Showing posts with label Cecchi Gori. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cecchi Gori. Show all posts

By Popular Demand... Rifkin's Festival!

Rifkin's Festival
is Woody Allen's latest film, and his first after his deal with Amazon fell apart.  Filmed in Spain, and not (yet?) released in the United States, it was released as a Spanish DVD back in March.  There was quite a run on them; I watched them rapidly sell out on Amazon.es and go for inflated prices on EBay.  But I figured if I held out long enough, a blu-ray would have to be issued somewhere on this globe.  And now it has been, by Cecchi Gori in Italy.  And its Amazon.it listing promised English audio.  So I rolled the dice, and here we are with all of the answers fans will be seeking... And yeah, you might want to read this post before ordering a copy for yourself.

Update 10/6/21 - 11/9/22: Alright you sick, filthy degenerates.  You want more Rifkin's Festival?  I'll give it to ya.  Yeah, I'll let you have all the Rifkin's Festival you can handle.  Just because it's Update Week.  Somebody (MPI Home Video) finally released it on blu in the United States, and I picked it up so we can cover it here.  I just hope you can take it.
We Wallace Shawn devotees have been asking for decades, when will he finally get a leading role fan in a Woody Allen film?  He's had bit parts in at least four by now, and they've always seemed like parallel New Yorker writer/ characters ideally suited for each other's work.  The fact that we only get it now that Allen's become persona non grata is somewhat bittersweet.  He stars as the titular Rifkin, a curmudgeonly film professor whose wife, Gina Gershon (yeah sure, but at least she's not 20) is a Hollywood producer.  He accompanies her to the San Sebastian Film Festival, an event he loathes because he resents the superficiality of modern cinema, because he's worry she might be having an affair.  This device gives Vittorio Storaro (Apocalypse Now, The Last Emperor) an endless tapestry of background locations to shoot (though the colors seem excessively artificially boosted) and the story a pleasing gimmick: Rifkin projects his relationship into a number of classic films, where they reenact and transform scenes from classic films like Wild Strawberries, The Exterminating Angel and Jules & Jim.  Good times.
Still, this is far from Allen's best work.  The film references are mostly clunky and superficial.  I've read critics lambast him for being out of touch with the modern generation, which is certainly true, but I'm not sure is such a flaw.  I mean, for one thing, I think that's an issue being purposefully addressed in this film.  Also, would we mock Kurosawa because Madadayo's characters weren't hip to the latest 90's fashions of its day?  Old men have old men concerns, and Shawn's the right age to depict them (as opposed to A Rainy Day In New York, where it was harder to believe those kids were saying their dialogue).  It just seems like a misplaced cheap shot for people looking to dunk on Allen for their other grievances with him.  On the other hand, it does render his parody of a modern filmmaker at the festival rather toothless - who on Earth is "Philippe" supposed to be lampooning?  If Allen actually attended modern festivals to watch the latest, trendy filmmakers, his character would probably have more bite.
So yeah, this is weaker Woody Allen.  The film parodies are pretty obvious, a couple of his jokes are blatantly recycled from his past films and no one's going to get emotionally invested in Rifkin's relationship problems.  But it does explore some interesting themes about our twilight years, and if you can watch a Woody Allen film without being blinded by rage (fair enough if you can't) it's engaging fair, with a professionally crafted plot, some good humor, an entertaining conceit and a strong cast.  This would've done more for Gershon's career ten years ago, plus we've got Richard Kind, Bobby Slayton, Christoph Waltz and look out for a refreshing appearance by Steve Guttenberg.
2021 Cecchi Gori BD top; 2022 MPI BD bottom.

So what about the damn BDs already?  Framed in 1:2.0 (except when the AR changes to match the classical films they're mirroring), both discs are properly 1080p and look quite nice.  The framing, color-timing, etc are exactly the same on both discs, with only slight encoding differences visible in extreme close-ups.  If you press me, I'll admit I do prefer the CG's encoding to MPI's; but it's a distinction you'll never see in motion, so it's a pretty arbitrary call.  I did think the colors looked over-saturated, but as I understand it, that's how the film always looks; it's not an issue with the blu-ray transfers.  This was shot on digital, so film grain isn't a factor.  It was shot in 4k (or possibly 8k?), so a UHD would be even better, but I wouldn't hold my breath for that.  These blus look as good as you could hope for.

