Showing posts with label Koch Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Koch Media. Show all posts

Yes, She Dies Tomorrow Is On Blu Now!

You might think it's crazy to be stuck buying a barebones new release DVD of one of 2020's best films.  720x480, still, in the age of 3840x2160?  Madness!  Well, let me reassure you, dear reader, this is no DVD... it's a DVD-R!  That's right, one of those M.O.D. video discs that's not even allowed to use the traditional DVD logo on its packaging.  Whomp, whomp.  But, yes, alright.  Something's still better than nothing.  I'm taking it.  She Dies Tomorrow is a literal must-have film; and considering how many other new films are simply being planted in various streaming service's walled gardens and left to rot these days, I guess I am still grateful to have an official, packaged release for my shelf, even if it is in SD.  I mean, it isn't like we're not still stuck with even worse editions of our other favorites.

Update 1/21/21 - 10-23-21: Woot!  Less than a year later, and everything's fixed.  Well, at least if you can play Region B discs.  Koch Media has released She Dies Tomorrow in Germany on DVD and Blu in a fancy-schmancy combo-pack mediabook.  Does it manage to be everything we fans disappointed by the DVD-R hoped for?
If you're not familiar with this one, though, and you're reading me saying things like "one of 2020's best films," "literal must-have" and calling it a favorite, maybe don't give it a blind-buy just yet.  First of all, I would not consider this a horror film, but it's being marketed as such.  The Indiewire quote on the front of the box calls this a "gripping apocalyptic thriller," and while I know what they mean, I don't think I could come up with more misleading marketing copy without overtly lying.  This film never once, for a split second even attempts to be thrilling.  If there's anything remotely scary about it, it's a sense of morose existential dread.  The closest film I can come up with to it, I guess, would be Lars von Trier's Melancholia?  Except even that film had its characters facing the ostensible threat of an on-coming planetary collision.  No such danger exists here.  And that's not a criticism, at least anymore than saying Schindler's List doesn't have any big belly laughs in it - it's just not that kind of movie.  I've heard a lot of frustrated comments from people expecting the next Babadook or Midsommar (ugh, thank you for not being another Midsommar), in entirely the wrong disposition to respond to a darkly witty drama whose strengths lie in subtle, sympathetic observations of human behavior.
I'm going to give you the quite concise, official description of She Dies Tomorrow right from the back of the box, because I watched this with someone who wound up feeling frustrated because they assumed this film was leading up to some kind of big reveal.  This is definitely a "journey not the destination" story, and I think being on the same page as the storytellers (because I'd read a bit about the film before diving in) really freed me up to engage with it right from the start.  So here it is:
"After waking up convinced that she is going to die tomorrow, Amy’s carefully mended life begins to unravel.  As her delusions of certain death become contagious to those around her, Amy and her friends’ lives spiral out of control in a tantalizing descent into madness."
See, because this film is being presented as a sort of elevated horror film, you can get stuck watching this film thinking all the dialogue and character work is some sort of slow burn building up to a climatic shock.  Like, at the end, aliens will be revealed.  Or even an ominous presence left vague, like It Comes At Night or (lol) Bird Box.  But the whole point this time is that there's nothing out there; this film's just about what people think is going to happen.  And that's not a spoiler.  The film tries to tell us that early and repeatedly.  It's right there in the two-sentence pitch that's also on the official film's webpage and everywhere else they can sow it.  They did their bit to let us know.
Writer/ director Amy Seimetz apparently agreed to star in the recent Pet Sematary remake to finance this film.  Who would've guessed in 2019 that something good would've come of that?  But here we are!  Kate Lyn Sheil, of Kate Plays Christine and Seimetz's excellent first film, Sun Don't Shine stars alongside the always wonderful Jane Adams (Happiness, Twin Peaks) as two friends who go on distinctly individual journeys during what they believe to be their last day on Earth.  This film swings easily from cutting to sympathetic and back as the film alternatively watches maudlin Kate self-indulgently replay the same Mozart record over and over and Jane overrun her sister-in-law's birthday party with her disengaged preoccupations to them finding joy and peace in the perfect ways to spend their final hours.  And we're treated to more and more perspectives and possibilities as everyone they come into contact with also become perfectly convinced that they will die tomorrow.  Fortunately, it's both too clever and sweet to become depressing, helped immeasurably by the cast, which also includes Josh Lucas, Jorge/ Jump Tomorrow's Tunde Adebimpe (boy, there's someone I haven't thought about in years!  But apparently he was in the last Spider-Man flick), horror director Adam Wingard and a refreshingly non-violent Michelle Rodriguez.
2020 Neon DVD-R top; 2021 Koch DVD mid; 2021 Koch BD bottom.
This film is left open at 1.78:1 on all three discs, but seeing as how the Neon Film Company seems to be releasing this directly through an MOD service themselves, I'm going to assume all matters of presentation are correct.  Like, if it was meant to be matted to 1.85:1, they'd have no one to blame but themselves.  And like I said in the intro, I've seen far worse DVDs.  This is not interlaced, pan & scan, censored, or troubled in any of the ways many of the films still stuck on old discs are.  Some scenes I'd say have an intentionally soft look to it, but the Neon disc is soft above and beyond that, drifting from a gentle mystique to flat-out murky.  Even the Koch DVD comes slightly more into focus... though it helps that it's also correcting a little vertical stretch, which also winds up revealing a sliver more information along the top and bottom of the Koch discs.  But yes, the blu looks decidedly sharper and cleaner.  Small detail that was, frankly, mush on the first disc comes into clear resolution on the BD, especially helpful in this film's many low-light scenes, where we're already on the edge of losing critical facial impressions in the shadows.

