Actors & Directors
- Dusan Makavejev
- Bratoljub Gligorijevic
- Vera Jovanovic
- Pera Milosavljevic
- Ivan Zivkovic
- Ana Milosavljevic
Release date: 1996-04-15 Run time: 78 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £16.50
Review Innocence Unprotected [1968] / Connoisseur Video:
Actors & Directors
- Pierre Fresnay
- Jean Gabin
- Marcel Dalio
- Eric Von Stroheim
- Julien Carette
Release date: 2000-05-15 Run time: 109 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £7.99
Review La Grande Illusion (1937) [1998] / Warner Home Video:It's long been one of the revered classics of international cinema, but there is no fine layer of dust over La Grande Illusion. Jean Renoir's film is just as vibrant, exciting and wise as it has ever been. The story is set during World War I, mostly in a couple of German POW camps, where two very different French prisoners plot to escape: the working-class officer Maréchal (Jean Gabin, the French Spencer Tracy) and the upper-class de Boieldieu (Pierre Fresnay). The suspenseful backbone of the story is formed by these escape attempts, but Renoir is primarily concerned with the way people treat each other, and especially with how class and nationality inform human relations. Most compelling of all the film's characters is the aristocratic German officer von Rauffenstein, unforgettably incarnated by stiff-backed Erich von Stroheim; although he runs a prison camp, von Rauffenstein cannot help but strike up a friendship with de Boieldieu, a kindred spirit from the doomed nobility. There is nothing dewy or naive about Renoir's vision (and two years after the release of this antiwar film, Europe was plunged into another world war), yet La Grande Illusion is one of those movies that makes you feel good about such long-outmoded ideas as sacrifice and brotherhood. After it won a prize at the Venice Film Festival in 1937, the Nazis declared the film "Cinematographic Enemy Number One". There can be no higher praise. -Robert Horton, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Vito Annichiarico
- Aldo Fabrizi
- Anna Magnani
- Nando Bruno
- Roberto Rossellini
- Marcello Pagliero
Release date: 2000-01-24 Run time: 97 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £21.99
Review Rome, Open City [1945] / Connoisseur Video:
Actors & Directors
- Jean Delannoy
- Madeleine Sologne
- Jean Marais
- Roland Toutain
Release date: 1994-09-26 Run time: 107 min. Price: £15.99
Review L'Eternel Retour [1943] / Art House Productions Ltd.:
Actors & Directors
- Renzo Ricci
- Dominique Blanchar
- Lea Massari
- Monica Vitti
- Michelangelo Antonioni
- Gabriele Ferzetti
Release date: 1996-01-15 Run time: 136 min. Price: £15.99
Review L'Avventura [1961] / Connoisseur Video:
Actors & Directors
- Jean Sorel
- Michel Piccoli
- Luis Bunuel
- Catherine Deneuve
- Maria La Tour
- Genevieve Page
Release date: 2000-05-15 Run time: 95 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £8.49
Review Belle De Jour (1967) / Warner Home Video:
Actors & Directors
- Carl Goetz
- Fritz Kortner
- Krafft-Raschig
- Louise Brooks
- Francis Lederer
- Georg Wilhelm Pabst
Release date: 1993-10-25 Run time: 104 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £5.95
Review Pandora's Box [1928] / Tartan Video:G W Pabst's 1928 silent masterpiece Pandora's Box stars the luminous and highly photogenic Louise Brooks. She plays the irresistible Lulu, a cabaret star who entices, captivates and eventually destroys all men who cross her path. Her beauty and her fetching charm draw an assortment of repressed and lonely people; Schigolch, a boozy old man who pretends he's her father; Geschwitz, a countess who has also fallen for Lulu, and Schoen, a rich tycoon who carries on an affair with Lulu even though he's to be married. His short solution is to put Lulu in his son Alwa's vaudeville show. As Alwa, too, becomes trapped in Lulu's charms, Schoen's fiancée catches Lulu and Schoen in a backstage embrace. Lulu quickly takes her place as Schoen's bride, only to drive Schoen to suicide during their wedding party. Put on trial for murder, Lulu almost gets out of it by simply batting her eyes at the prosecutor. Still, she is found guilty and Alwa, who has grown increasingly obsessed, causes a distraction to allow Lulu's escape from the courthouse. Alwa, Lulu and Schoen become desperate fugitives, eventually ending up in London where Lulu finally meets her match: Jack the Ripper. Pandora's Box offers pure cinematic delights-Pabst's luscious photography, the tense drama of its story line and, most impressively and importantly, Louise Brooks, who gives a performance that is certainly one of the best in the history of cinema. [+]