The burning issue, of course, is how English-friendly is this Cecchi Gori disc?  First of all, yes, it has the original English audio, in stereo and 5.1, both in DTS-HD.  For the record, there are also Italian 2.0 and 5.1 dubs in DTS-HD, plus Italian subtitles.  And are the Italian subs forced?  Happily, no.  But there also aren't any English subtitles, and there is, in fact, one brief scene that calls for them.  In a reverie dream sequence modeled after Ingmar Bergman's Persona, Gershon starts talking about an affair she almost had, and then slips into Swedish.  With no English subtitle options, we have no idea what she's saying, but I've taken the liberty of GoogleTranslating it for you now:
"I was obsessed with the silence of God, until one day I heard his voice. And God said to me, 'I saw Mort and. If I were you, I would betray him with no problem'."  Then the doctor says, "I am very perplexed and confused about life. I believe that God makes us suffer for our sins, but Sue and I have committed no sins, and Mort's only sin is that he only watches subtitled movies." After that we're out of the dream and back to English.  So there you go.  Write it out on an index card so you can pull it out of your pocket when you watch the movie and this scene comes up.  Or just get the MPI disc, because it's properly subtitled into English there.  For Italians, CG does get it right, offering both complete Italian subs, and a track that just subtitles the Swedish exchange.

MPI does the same.  We get the English audio in both 2.0 and 5.1, both as DTS-HD.  The above scene is of course now subtitled into English, making this the clear preferable option for us native speakers, with optional English subtitles for the entirety of the film as well.
As for extras, of course there's nothing there's actually something now!  I'd hoped CG might've at least had an Italian dubbed trailer, but no.  MPI, however, actually made the effort.  I mean, first of all, yes, they gave us the trailer, in English, plus a couple bonus trailers, including, naturally, A Rainy Day In New York.  But more than that, they gave us a half-hour special feature dedicated to the film.  It's a film festival press conference discussion (at the SSFF, of course) with Wallace Shawn, Gina Gershon, Elena Anaya, producer Jaume Roures and the Wood man himself!  This basically puts this blu in the running for the most loaded special edition of a Woody Allen film ever.  It certainly is in the US.  So cheers to MPI!
I held out through the Spanish DVD, and I suppose I should've waited another year for the MPI.  But come on, that's a long time to ask a Woody Allen fan to wait for the latest film!  And while it's no Crimes & Misdemeanors, Rifkin's Festival isn't a bad little movie.  If you've seen the trailer or other marketing and think this would be up your alley, it probably is.  And it helps that MPI's disc is not only an improvement, but decidedly easier to get your hands on.

In the Mouth of Madness's Wide World of Special Features (DVD/ Blu-ray Comparison)

So I just got my hands on Scream Factory's brand new special edition of John Carpenter's (last great?) movie, In the Mouth of Madness.  I don't have the older blu-ray to compare it to, because I was always annoyed by the lack of special features for such a wild, beloved cult film that obviously cried out for all kinds of fun bonus content.  And, as we now see, my holding out eventualllllllllly paid off.  But here's the thing.  Did you ever look up a movie on DVDCompare and wonder about all those foreign editions of a movie you like that have all these random, exclusive little extras?  Usually short running times, probably EPK (Electronic Press Kit) stuff; but better than the nothing we were getting in the US.  Well, for this film, I decided to break the bank and import a few additional DVD editions to see just what all that stuff was, and maybe scrap together a halfway decent special edition for a film that so deserved one.  Let's see how worthwhile that endeavor was.