Meanwhile, all three discs provide a nice, clear 5.1 mix, but it's lossless DTS-HD on the blu.  The mediabook also includes a German dub, again in 5.1 DTS-HD, but loses half a point for not including optional English HoH subtitles like the DVD-R did.  They do provide optional German subs though, if that's helpful to ya; but this is small step backwards we have to accept along with our big steps forward.
Another point for the DVD-R, which is naturally pretty barebones, threw in the trailer, something MOD DVD-Rs don't typically bother with.  But Koch tops that handily enough.  First of all, they also include the trailer (and yes, in English) along with a couple German-language bonus trailers.  But then they include a sweet 23-minute 'making of!'  It's primarily comprised of an online conversation between Seimetz and her DP intercut with clips from the film, but there's also a brief visit to Seimetz's garage that still houses a lot of the stuff she used to make the film.  It's on the technical side, so don't come in hoping for Seimetz to unveil that it was really demons from the id the whole time; and the film clips run a bit overlong.  But it's pretty great.  Plus the mediabook naturally has the book element.  It's all in German, but still many pages of beautiful color imagery from the film tops the nothing that comes with the DVD-R.
It would've been nice to know this was pending back when the DVD-R came out, so we could've waited instead of wasting our money.  But this release is too satisfying for me to stay mad about even such a quick succession double-dip.  The new 'making of' was a nice surprise (the online listings I saw made no mention of it) that really helped take the sting out.  So obviously, yes, this is the version to choose now, and I'm just glad this movie finally has a release worthy of it.

