  But that's not the case with The Stone Tape, which retained BFI's excellent commentary.  And now 101's is the definitive release with their new blu-ray, a packed special edition released in a fancy boxed limited edition as part of their Black Label series.  Oh, and all of this is in the UK.  Here in the US, we just had a not necessarily official, barebones DVD from Sinister Cinema.
2001 BFI DVD top; 2024 101 Films BD bottom.
As I said up top, unlike the other Ghost Stories for Christmas, The Stone Tape was shot on tape (no, not even the exteriors, as the BBC often split their productions, a la Fawlty Towers, Monty Python, etc).  Consequently, I wasn't expecting any revelations from seeing this arrive on blu.  101 even asks, right on the back of the case, that we "please approach the technical quality of this upscale with empathy."  Yeah, upscale.  So is this just the DVD with less compression noise?  No, there are some differences, starting with the aspect ratio.  BFI's disc was 1.27:1 and 101's is a more correct sounding 1.35:1.  But it's not just a little vertical pinch being fixed.  101 actually mattes it down a little, and crops a sliver off he right-hand side, so we've actually got a little less picture now... yay?  Well, hopefully we can trust 101 that it was always supposed to be framed a little tighter.
What else is different?  Well, the blu is a bit brighter, particularly in the shadows.  That might be an attempt to bring a little detail out of this very detail-free footage.  But if it is, I don't think it does; so it's more of just a slum, arbitrary distinction.  Is there any definitive improvement?  Yes.  The colors seem to bleed slightly less.  And both discs are interlaced (broadcast television tape?  There was never going to be anything they could do about that), but if you look closely, you'll see the combing is a finer, and therefore less destructive to the root image, on the blu.  And yes, there is slightly less compression noise.  That might almost make the film look too smooth at first glance, since there's such a lack of detail inherent to the source.  But no, we don't actually want any video noise cluttering up the picture.

101 also bumps the original mono track up to lossless LPCM, and theirs is the first release to throw in optional English subtitles.
But the big victory comes in the special features.  BFI just had one, but pretty great, special feature: an audio commentary with Nigel Kneale, in discussion with Kim Newman, who proves to be the absolutely ideal moderator to get Kneale talking, informed and curious.  They do a good job staying focused on what's on screen, though they also take a couple interesting detours into subjects like Kneale's issues with Halloween 3 and what his Creature From the Black Lagoon film with John Landis was going to be like.  But apart from some text stuff, that was it.

Again, 101 keeps the commentary, but they've added a whole lot more.  First is an expert commentary.  I was wary, but they knew their stuff and were lively without being jokey or otherwise annoying.  They have a video essay by Kneale's biographer, which also exceeded my expectations.  It's shot a little weird, but he's got the goods, hangs around the island Kneale grew up and even includes some recording of an exclusive interview with the man.  The same biographer also turns up in 101's new documentary, which is about 45 minutes and talks some appreciators not involved with the production, like Mark Gatiss, who makes the new Christmas Ghost Stories for BBC, the producer of Ghostwatch, and two guys who made a Stone Tape radio play for the BBC in 2015.  They talk to a guy who wrote a book about folk horror, who seemed like he wasn't going to have much to add, but it turns up he did a lot of research on the science(?) behind Kneale's script and quotes some obscure sources.  But the best part is that they've got the sound recordist from the original crew (not exactly the highest rank, but uniquely relevant to this project) and star Jane Asher, who still has a lot of enthusiasm for the project.
And the swag is real with this one.  101's Limited Edition comes in a thick, hard box, with a massive 193-page reproduction of the original screenplay, another 32-page booklet with essays by Andy Murray & John Doran, three art cards, and reversible artwork for the amary case.  Sadly, however, I have to point out another set where the back paper fails Grindhouse Mike's "will it fit in the box" test.  But that's my sole, tiny gripe against this extremely welcome release of one of my favorite (non)ghost stories.