Oh, and you're probably wondering how much of that material is on Scream's new Collector's Edition.  We're going to sort all that out, too.
Suggesting this might be Carpenter's last great movie is probably pretty contentious of me.  I imagine most fans would point to Vampires.  That's certainly a good one, but there's just something so much more evocative about the way Carpenter handles his far out apocalyptic horror - especially this one, where he gracefully ties it into our Stephen King-style small town Americana - that elevates it to a much higher level for me.  I'd trade ten Vampires for one In the Mouth of Madness.  Now I'll admit, we're probably sinking pretty deep into personal taste and preference more than any pretense of objective artistic merit at this point.  But I don't know... if nothing else there's a thrilling level of ambition in telling this particular kind of "absolutely anything can happen, and does" story that sets it apart from most other horror films.
And this film has so much else going for it besides.  Carpenter seems to be playing with one of his highest ever budgets, steeping the film in production values that enable him to bounce from one incredible set piece or massive KNB special effect to another.  And he's got a pretty strong all-star cast with Sam Neill, Das Boot's Jürgen Prochnow, David Warner, John Glover, Carpenter staple Peter Jason and Charlton fuckin' Heston.  And even the small roles are filled with great character actors like Bernie Casey, Willhelm von Homburg (Ghostbusters 2's Vigo) and Frances Bay.  You know who played that little paperboy kid at the end of the film?  A pre-Star Wars Hayden Christensen.  I'm not pulling your leg; look it up.  And speaking of looking up the cast, I couldn't place where I new Julie Carmen from until I visited her imdb - she's the head vamp in Fright Night 2!  Top it all off with a rockin' Carpenter score, and you've got one of those great, "anytime I see it's on television; I have to sit down and watch it" movies.
So happy DVDs did I have to scrap together to assemble every single special feature?  Actually, not all that many (the picture at the top was probably a spoiler, huh?), which should be encouraging if anybody else feels compelled to follow in my footsteps.  But I'd suggest waiting until we see how they stack up to the Scream features before committing to any decisions on that front.  So, we start out with the original US New Line DVD from 2000.  That one's not entirely barebones; it actually features an audio commentary by John Carpenter and his DoP Gary B. Kibbe.  But it's infamous as one of the worst audio commentaries of all time... anyway, we'll come back to that.  It's also a flipper with both a widescreen and fullscreen transfer, so it should be interesting to see how they handled that, especially since Carpenter is so famous for shooting in 'scope.

Then we've got the 2002 Italian DVD from Cecchi Gori.  If you're checking my work against the DVDCompare page, you might be thinking I made a mistake.  The German DVD from BMG Video has the same features as the Italian one, plus one more.  But - and I only know this by virtue of having the Italian DVD right here on my desk in front of me - that listing is missing an entry, and the "B-roll featurette" is actually on the Italian DVD as well.  So, at least in terms of special features, they're entirely interchangeable.

Anyway, then I've got the 2006 French DVD from Metropolitan, who you might remember also brought us the exclusive special features for American Psycho.  I'm beginning to realize those guys are an under-appreciated label, because they scared up some really good, all new special features for their edition, not just EPK stuff that New Line, for whatever reason, neglected.  And, of course, now I've got Scream Factory's 2018 Collector's Edition due to be released on July 24th.
1) New Line wide 2) New Line full 3) Cecchi Gori 4) Metropolitan 5) Scream
So, okay, first of all, that's a nasty fullscreen transfer.  I think they actually managed to chop off more than they left in.  I guess Carpenter didn't leave them any vertical matte area to play around with, going from 2.31:1 to 1.33:1.  Woof.  Apart from that, I'm not too mad at the 2000 DVD despite its age.  It's certainly better than the murky 2003 Italian DVD, which I'm guessing taken from the laserdisc.  It's somewhat windowboxed, zooming in a bit to crop all four sides to 2.21:1; and the edges look they were enhanced with a black magic marker.  Even before the days of HD, if you had gotten that disc for the extra extras, you still would've needed at least one other edition to watch the movie.  The French disc looks almost identical to the US disc, except a smidgen greener and slightly more accurately framed at 2.36:1.  The blu is at an even more perfect 2.35:1, but you'll notice manages to uncover more information on the sides than ever seen before.  It also loses that French greenness, and being in HD is naturally sharper and more clearly defined.  This is a new 4k scan of the "original film elements," which I guess is safe to assume isn't the OCN or they would've said so.  Grain is evident but not super distinct; it's obviously an entire class above any of the previous DVDs.