Importing Dancer In the Dark

Lars von Trier's musical drama Dancer In the Dark is one of those fairly early shot-on-(standard def)-digital films that begs the question, is there any point, really, to reissuing it on blu-ray?  You look at, say, 2002's 24 Hour Party People or 2006's Inland Empire, and apart from lossless audio or special features, there really isn't much reason to upgrade.  The HD transfers are nearly identical to their DVD predecessors; there's no substantive boost in PQ to be found.  And this film's from 2000, so it's even older than those.  But take one look at these screenshots, and it becomes immediately that this somehow not one of those situations.
Bjork stars as the third and final of his "Golden Heart" heroines (following Breaking the Waves and The Idiots).  She's obviously been brought aboard for her singing and song-writing, but she proves to be a damn impressive actress, too, playing an immigrant mother in rural 1960s America, working at a sink factory to pay for her son's eye operation.  Because she's going blind and it's hereditary.  Unfortunately the otherwise altruistic cop (David Morse in an unforgettable role) who lives next door plans to steal her money, and it all ends in grisly murder.  Only Bjork's love of Hollywood musicals can see her through.  Yes, it's very melodramatic (some of the courtroom material in the third act seems particularly unrealistic), presumably paying intentional homage to classic cinema plotting, but the direction and the performances manage to hold it together as a genuinely moving crime story.  Plus singing and dancing!  The supporting cast includes Catherine Deneuve(!), Cabaret's Joel Grey and cameos by Stellan Skarsgard and everybody's favorite Udo Kier.
New Line initially released Dancer In the Dark as a pretty nice special edition DVD in 2001.  Warner Bros reissued it as a DVDR for their Archives collection in 2016.  But by then it was irrelevant because it had already been released on blu-ray overseas: a 2012 Japanese disc from Sochiku and a 2014 German disc from Koch Media.  I've gone with the latter.  And I guess now's as good a time as any to point out that the blu-ray is of the original, European version of the film, not the altered US version included on the New Line and WB DVDs.  There's only one difference between the two: the prologue.  Originally, it was just a black screen - with "PROLOG" written on it in white, as you can see above - because the intention was for the film to simply play the music with the curtains drawn, and they would only open at the end of the prologue for the start of the film proper.  Since American theaters don't always make use of curtains like that with their movie screens, he commissioned Danish artist Per Kirkeby (who also, I'm sure by sheer coincidence, happened to be married to the film's producer) to create a series of abstract paintings to play during the overture.  Anyway, that's the only difference.  Once the opening title card appears onscreen, everything else is the same.
2001 New Line DVD top; 2014 Koch Media BD bottom.
This film was shot in two ways: the bulk of the film in single-camera hand-held (the first set of shots), and the musical numbers was famously shot with 100 - sometimes more - fixed cheaper cameras with boosted saturation (second set), designed to give the musical fantasies a distinct look.  Well, the distinction is much clearer on the blu, where the colors are brighter and you can more easily see the shift between footage.  The DVD is also interlaced (yes, in both the parts of the film... also the extras), and just having the blu-ray clear that up would be worth the price of the upgrade.  But it's not just the interlacing; there's a lot of fugly compression noise on the DVD that the BD clears up.  And while both discs are presented in 2.35:1, the blu discloses just a sliver more image along all four sides.  If I had one complaint, it's that the blu's colors are overall an improvement, they do make the blacks slightly milky.  But then the crushed blacks on the DVD aren't much better.

Well, the DVD messed around with a bunch of extraneous audio options, giving us a 5.1 DTS mix, 5.1 Dolby Digital and 2.0 Dolby Digital, plus optional English subtitles.  It's nice to have options, but I'm happy to replace it all with Koch's lossless DTS-HD 5.1 track, though I do miss the English subtitles.  Instead we get (removable) German ones, plus a German dub, also in 5.1 DTS-HD.
So which version do you want?  Well, you're about to see the answer is both because these two special editions are packed with a lot of very different stuff.  Let's start with the DVD.  It has two excellent audio commentaries.  One is a stitched-together recording of Trier, producer Vibeke Windelov and editor/ technical supervisor Peter Hjorth.  Plus they bring in Per Kirkeby for the prologue.  Trier is always great in extras, Kirkeby and Windelov are some unique participants we don't get to hear from in any of the other extras.  Unfortunately, Hjorth's portions seem to just be snippets from one of the featurettes on this disc, but otherwise it's a must-listen.  And the second commentary is by choreographer Vincent Paterson, which might sound like a bore, especially since there's only dancing in like a quarter of this movie.  But no, check it out, he's really interesting and has a lot to say about the experience behind the scenes of this movie.  Plus, he played a role in the film and turned out to be a de facto musical director on it, so he was really involved with much more than just the choreography.

Besides that, there are two featurettes: a more technical one that interviews Trier and several crew members about the techniques they invented for this film, and one with Paterson who shows a lot of the behind-the-scenes footage he shot, including an additional musical number that was scrapped before final photography.  Both are essential viewing.  There are also three alternate edits of a couple musical numbers from the film, plus the trailer.
The blu-ray has basically none of that, except for the trailer.  Instead, it has its own unique package of special features.  The highlight here is definitely the audio commentary by Trier and sound designer Per Streit.  Trier is beyond candid in what he likes and dislikes about this film, including, yes, his struggles with Bjork.  He skirts around the more serious allegations that have come out in recent years, but delves deeply into the artistic power struggles they had during the filming, plus there are additional insights into the film itself that none of the other extras examined.  We also get on-camera interviews with Trier and Bjork that don't run particularly long, but this is the only point on ether disc where we actually get to hear from Bjork herself, so they're welcome additions.  And all of these extras are completely English friendly.  The only extra that isn't is a brief collection of behind-the-scenes footage that is partially in English, but also has some Danish voice-over by Trier that they only translate into German.  Oh well.  The blu also includes reversible artwork so you ca hide the large, green ratings logo.
So is the blu-ray worth importing?  Yes, get it!  This is a substantial upgrade over the DVD, and you'll want to hear the new commentary.  I was just hoping for the interlacing to be fixed, and was happy to discover much more than that.  But hang onto your old discs, too.