Behind the Curtains of Ghost Watch

So I was just watching The Conjuring 2 the other night, and as it went on, I started to think, in some ways this is set up a lot like Ghost Watch. At a certain point there's a big plot twist, which don't worry, I won't spoil, but it's basically the end of the second act. So if you've seen the movie, you can probably guess. Anyway, that convinced me there's no way James Wan could not have seen Ghost Watch; he's totally cribbing!  But then it occurred to me that these Conjuring movies are based on "true" cases of hauntings, so even though Ghost Watch never credits it, they must've both been based on the "real" Enfield hauntings. I did a little research, and sure enough not only is the general set-up about the same, but that plot twist happened in the real event.  So I apologize for just thinking in my head that Mr. Wan was stealing.  But it's still interesting that Ghost Watch did it first, and I would argue, better.

Update 7/3/16 - 12/18/22: Wow!  This is one I never thought we'd see on BD, but here it is.  In a fancy new, special edition from 101 Films.  But given the unique nature of this particular program, is there any point to releasing this in HD?  Let's investigate.
Ghost Watch did a lot of things first, beating all kinds of ghost movies from Grave Encounters to Paranormal Activity to their punches by a couple of decades. But in some ways, it's still pretty unique. In fact, Ghost Watch is possibly best known for being a War Of the World-style hoax, where a piece of fiction was played like a non-fiction broadcast, in this case on the BBC, and scared a lot of people. According to the materials that came with the film, it was quite serious, including newspaper reports of a teenage boy who supposedly hung himself because of the broadcast. But as with Orson Welles' radio play, it's hard not to think that some of this ballyhoo is a bit exaggerated. And while the show had not been repeated since its original broadcast until BFI's 2002 DVD, upon finally seeing it, it plays like more of a spooky but fun Halloween ghost story than a real con.
But it is effective on pretty much all levels. Regular BBC presenter Michael Parkinson cleverly plays himself hosting a somewhat cheesy BBC Halloween television special ("Ghost Watch," in the style of quite real BBC programs of the time: Hospital Watch and Crimewatch UK), where they're going to ghost hunt a supposedly real London haunting live on the air. Some aspects of it are also remarkably similar to ghost hunting shows we have today, but this predates most of that sort of thing, having aired in 1992. Another frequent BBC host Sarah Greene plays the lead reporter who takes a camera crew to stay the night with a single mother and her two daughters in their supposedly haunted flat, and Red Dwarf's Craig Charles plays an irreverent reporter cynically interviewing trick or treaters out on the street. Naturally, nobody on the show takes the threat of the haunting seriously until the eerie signs of a real supernatural presence start to add up.
This is a smart story, which puts it well ahead of most of its haunted house competition. The show has us carefully studying hand held and surveillance footage just like Paranormal Activity would do much later. And its subtle self-parody of the tackier side of BBC programming is much more authentic than Grave Encounters. And yet this movie knows just when to stop being clever and shift into the dark and serious. The all too human trauma of young girls being terrorized by a grisly, malignant force gets genuinely creepy and unsettling. This film's Mr. Pipes is still a strong rival for Wan's Crooked Man.
Now, Ghost Watch debuted on DVD from the BFI as a tight little special edition in 2002, and that's the DVD we're looking at here. It has since been reissued by 101 Films in 2011, and again as a double-pack paired up with Nigel Kneale's excellent ghost story The Stone Tape in 2013. But those discs were a step backwards, removing BFI's excellent special features.  But they've redeemed themselves in full now in 2022, giving us a fancy, new special edition blu that recovers BFI's extras and cooks up some new ones of its own.  But given it's an intentional reproduction of a vintage, early 90's live television broadcast, would restoring this film from its original elements for a new HD transfer spoil the spirit, or even the entire point, of the show? Well, don't worry. They haven't really done that.
2002 UK BFI DVD top; 2022 US 101 Films BD bottom.
The film is full-screen, interlaced and sourced from tape. That's as good as it can get and as good as it should get. It was made to look 100% like an early 90s BBC broadcast, and that was authentically achieved by the BBC using their own equipment and crew of the time. If you're here looking for Avatar-like PQ, you've come to the wrong place. But that doesn't mean there isn't room for improvement on 101's BD release, and thankfully they've done it without any of the unfortunate tinkering many of us fans feared.