So the original DVD gave us a stereo and 5.1 mix, plus optional subtitles. No one should be using the Italian DVD to watch the movie in 2018, but just for the record, the Italian DVD just gives us the English stereo mix (plus two Italian 5.1 mixes), with English and Italian subtitles.  France gave us English and French 5.1 mixes plus French subtitles which are hard to remove (and no English ones).  Scram just gives us the English 5.1 mix, boosted to DTS-HD, plus optional English subtitles.  The previous US blu-ray didn't keep the stereo mix either, so really the only difference is the Warners blu had a bunch of additional foreign dubs and subs.
So let's talk extras!  And we can begin with that notorious commentary.  Carpenter enjoys a well-earned reputation for doing really good commentaries.  They're lively, easy to listen to, yet still enjoyable.  So I think part of the blow-back for this one was just that expectations were really high.  I've heard plenty worse commentaries, and this one has its share of good information.  But the fact that the DP doesn't seem to want to engage, and Carpenter insists on throwing it back to him routinely even though he seems pretty checked out is a bit of a downer.  Plus, it's just a more technical commentary where they're talking about lights instead of talking about stunts and goofing around on-set like he'd often do with Kurt Russell on other commentaries.  So yeah, it's kind of a dud, but not the unlistenable disaster it seems to be known as.  Anyway, that was all we had on the original 2000 DVD... and the original 2013 blu-ray.  You can see why I wasn't super eager to double-dip.
Cecchi Gori exclusive
So we'll go to the Cecchi Gori disc next, because it's actually not much.  Just three short things, all EPK material.  First is a five-minute promotional featurette, which is heavy on clips from the film and almost more like an extended trailer.  Next is a about four and a half minutes of on-set interview clips, with Sam Neill, Prochnow, Heston and Carpenter.  The best part of that is just getting to hear Heston talk a little about being on a John Carpenter horror movie, which is kinda neat.  Then, finally, there's about five minutes of behind-the-scenes footage, which gives some cool glimpses at how some of the more elaborate special effects sequences were made, and little exchanges captured on set.  Fun little odds and ends, but nothing to make a big deal of.  It also includes the trailer and a full-color insert.
Metropolitan exclusive
France's Metropolitan DVD, on the other hand, actually went out and got the big names to provide brand new content exclusively for their release.  They got new, on camera interviews with both John Carpenter and Julie Carmen, which weren't super long but both quite good and well edited.  Then there's a fairly long, eighteen minute featurette with Greg Nicotero going over the many creature effects of the film.  Honestly, getting this DVD in 2006 was pretty satisfying; the kind of thing that should've always been packaged with the film.  Metropolitan also included the old commentary, plus a couple of bonus trailers.  It was certainly a smarter option compared to the US DVD.
Scream Factory exclusive
But that was then and this is now.  Along comes Scream Factory, with a whole bunch of new, awesome stuff, and some older stuff.  Yes, they have the old commentary; but they also have a brand new commentary with Carpenter and his wife/ producer Sandy King Carpenter.  And this is a more loose kind of commentary, basically what fans were expecting and hoping for the first time around.  If you've heard the old commentary, he does repeat quite a few observations, but Sandy really is a good partner for John on here, keeping things engaging.  Even more fun is another episode of Horror's Hallowed Grounds, which really, I can't get enough of.  Then, there's about a sixteen minute on-camera interview with Greg Nicotero, which is essentially a rehash of the Metropolitan one.  It's not the same, it's brand new; but he covers pretty much all the same things and even shows some of the same video clips.  Similarly, there's a brand new Julie Carmen interview, which stays fairly close to the one she gave Metropolitan.  Besides that, there's about twelve minutes of behind-the-scenes video footage shot by Nicotero, the five minute promo featurette, the trailer, and an impressive ten minutes worth of TV spots.  It also comes with a slip cover, reversible artwork, and if you ordered it from Shout's site directly, a limited edition poster.
So, let's review.  How much of the older extras did Scream carry over?  Unfortunately, not all that much.  The original commentary and the featurette.  Not the EPK interviews or B-roll footage from the Italian DVD, and none of the new(er) interviews from the French disc.  And yes, I checked, and the behind-the-scenes footage from the Italian disc is not included in Scream's behind-the-scenes footage, although they both spend a lot of time covering the same scene of Neill running down the tunnel being chased by monsters.  But it's different footage shot by different people.