L.A. Story and the Mystery Of the Missing Commentary

Someone in the extras describes L.A. Story as being a brilliant comedic love story for the oft-maligned city of Los Angeles, which it absolutely is, and also a deeply beautiful romance between writer/ star Steve Martin and Victoria Tennant, which it isn't.  Yes, L.A. Story is a delight, full of brilliant gags, one of the world's best supporting casts (Richard E. Grant, Woody Harrelson, Rick Moranis, Kevin Pollak, Patrick Stewart, Chevy Chase, Larry Miller, Terry Jones, George Plimpton and even Juice Crew Allstar MC Shan) and genuinely intelligent writing about life in LA.  The opening homage to Fellini's 8 1/2 and the way it retains but deflates the pretentiousness of its many Shakespeare references are genius.  But the romance is shallow and feels tacked on.  It doesn't get as much screentime as it needs to flesh out the relationship, so it's forced to lean on textbook meet-cutes and coincidence-driven RomCom cliches.  And another sticking point is that Tennant is alright but a clear case of nepotism (she was Martin's wife at the time) spoiling the opportunity to cast a truly funny leading lady, like Lily Tomlin or Bette Midler, who could've brought as much to the role as the rest of the cast do to theirs.
Writing-wise, it's under-cooked too, and feels like it's pulling against the thrust of the main story.  Like, we have to keep stopping examining Martin's relationship with LA every time the screenplay takes a pit-stop at Tennant's B-story.  Really, she should be tied to the A-story.  I think the five-pointed love pentagram is over-complicated, since this film's already packed with so much great stuff already.  They probably should've aged up Sarah Jessica Parker's character (who manages to breathe a lot of humanity into an otherwise one-joke character), and have her been the final love interest.  So instead of Martin falling for this quirky journalist who just flew in from London, he'd be falling for this quirky shop girl (wink), whose eccentricities as an LA local would be part and parcel with Martin's love for LA, so every scene is on-theme.  Marilu Henner could be the outsider, a NY woman whose misunderstanding and lack of appreciation for LA's spirit would dovetail with them realizing they're wrong for each other.  Maybe that's too on the nose?  That's how I would fix it, but even if you don't like that, the point is that there is a major problem that needed fixing here.
But thankfully - dare I say magically? - Martin's homage to LA is so good, that you can easily get past the problem.  The film is packed with so many great jokes it starts out playing more like a classic Zucker Brothers' romp (or perhaps more significantly, like Martin's early classic films with Carl Reiner), but then Martin and director Mick Jackson manage to bump enough sincerity into it that you can't help being touched by the film's heart, even if it is misguided and rickety.  When the music swells and Martin and Tennant turn into small children, it really is an effective moment... helped by the fact that it's possibly the one moment where their relationship stays on-message with the rest of the film: LA celebrates and nurtures the residents' youthful ambitions.  The fact that it's dated (car phone jokes in the age of the smartphone, yadda yadda), doesn't even work against it, because you sense that it's perfectly capturing, and occasionally skewering, a very specific time and place in our history and culture in need of preserving... and a particularly silly one at that.
L.A. Story debuted on DVD all the way back in 1998 as a non-anamorphic disc in an Artisan snapper, which was reissued three years later with a proper amaray case.  They sowed some confusion as to whether these were actually the same discs (oh, we're going to get into that in a bit), but yes, they were.  We got updated discs in 2006, though, for Lions Gate's 15th Anniversary Edition (itself reissued in 2010 with a new cover and identical disc), which boasted a healthy, anamorphic remaster and all new extras.  And that's a good thing, because that's as good as it ever got, at least here in the USA.  In other parts of the world, it's actually been issued on blu plenty of times.  Personally, I went with the recent 2020 German release from Koch Media.
2001 Artisan DVD top; 2006 Lions Gate DVD mid; 2020 Koch BD bottom.
So the big upgrade came between the original DVDs and the 15th Anniversary.  Not only, as you can plainly see in the first set of shots, did we make the leap to an anamorphic picture, but the aspect ratio's been corrected from 1.80:1 to 1.84:1.  That may sound slim, but it means a decent chunk of image around the edges has been restored, in addition to some light overall reframing.  Also, the saturation has been brought down to normal levels as opposed to being blasted off the charts, which was an interesting look, but ultimately not too lifelike.  Then Koch's blu makes things even nicer.  It corrects the AR a bit more, to a good and proper 1.85:1, which despite technically being a tighter matte, actually adds extra slivers of info as it undoes some vertical pinching.  More importantly, though, it's just a sharper, clearer HD image with some nice, untouched film grain for an old master.  I was expecting that bare minimum bump, but the old DVD looks downright soft and messy compared to this surprisingly clean BD.  It's a pleasant surprise.