For starters, yes, this film is meant to be fullscreen and is on both discs, but BFI is slightly windowboxed and pinched to 1.29:1, which 101 corrects to its proper 1.33:1.  And while it maintains the interlacing and weird edging effects video masters of that period naturally have, the blu-ray clears up the gunky compression artifacts that cover the DVD's SD image.  For the most part, the image looks the same as it ever did (without clicking through to the full-size versions, the caps on this page appear pretty identical), and certainly still looks like an old 90s BBC show, with the blu just clearing up the little faults that the DVD added into the mix.

Both discs just have the Dolby 2.0 audio; but 101's LPCM presentation does sound a bit more robust, with background dialogue a little easier to discern.  BFI's disc was also lacking subtitles, which 101 has added (particularly useful for the possessed voice of Pipes in a few dramatic sequences). 
But BFI did offer some great supplements, which the original 101 DVD was missing.  The center piece of that features package is an audio commentary by director Lesley Manning, writer Stephen Volk and producer Ruth Baumgarten. They have a lot to say because the show's novel premise and format, not to mention the surprising controversy, giving them a lot to talk about. So it moves at a steady, informative clip. There's also a featurette called Shooting Reality, which is mostly Manning narrating stills of the original shooting script, behind the scenes photos, letters she received from children about the show, storyboards, etc. It's essentially an addendum to the main commentary to fill in the last few missing bits she wanted to say. So you'll definitely want to check out both. The DVD also includes an insert with liner notes by Kim Newman, and DVD ROM copies of the show's original treatment, screenplay, and another ghost story written by Volk.
Apart from the DVD ROM content and insert, all of that's been brought back for the 101 blu.  And what little they didn't bring back, they handily topped.  First, they added a second audio commentary, though this is actually probably the most disposable of the new assets.  It features academics Shellie McMurdo and Stella Gaynor who were both scared by this film when it originally aired on TV and they were kids.  So they don't have a lot of information to impart, and mostly just reminisce and fawn over how convincing it is (plus they run out of things to say and give up before the movie is over).  In other words, it plays as a giggly, repetitious fan commentary, rather than an expert commentary.  But more is always better than less, and maybe there's somebody out there who enjoys that kind of thing.

Much more rewarding is the new, 48-minute retrospective documentary.  It features sit down interviews with Volk, Manning, stars Sarah Green & Gillian Bevan, plus the writer and director of Host (Jed Shepherd and Robert Savage, respectively).  And while the DVD ROM copy of the script might've sounded cool, 101's actual physical 100+ page reprint is way cooler.  They also include another, 50+ page booklet of essays and six art cards.  It comes in a thick slipbox (like the good ones Arrow makes), and the interior amary case has reversible artwork.
Still, there are some key voices missing from the existing special features. And that's where Rich Lawden's 2012 documentary feature Ghost Watch: Behind the Curtains comes in.  On its own, it's quite a thorough history of the 1992 television film. They talk to pretty much everybody, including Manning, Volk and Baumgarten, and all the major stars, including those the BFI and 101 missed, like Parkinson, Mike Smith, Greene and Charles. They also talk to fans and people who remember the scares raised up by the original broadcast, and even Kim Newman. Any Ghost Watch fan will want to see this, too. In fact, it's Ghost Watch's single best companion piece, topping all the other special features combined.
2013 UK Lawman DVD.
And thankfully, it's available on DVD. It's a nice, anamorphic 16x9 1.78:1 presentation that ironically has superior picture quality to Ghost Watch itself. It's just got your basic Dolby 2.0 audio with no subtitles, and there aren't any extras except for a trailer for the doc, but I guess you wouldn't expect much for a film that's sort of already a blown up extra. Though I noticed they do have a few neat odds and ends on the filmmakers' youtube channel that would've made nice bonuses. Oh well.
Or, if you prefer, the transcript for Lawden's documentary is available in paperback. But you're going to want some version of Behind the Curtains to supplement whichever edition of Ghost Watch you may have.  If anything, it invalidates many of the other extras, just because it covers the same ground better.  Interestingly however, none of these looks at the Enfield case. It took the Conjuring 2 to put me onto that. So I'd also have to recommend this to anyone interested in that story, which was also depicted in 1998's Urban Ghost Story, and again by the BBC in their recent 2015 miniseries, The Enfield Haunting starring Timothy Spall.  But even given all of those, Ghost Watch is a unique and innovative take on the subject matter.  And, I daresay, the best.