With that said, though, Scream did make most of what they didn't carry over fairly redundant.  They came up with their own Carmen and Nicotero interviews, got Carpenter to do the new commentary, and found their own batch of B-roll footage.  So on the one hand, if you're a die-hard collector, yeah, all that other stuff is still out there on the foreign discs.  But for most of us, basically all that content is closely represented here, plus more, making this the only release you really need.  I'm keeping my imports, so when I rewatch this film's extras I can include Heston's soundbites and stuff; but if I didn't already own them, I wouldn't hunt them down now.  At the time, importing was worth it.  But Scream Factory has finally given this film the treatment it always should've had.  Today's an awesome day.

Finally, Scorpion Unleashes the Ultimate Sect! (DVD/ Blu-ray Comparison)

Oh, man.  How many years has it been since Code Red first announced their special edition of Michele Soavi's The Sect on blu?  Since that time, it's come out as a perfectly respectable edition in the UK from the fine folks at Shameless, Germany from Koch and Japan from Happinet, then switched hands to Scorpion Releasing, and come out as a budget single disc edition.  But I kept the faith and resisted all of those releases, holding out for the ultimate 2-disc special edition that was always just around the corner.  And now it's finally here!
Now, I'm going to hold off official, final judgement until all four of Soavi's "main" films get proper, special edition blus to really lock in an official decision.  But most of my life, I've always been in the minority, holding up The Sect as my favorite.  Stage Fright certainly has the style to set it apart from the bulk of the genre, but still plays too much like a generic slasher to top my list.  The Church is a blast, but a bit sloppy, and unluckily stands in The Demons' shadow.  Dellamorte Dellamore was my favorite when I was young, but since then feels a little too comic bookish (fair enough, because it's based on a comic, of course; but still not my ideal sensibility).
So they're all great films, but The Sect winds up nestled in that sweet spot for me, still a more adult horror movie, full of atmosphere and completely wild imagery.  It feels more unrestrained, free to go where ever it wants, as opposed to his previous films, where he pushed against the envelope.  The Sect doesn't have an envelope.  It's just whatever Soavi wants it to be at any given moment.  Is Satan a hippy?  Is your face a lock that needs to be opened with a key of giant scary hooks?  Will a rabbit lead you down a hole that contaminates your drinking water with blue alien slime?  Will a bug crawl into your brain and make you dream about turning into a giant before a crucified bird monster pecks you to death?  Sure, all that can happen in The Sect!
With all of that said, I can just as easily see why this is some fans' least favorite film.  If you want a coherent, logical plot, you're out of luck.  It's confusing, seemingly arbitrarily weird, a little too reminiscent of Rosemary's Baby, and let's face it, the Alice In Wonderland theme is obvious and heavy-handed, and for all it's creative imagery, it can get pretty talky.  But even if it's at the bottom of your list, I think you have to admit it's still got a lot going for it.  There are undeniably cool scenes, and Soavi's camera is always crawling around, hunting out exotic new angles.  We get a pretty nifty performance from Herbert "Inspector Dreyfus" Lom from The Pink Panther movies.  And Pino Donaggio's score pumps the film full of cool energy.  At worst, it's a fascinating failure, which is still more than you can say for most movies.
So, like I said, I've held off on buying the previous blu-rays of this film, but I do have the original 2002 Cecchi Gori DVD from Italy, which until recently was the definitive release of this film for fans around the world.  And so we'll do that comparison, and talk about the differences between this brand new limited edition (to 3000, mine's #1892) 2-disc set that came out just this month as opposed to the single disc release Scorpion put out last month.  The difference isn't just that second disc.
2002 Italian Cecchi Gori DVD on top; 2018 US Scorpion blu-ray bottom.
The Cecchi Gori DVD was pretty sweet it its day: uncut, anamorphic widescreen, with both English and Italian audio.  What more could you want?  Well, in this new era of HD, we want more.  Like for instance, not a soft, splotchy mess.  There's a weird kind of noise to the whole image, not interlacing, but this kind of pattern like you're watching the film through a screen door.  I remember the first edition of the Upstairs Downstairs DVDs looked like that too, until they corrected it with the remastered 40th Anniversary boxed set.  Or here, I've actually got an example of it already on the site with I, Claudius.  Look closely at the old screenshots from the original Image DVD.  All part of the ride in the olden days of DVD.