The original DVD includes the film's stereo surround mix with optional English and Spanish subtitles.  The 15th Anniversary DVD keeps all of that, but gets a bit showy by adding in a new 5.1 mix as well.  Well, happily, Koch has preserved both tracks in now lossless formats (PCM for the stereo and DTS-HD for the 5.1), as well as a PCM German dub.  The only downside is that they dumped the English (and Spanish) subs, replacing them with (naturally) German ones.
1998 US DVD top; 2001 US DVD bottom.
But doesn't the title of this post mention a "Missing Commentary?"  Yes, that's been the biggest drama in L.A. Story's history on disc.  See, the original 1998 snapper case listed its proper specs, but the 2001 re-release, which has the same UPC, featured new, updated specs promising a "Director's Commentary Track."  I can still feel how excited I was to upgrade, only to discover that inside was the same old, commentary-less disc, and the new information was some kind of crappy mistake.  Part of the reason it sticks with me is that this wasn't immediately obvious.  In those days you couldn't just pop a disc into your computer's DVD drive and analyze the disc's contents.  Finding obscure features and easter eggs was a slow, imperfect process that brought people like us together on online forums to puzzle it out.  It's not clearly demarcated on the menu and pressing the audio button during the movie doesn't work, but it certainly wouldn't have been the first DVD feature blocked from remote access.  And this disc WAS full of easter eggs tucked into obscure places that wouldn't even show up as distinct Titles in the disc directory.  So I know I'm the not the only person who wasted a lot of time hunting and pecking for that elusive commentary.  But no, it's definitely 100% not there. The 15th Anniversary Edition didn't come up with it either.
deleted scene... yes, John Lithgow is flying through LA in a jetpack
So instead let's talk about the special features that aren't dirty lies that conned us devoted double-dipping fans out of $20.  As you can see in the specs posted above, the original DVD had a featurette and easter eggs.  The featurette is your usual, brief promotional affair that doles out just the briefest interview soundbites and B-roll footage with a bunch of clips from the movie, almost like an extended trailer.  It's alright, but not much.  And the easter eggs, some easier to find than others, consisted of additional EPK interview clips with Jackson and the cast.  All told, there's a little over four minutes, which is nice but about as much as you'd expect for extras relegated to waster egg status.  It also has the trailer.

The 15th Anniversary was more of a special edition.  It still had the promo featurette, although in a slightly shorter form, cutting out about a minute of material including a clip from Roxanne, and a scene + interview clip with Sarah Jessica Parker.  But it adds higher quality stuff, including a detailed interview with the producer and an "interactive map," which basically amounts to an exploration of the film's shooting locations across thirteen video clips with the film's production manager.  These are both made with care and quite interesting.  But the jewel in the crown is the collection of over 20 minutes worth of deleted scenes, which includes a lot of great stuff.  There are whole subplots with John Lithgow and Scott Bakula who were completely cut out of the movie (though featured in the trailers), clearly just for time because they're great.  We also get an additional teaser, some bonus trailers, and a slipcover.
a brief, German-exclusive interview with Grant
And Koch's blu?  Happily, everything from the old DVDs is here.  Technically the easter eggs from the old DVD aren't, but all that footage and more is now spread across the other, newer extras.  The BD adds a collection of EPK interviews with the cast and producer, plus a collection of behind the scenes footage.  It also restores the longer version of the featurette... although that SJP soundbite, like the rest, are repeated in the extended interviews.  I'd actually recommend watching everything else and skipping the featurette, which is just redundant footage.  Anyway, the blu also now has five trailers for the film, additional TV spots and a stills gallery.  So yeah, it's nothing major, but it's everything from before and more.  The blu also comes in a slipcover and includes reversible artwork, so you can hide the garish yellow ratings icon.
So this blu is a strong recommend.  It looks better than I expected, with lossless audio and even some new extras.  But still no commentary.  I sometimes wonder if the session was planned but nobody got the memo that it had fallen through at the last minute, or if a commentary really was recorded and is still sitting in Artisan's vaults.  Maybe Jackson let it all hang out and the studio refused to release it, or maybe he was silent for more than half the picture, leaving the producers with a track full of dead air.  We'll probably never know.  But at least we finally have a home video edition that's worthy of this little gem.