Controversial Blus: Is It Time To Update eXistenZ?

David Cronenberg fans, you've got a tough choice in front of you. Do you want the Canadian special edition DVD of eXistanZ from Alliance Atlantic, or the newer US blu-ray from Echo Bridge? If that sounds like a no-brainer to you, I daresay you don't know all the facts, because it's a difficult compromise either way. And it can't even be fully resolved by buying both. Oh, and the only other options are even worse, so until Criterion or Arrow dive in to rescue this film with a fancy new version (don't hold your breath), it's really down to these two.

Update 10/26/15 - 6/12/18: There's a brand new, fancy blu-ray edition on the market, from the UK's 101 Films.  And, well, I'm not sure it makes the choice any less tough.  It really just adds more complications.  So let's see if we can make sense of it all, shall we?
Frankly, I'd be more bothered by our limited selection if eXistenZ was a stronger film. It feels like a halfhearted attempt to re-capture the magic of Videodrome, only updating television with video games. But it's far more conventional, not wild and trippy at all; and all the sci-fi concepts feel like well-worn tropes we've seen and heard many times over, most obviously in The Matrix which came out the same year. There are a couple compelling images that feel like top shelf Cronenberg... a man is given a large plate of fish at a Chinese restaurant. He eats the flesh off of them and then uses their bones to create a makeshift gun that fires teeth and uses it to shoot the waiter. Unfortunately, that and comparable moments add up to maybe 98 seconds of this film's otherwise dull 98 minute running time.

We're introduced to Jennifer Jason Leigh an eccentric genius video game designer who's debuting her latest virtual reality system to a small room full of suburbanites. A teenager tries to assassinate her, but her socially awkward bodyguard, Jude Law, rushes her off the premises. They hide out in a small hotel where Leigh tells him that they have to play her game to unlock secrets or something, and the majority of the film takes place within her video game world, which looks like the same brown warehouse redressed to be every location in the film. There's an amazing supporting cast, including Ian Holme, Willem Dafoe, Don McKellar, Last Night's Callum Keith Rennie, Christopher Eccleston, Sarah Polley and Robert Silverman, who's my favorite recurring supporting cast member of Cronenberg's work. But they're all wasted playing cartoonish video game characters with silly dialogue and incredibly fake accents. The accents are intentional; it's written into the script that our leads point out several times how unconvincing the video game characters are, especially their accents. But it still means nobody winds up giving a dramatically compelling performance. They could've just as well filled these parts with unknowns. Well, except Dafoe - he was nice and creepy.
And the leads aren't much better. Jude Law sure wasn't the actor he is today. And Leigh, well, I think you can blame the writing for her part. The script's really to blame for everything. Cronenberg's created a whole new, virtual reality world that's supposedly run by the human nervous system and re-engineered fish parts, and it's the most boring place in the world. It's basically the inside of a big cardboard box. If "eXistenZ" were an actual video game, it would be a huge flop. And the film only ever asks one question: are we in the game, reality, or a game within the game? You know, like Inception or one of those. But there are never any stakes either way. Who's real, who's fake, who's lying, who's double-crossing who? Everything's so disconnected, it never matters. I think the central issue we're supposed to be invested in is whether Leigh can save her game from mysterious saboteurs (who very well might not even exist), so she can get it into stores by release date? Um, okay.
Still, it's hard to resist all the talent involved. And this film does have its moments... did I mention the fish-bone gun? And it's Cronenberg returning to psychological science-fiction and body horror, which is everything his fans were begging him for back in 1999. It's just unfortunate that a bunch of people who know and care nothing about video games decide to write and film a movie about the subject that probably interests them least in the world (you'll see when you watch the extras... Tarzan knew more about computers than these folk). So it's weak Cronenberg, but it's still Cronenberg. Worth a watch, and depending on your degree of dedication, still worth having in your collection.