Anyway, both films are presented in 1.78:1, although the DVD has a bit of feathered edging around all four sides and despite the DVD case claiming 1.66:1.  But despite the same AR, we see Scorpion has unveiled a healthy amount of information around all four sides.  The case tells us that this is a brand new 2017 2k scan (so a fresher one than even the 2016 blus?) with over 45 hours of color correction.  And that color work really pays off, because it's beautiful.  I mean, it's clearly superior to the blander DVD, but even on its own terms as a contemporary blu, it's an attractive image.
2002 Italian Cecchi Gori DVD left; 2018 US Scorpion blu-ray right.
Detail is a little light, but at this point I think that's down to the film itself.  This is a 2k scan rather than a 4k, so the grain isn't quite as individualized; but I think it's safe to say we're seeing all the pores of the actors' skin now that we were ever meant to see.  Compared to the DVD, it's a massive boost in quality.  Look how photo realistic the HD image is compared to the noisy SD above - you can actually recognize the Ford logo as a Ford logo on the blu.
And if Zeder had you worried, here's a shot of the subtitles.  They're perfect, and no they're not dubtitles.  And that's the first big distinction between this 2-disc release and Scorpion's single disc that came out last month.  That version didn't have subtitles, only the English audio.  This disc gives you the full language options with both the original Italian and English mono tracks in DTS-HD 2.0.  And this is a film where you want the Italian audio option; it has the better performances.  Try comparing the scene where Lom collapses in Kelly Curtis's house and she starts shouting for help.  In English, she sounds like a disaffected high schooler reading Shakespeare in a classroom.  In Italian, it's a convincing performance.  Admittedly, Tomas Arana's part is better in English; but overall, the Italian rules the day.

And this may be the first time most of us are really getting to appreciate the film in Italian, because while yes, I did say that the Cecchi Gori DVD had both audio tracks (in fact, they have both Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1 options for the Italian track), it only has Italian subtitles.  So we English speakers had to stick to our dub.  It was nice to be over to switch over to the Italian and get a taste of the Italian dub, but now we can finally make proper use of it.

Finally, I have to point out that there is some hiss to Scorpion's audio tracks.  It's not bad; and shouldn't bother you at all once you've grown accustomed to it.  The nearly wall to wall soundtrack covers up most of it.  But it's there and you won't exactly need to be wearing high frequency headphones to pick up on it.  And the old DVD doesn't seem to have it.  It's fine, though.  I guess Scorpion decided it would be more destructive or revisionist to run it through some noise filtering.  Cecchi Gori was happy to remix the whole thing into 5.1's after all, so they're hardly being true to the original mix like the blu is.
But language options aren't the only difference between the two Scorpion blus!  There's a whole wealth of new extras.  Now the old DVD just had the trailer and a negligible stills gallery (and a cool looking insert).  Scorpion already topped that with their single disc edition, which included on-camera interviews with Soavi and Arana, plus the trailer and some bonus trailers.  Well, that stuff's carried over, of course, but we also get an audio commentary by Troy Howarth, who did an excellent job on Arrow's Phenonema disc, and an on-camera interview with Dario Argento.  As you can see, while this is definitively a Scorpion release now, Code Red still gets credit for the extras they created.  And these aren't cheap, no frills interviews.  They're well shot in HD, cleanly subtitled (as opposed to the mess on that Zeder disc) and thoughtfully edited with clips from the film.

And that's just the first disc!  The second disc gives us two and a half hour's worth of additional interviews with cinematographer Raffaele Mertes, set designer Massino Geleng, screenwriter Gianni Romoli, Pino Donaggio, Giovanni Lombardo Radice and film historian Fabrizio Spurio.  And yes, these are all the same high quality as the ones on the first disc.  The only difference is the subtitles are removable here, but burned in on disc 1 (the extras, not the movie!).  Just something I noticed.  Anyway, this 2-disc set comes in a nice slipcover and features reversible artwork, utilizing the same poster image you see on the Cecchi Gori cover.
Scorpion has clearly set their sites on the very top A-list releases by companies like Arrow and Criterion and is playing to win.  And the result is Soavi's films finally get the treatment they've always deserved.  I mean, it's amazing The Sect never even got a standard Anchor Bay DVD back in the day.  It took until 2018, but I've finally gotten The Sect release I've always wanted.  And you can still get the single disc release if you're more of a casual viewer.  But there was no way on Earth I was going to miss out on this edition, and now that I've got it, I'm grinning ear to ear.