Importing Ang Lee's Complete Father Trilogy

Ang Lee's Father Trilogy is in a difficult, but not impossible, situation on home video.  If you're not aware, his "Father Trilogy" consists of his first three feature films, which just so happen to also be the only three of his films where Lee also takes a writing credit.  They've been so dubbed most plainly because all three star Sihung Lung (he was also Sir Te in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) in a patronly role.  But also, as Lee has explained in interviews, because all three films were created as ways to prod and react to his relationship with his own father.  And it's pretty difficult to get the whole trilogy here in the US, but I've imported a couple alternatives to explore our international options.
1992's Pushing Hands starts things off small, but hides a surprisingly robust tale.  Lung is a Chinese citizen, staying at his son's house in America, where he spends most of his days with his working-from-home daughter in-law, Deb Snyder.  It's an oil and water culture clash, alleviated only by the time he spends away, volunteering as a Tai Chi instructor at a local Chinese school.  It starts as a light comedy with some heartfelt dramatic underpinnings, but goes in some unexpected directions as we discover the true depths of Lung's abilities.  This is clearly a low budget debut, and it feels unpolished compared to Lee's subsequently masterful body of work.  But everything that's important - i.e. the writing, the characters, the performances - are as mature and rewarding as the best of his ouevre.
Pushing Hands is the real sticking point when it comes to getting this trilogy on disc in the US.  There was an initial DVD from Image Entertainment in 1999 that's long out of print and very hard to come by.  What's more, it's barebones, fullscreen and looks like it's sourced from the tape transfer they used for the VHS, so it's not worth the lengths it would take going through to obtain anyway.  But that's all we've ever gotten.  So I tracked down two foreign blu-ray sets: Sony's 2013 Taiwanese "Ang Lee's Father Trilogy Remastered Version" boxed set and Koch Media's 2015 German "Ang Lee Trilogie" boxed set.  Now the German set is region B locked and not English friendly (a fact I'll keep repeating, because I'd hate to see anyone rush off after just skimming this post and getting screwed), but the Taiwanese set is all-region and subtitles everything into English.  And yes, even though this and the next film take place in America and have some English dialogue, more than half is in Chinese, so unless that's your native language, you really need those subs.
1) 1999 Image DVD; 2) 2013 Sony BD; 3) 2015 Koch BD.
So yeah, look at that DVD.  They don't make 'em like that anymore, thank goodness.  It's a fullscreen 1.32:1 (somewhat open matte, but definitely cropping the sides as well), washed and faded image with dark whites and light blacks.  Why did I leave the subtitles on in that second set of shots?  Because, oh yeah, they're burnt in.  And the blus?  They're virtually indistinguishable, clearly sharing a common master, with even the encoding appearing nearly identical.  So they're both a massive leap forward from the blu.  This was actually my first time getting to see Pushing Hands in its proper widescreen 1.85:1 ratio, and I have to say, it makes it feel more like a proper film and less like the direct-to-video flick it's always felt like.  Grain is solid and this doesn't look like it's been DNR'd, sharpened, or otherwise tinkered with.  Moments of deep shadow to look a little crushed, unfortunately, but that's really the sole flaw here.  And again, considering what we've had to live with for so long, they're a freakin' revelation.
Audio-wise, as you can probably guess, the Image DVD just has the one Chinese/ English stereo track.  Curiously, it also comes with an informative insert, defining all sorts of audio and DVD terms for us[left].  And again, the Chinese dialogue has burnt-in English subtitles.  Speaking of repeating myself, let me just reiterate that the Koch set is not English friendly, offering us the same stereo track, now boosted to DTS-HD, with only removable German subtitles.  The Taiwanese set, naturally, doesn't have German dubs or subs, but does have the original audio in lossless LPCM and optional/ removable English subtitles (as well as traditional and simplified Chinese).  It's worth pointing out that these subs transcribe both the English and Chinese dialogue, so it isn't quite as nuanced as the DVD's subs that only translate the Chinese.  But that's a tiny annoyance, all things considered.