So what do we have again? Well, when this was first issued on DVD, it was a new release film, and fans were very let down that all we got in the US was a barebones disc from Buena Vista/ Dimension. But in-the-know fans quickly figured out that the situation was much better in Canada, where it was released with three audio commentaries and a 54-minute documentary! It's pretty rare that Canada will have unique extras apart from their US counterparts, but I guess Cronenberg being a Canadian filmmaker stirred up some local pride.

But, still, 1999 is very old in DVD terms, and as we'll see shortly, this film has been looking very much in need of an update. And what label came to our rescue? Well, uh, Echo Bridge did. They came out with their own little special edition blu in the US, which, as you might suspect given the company, is a little less than perfect. It also went out of print rather quickly, and despite having been issued in 2012, now routinely goes for $40-50 on Amazon and EBay. Is it worth it?  Or maybe you'd prefer one of the newer blu-rays.  There was an equally pricey mediabook released in Germany, and using the same master, last year.  And now 101 Films has just released a UK edition (a blu-ray/ DVD combo-pack, by the way), the second in their new "Black Label" series.
1) 1999 Buena Vista DVD 2) 1999 Alliance DVD 3) 2012 Echo Bridge blu
4) 2018 101 Films DVD 5) 2018 101 Films blu
Where to begin? Well, the framing is 1.78:1 on the blus and slightly pillar-boxed to about 1.74:1 on the older DVDs (the 101 DVD matches the 101 blu, naturally), giving the latter a little extra vertical information and leaving the blu feeling a bit tight and probably not how Cronenberg intended. But the Canadian DVD is chock full of haloing, over-sharpening, high contrast and even crushed blacks. It may've been passable for 1999 - hey, at least it's anamorphic, right? The US DVD doesn't have any of those problems, and it's anamorphic too, but it's pretty soft and compressed. Looking at the US DVD makes you understand the Canadians' temptation to try and artificially sharpen it.

Meanwhile the HD versions look pretty low-fi and compressed; but compared to the DVDs, they do show a readily apparent improvement. I've seen complaints online about the brightening, but I prefer it. I think it's the darker picture that's incorrect. I mean, you just can't look at those two shots of Leigh by the pump and say you prefer the second one. Even there, the blus have some edge enhancement and other imperfections, but compared to the Alliance DVD, it's a revelation.  To cut to the chase, all these discs seem to be using the same master, with just very slight framing adjustments.  The blu-rays are naturally a bit clearer than the DVDs, and the Alliance disc has a few extras flaws.  But basically we're looking at a lot of repetition between transfers, and if anyone was hoping any of the newer editions were going to "save" this picture and give us a real boost in PQ... sorry, folks.
1) 1999 Buena Vista DVD 2) 1999 Alliance DVD 3) 2012 Echo Bridge blu
4) 2018 101 Films DVD 5) 2018 101 Films blu
Except for one thing.  Look at the above set of shots... The Echo Bridge blu-ray is interlaced! Yuck, even the old DVDs didn't have that problem, and it's really hard to ignore on Echo Bridge's disc. I guess here is where I should mention that Echo Bridge also released Existenz on blu as part of a combo-pack with some other movies. They're the kind of budget releases EB is known for; but they announced that even those those earlier discs were 1080i; this 2012 solo blu-ray was supposed to be 1080p. Sounded great, but nope! Jokes on us, it's "i," too.  But thankfully, the 101 release (and reportedly the German release as well) corrects this issue and isn't interlaced at all.