The Image DVD had absolutely zero extras, and the Taiwanese BD isn't much better, with only a nice stills gallery.  But the German blu has a substantial, all-new featurette interviewing Ang Lee and co-producer/ co-writer James Schamus.  That also only has optional English subtitles, but the entire featurette is spoken in English, so it actually is completely English friendly.  It's also pretty terrific, well conducted and edited that provides a lot of information and insight into the story behind the film, from its inception to its release and surprise success in Taiwan (hence them getting this film restored on blu and us not).  A very pleasant discovery.
1993's The Wedding Banquet is the out and out comedy of the trio.  The set-up is similar: another young Chinese man living in a relationship, whose traditional Chinese parents (including Lung, of course) come to stay with them.  The twist, this time the son is also gay and has to hide his relationship from his family while they're here.  And the ante is upped when a young female friend is in sudden need of a green card.  What could be the ideal solution to these issues?  Why, a sham wedding, to fool the government and the family, of course!  So, this spills into classical screwball comedy of errors territory here, with everybody keeping secrets, playing roles and telling increasingly convoluted lies that are naturally bound to blow up in their faces sooner or later.
The Wedding Banquet isn't nearly such a disaster here in the states.  The 2004 DVD from MGM is actually quite respectable, with an anamorphic widescreen presentation and even a nice little featurette for an extra.  And unlike Pushing Hands, this has been released on blu, by Olive Films, with the featurette from the DVD and everything.  I don't have that disc, though, since I've already got the film in my 2013 and 2015 boxed sets from Taiwan and Germany.  And no, the German disc of this film isn't English friendly either.
1) 2004 MGM DVD; 2) 2013 Sony BD; 3) 2015 Koch BD.
So yeah, now everything's in roughly the same aspect ratio.  The DVD is actually slightly off at 1.83:1, which the blu-rays correct to 1.85:1, finding at least a sliver of additional information along all four sides.  The colors are a little bit cooler, but only so's you'd notice in a direct comparison like this.  Again, both blus are virtually identical, and for the most part are a very satisfactory HD presentation, although the shadows might be ever so slightly crushed (not so much in either of the comparison shots, but scroll up a little higher to the shot of them eating dinner together).  But considering now nice and uncrushed other scenes appear, like the black tuxedos above, it's a minor issue.  Detail is strong and film grain is natural, though, and overall the blus are discs quite satisfactory.

Except of course, that the German blu isn't English friendly.  Gotta keep pointing that out.  MGM has the original mono track in 2.0 with optional English, French and Spanish subs.  Koch's blu has the same mono track, but bumped up to lossless DTS-HD.  Unfortunately, it only has German subs, and a lot of the film is spoken in Chinese.  Fortunately, Sony's blu solves that with the same audio track in LPCM, and optional English (which again translate both the English and Chinese parts), plus traditional and simplified Chinese.
Extras-wise, MGM has that nice featurette, which runs just about 20 minutes long, and cuts back and forth between Lee and Schamus, in a light but informative little feature.  It also has the trailer.  And again the Taiwanese set only has a photo gallery.  But Koch comes along to stomp over all that came before them with their extras.  They have all new on-camera interviews with Lee and Schamus which run twice as long, and get more than twice as in-depth, as MGM's.  And they have another 20+ minute interview with co-star Mitchell Lichtenstein.  They've gone and given this a proper special edition.  They also have the trailer, but it's dubbed in German.  Their interviews, however, are completely done in English, with removable German subs.  I've got to hand it to Koch, they've really done a nice job with their special features here.
Finally, we end with the strongest film in the series, 1994's Eat Drink Man Woman, this time co-written by Hui-Ling Wang.  There are light touches, but this far less overtly comic than The Wedding Banquet, instead telling the touching, interconnected stories of a father (you know who) and his three daughters.  I remember a big deal in the marketing and the reporting for this film about the on-screen cooking; and yes, a series of master chefs were hired just to play Lung's hands as he prepared various, complex dishes.  Then movies like Big Night and Tortilla Soup started coming out in its wake, and the press started acting like "food movies" were becoming a genuine genre of filmmaking.  So it's funny to hear Ang Lee talk about this film and explain that originally Lung's character was going to be a master tailor, rather than chef, because all the food stuff is just superficial trappings for the heartfelt stories being told between its characters.  Lee has also become a bit more polished and stylish over the last couple years, and the production values just feel naturally higher by virtue of the fact that the film is now taking place, and being filmed in, China rather than NY.
And at first, the Eat Drink Man Woman situation feels much like The Wedding Banquet's situation.  We've got a perfectly respectable widescreen DVD with another interview featurette, this time released in 2002.  And again, it has been issued on blu in the US by Olive, although this time barebones and with forced subtitles for whatever reason.  A little disappointing, but who cares?  I've got my 2013 Sony and 2015 Koch blu-ray sets.  But this time... something's a little different.
1) 2002 MGM DVD; 2) 2013 Sony BD; 3) 2015 Koch BD.
This time the blu-rays are different!  And not just, like, minor encoding distinctions, they're clearly based on quite different transfers.  This time the DVD is a 1.80:1, with more noticeable pillar-boxing along the left-hand side.  And the Koch BD corrects this to 1.85:1.  Just the Koch, because Sony's Taiwanese blu actually goes for a more open 1.78:1 framing, with even more picture along all four sides.  So it's better?  Well, I wouldn't go that far.  Grain is decent on both blus, but more consistent on the Koch.  And the colors are all over the place on these discs, with essentially three different sets of color timing.  Like, just what color is this woman's shirt, anyway?  At some points you can chalk it up to an unknowable matter of individual preference.  Unless Ang Lee or his DP walk into the room, we can only take guesses and apply our personal judgment as to which colors are more correct.  Except, midway through the Sony blu, one scene gives us a pretty big clue.
1) 2002 MGM DVD; 2) 2013 Sony BD; 3) 2015 Koch BD.
Now, admittedly the DVD is a too dark in its own right, but the saturation levels in the shadows in this dark office scene are way off the charts on the Sony blue... I mean blu.  Now, the whole movie doesn't look like this.  You can see in the earlier cooking shot, the Sony blu has genuinely black blacks.  But here it's not a matter of taste; something's clearly just wrong.  Then you go back to the other shots, which aren't way off like this, but you still see plenty of signs of this blue for black push, more subtly in other scenes.  It's only this and one or two brief other moments that basically take place in the same office location at night that are off like this, but it really says, "hey, go with the Koch!"

But the problem with that, of course, is that the Koch isn't English friendly!  MGM's DVD features the original Chinese stereo track with optional English, French and Spanish subtitles.  Koch has the original Chinese audio in DTS-HD, but with only German subtitles, while the Sony again has the original track in LPCM, with optional English, traditional and simplified Chinese subtitles.
So MGM has another nice little featurette with Lee and Schamus, plus the trailer and a teaser.  They talk more about the food stuff on here.  Again, Sony only has a photo gallery.  Koch has two more new interviews with Lee and Koch, where they get a little deeper into the film.  This is the one where they explain how the father was going to be a tailor, etc.  And they have another dubbed trailer, but their interview pieces are once again in English with removable German subs.

Both sets are nicely packaged.  The Koch comes in a nice slip box with a separate slim digipacks for each film.  But the Sony's even nice, with a harder, thicker box housing three blu-ray cases, each in its own slipcover.  And there's an outer... obo sort of art piece on the exterior, with embossed gold lettering.  Genuinely fancy stuff.
So, it's a little more complicated than I'd like it to be; but the good news is, at the end of the day, we can own the complete trilogy on blu in very solid editions... with a nice selection of extras, too, if you're willing to spring for multiple editions.  The Taiwanese set is a nice way to get all three films in solid blu-rays, even if their Eat Drink Man Woman is a little weird.  If it bothers you, you can always just pick up the Olive disc to round everything out.  And if you want some nice extras, the German set is surprisingly good, although again, it isn't viable for the films since it doesn't subtitle them into English(!).  It's only good for the extras.  But as a companion piece, it's sweet as.