At least their claim to have added a new 5.1 audio mix is true, which tops the 2.0 stereo track of their past packs, and the lossy 5.1 mixes on the DVDs.  101 Also gives us both the 5.1 and 2.0 mixes, both in lossless LPCM on the blu.  All versions also feature optional English subtitles except the Echo Bridge disc.
Extras-wise, as I say, Alliance killed it. That documentary is specifically about Carol Spier, the film's production designer. So if you're hoping for an eXistenZ making-of, it's a little disappointing; but it's a pretty interesting feature in its own right, and with the three commentaries - including one by Cronenberg himself, one by effects supervisor Jim Isaac, and one by DoP Peter Suschitzky - it adds up to a pretty great special edition. It's also got the trailer, which the EB blu is missing.

Echo Bridge of course didn't port over any of Alliance's features. But they stepped things up from their previous, barebones combo-packs by including three vintage interviews exclusive to their new blu. The best is an almost 30-minute piece with Isaac, who's got a ton of props and creations to show off. Then there are interviews with Jude Law and Willem Dafoe. Law's fun because it's a big get, but Dafoe's a little more interesting when he talks about his craft. Unfortunately a lot of time is wasted in both of their interviews asking them if they like video games or using the computer, which they don't but still stumble their way through long, rambling answers. The parts where they talk about the film itself are interesting, though.

Oh, and the US DVD has nothing but the trailer and an insert.
But here's where things get interesting.  The new 101 release drops and adds a whole bunch of features to make another very distinct set.  They carry over the David Cronenberg commentary and the Spiers documentary from the Alliance disc.  Oh, and the trailer.  But they drop the other two commentaries.  However, they do carry over the three interviews from the Echo Bridge blu.  And, most interestingly of all, they've created some cool, new special features.

First of all, they add two, new audio commentaries with film critics/ scholars.  One with Kim Newman and Ryan Lambie, the other with Nathaniel Thompson and Edwin Samuelson.  I found myself drawn in more by the latter, but both are pretty good.  And there's a brand new, on camera interview with Christopher Eccleston, which is great, talking about his experiences filming and his take on Cronenberg in general.  Then, they've also dug up a vintage 'making of' featurette, which is cool because it gives us some behind-the-scenes footage and interview clips with a few actors we don't otherwise hear from, like Don McKellar, Ian Holme and Jennifer Jason Leigh.  And they also pull out a few interview clips from the featurette (and the Jim Isaac talk) as separate clips.  They're the same, redundant video clips, but I guess it's for convenience if you just want to hear Cronenberg or Leigh's takes without watching the whole thing.

101's set also comes in an attractive slip box with an impressive booklet.  The book features a note from the president of 101 films, a glossary of eXistenZ terminology, notes by Alex Morris and most interestingly, an interview with Denise Cronenberg.  It has the look and feel of a fancy Criterion release, where the full color booklet has a proper spine and is housed outside the amary case.  And unlike the German mediabook, of course, all the text is in English, which is always a plus.
So, what does one do?  Just about every release has unique extras.  The blu-rays look better than the DVDs, but they're all fairly underwhelming.  And Echo Bridge has that distracting interlacing problem.  What I'd say is this: if you've already sprung for the German media book, then leave it at that, unless you're a die-hard fan and need all the special features.  If you've got the old Alliance DVD, the 101 release is the best way to upgrade because you'll get the HD and the total set of extras.  But if you haven't got this movie at all yet, it's a bit of a tie between the German and UK blus, basically depending which set of extras is more exciting to you (and maybe whichever is easier and cheaper to get your hands on).  Really, what this film needs is a new friggen' scan, and you might still want to hold off on getting any of these blus in the hopes of a Criterion or Arrow finally doing it justice.  But that could be a very long wait.