-Shannon Gee Made at the very end of the silent era, Pandora's Box is one of the last flowerings of German cinema's greatest decade. It also marked the highpoint of two careers: Austrian director GW Pabst and American actress Louise Brooks. A merge of two linked plays by the decadent German playwright Frank Wedekind, it's the story of Lulu, the archetypal femme fatale (the same plays served as source for Alban Berg's masterly 1935 opera). At once sensual and innocent, a force of uninhibited sexuality, Lulu brings ruin on all her lovers both male and female, and ultimately upon herself. Hollywood never knew what to do with Brooks who, with her fierce intelligence and her open delight in sex, refused to play the coy flappers then in fashion. In Pabst, whose genius, she wrote, "lay in getting to the heart of a person", she found the director she needed, and he brought out her a screen persona with a depth of eroticism that's still breathtaking to see. The film features some of the finest German acting talent of the period-Fritz Kortner, Franz Lederer-but it's Brooks' luminous performance that rivets the eye and makes her a great screen icon. Though the action is nominally set in the late-19th century-Lulu ends up in a shadowy London where she encounters Jack the Ripper-Pandora's Box breathes the gamey air of the Weimar Republic, vividly captured by Günther Krampf's pungent photography. This release runs well over two hours and includes, for the first time in decades, over 30 minutes of cut footage, restoring the film to something very close to Pabst's original masterpiece. On the DVD: Pandora's Box on DVD is a clean, crisp transfer in the classic 4:3 ratio, and the mono soundtrack brings out all the detail of Peer Rubens' Kurt Weill-inflected score, stylishly performed by the Kontraste Ensemble. Dialogue intertitles can be read in either English or German. We also get an outstanding 60-minute documentary, Looking for Lulu, about Brooks' life and career: warmly narrated by Shirley MacLaine, it features excerpts from an interview with Brooks from 1976. -Philip Kemp.
Actors & Directors
- Max Ophüls
- Madeleine Renaud
- Mila Parély
- Gaby Morlay
- Ginette Leclerc
- Claude Dauphin
Release date: 2000-07-10 Run time: 94 min. Price: £15.99
Review Le Plaisir [1951] / Second Sight Films Ltd.:
Actors & Directors
- Fausto Guerzoni
- Marcel Camus
- Bruno Mello
- Marcel Camus
- Marpessa Dawn
- Lourdes de Oliveira
Release date: 1994-05-16 Run time: 102 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £19.99
Review Orfeu Negro [1958] a.k.a. Black Orpheus / Connoisseur Video:Marcel Camus's 1959 update of the Greek myth features an all-black cast and a story set in the frenetic energy of Carnival in Rio de Janeiro. Orpheus, a trolley car conductor and superb samba dancer, is engaged to Mira but in love with Eurydice. For his change of heart, Orpheus and his new doomed lover are pursued by a vengeful Mira and a determined Death through the feverish Carnival night. Camus at once demystifies and remystifies the old story, shifting not only its location but its tone and context, forcing a re-evaluation of the legend as a more passionate, pulsing, sensual experience. The film is really one-of-a-kind, an absolute whirl that barely needs words. -Tom Keogh, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Pinaki Sengupta
- Kanu Bannerjee
- Satyajit Ray
- Karuna Bannerjee
- Smaran Ghosal
- Santi Gupta
Release date: 2003-01-27 Run time: 104 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £16.90
Review Aparajito [1956] / Artificial Eye:
Actors & Directors
- Toshirô Mifune
- Chieko Nakakita
- Akira Kurosawa
- Reisaburo Yamamoto
- Michiyo Kogure
- Takashi Shimura
Release date: 1998-11-09 Run time: 93 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £5.85
Review Drunken Angel [1948] / Connoisseur Video:
Actors & Directors
- Dominique Rozan
- Alain Resnais
- Geneviève Bujold
- Ingrid Thulin
- Yves Montand
- Jean Dasté
Release date: 1994-06-13 Run time: 116 min. Price: £15.99
Review La Guerre Est Finie [1966] / Art House Productions Ltd.:
Actors & Directors
- Toshirô Mifune
- Isao Kimura
- Tatsuya Mihashi
- Tatsuya Nakadai
- Akira Kurosawa
- Kyôko Kagawa
Release date: 1999-02-01 Run time: 142 min. Price: £15.99
Review High And Low [1967] / Connoisseur Video:Although best known for his samurai classics, Japanese master filmmaker Akira Kurosawa proved himself equally adept at contemporary dramas and thrillers, and 1962's High and Low offers a powerful showcase for Kurosawa's versatile skill. The great Toshiro Mifune stars as a wealthy industrialist who has just raised a large sum of money to execute his planned take-over of a successful shoe manufacturer. Fate intervenes when he receives a phone call informing him that his son has been kidnapped, and by unfortunate coincidence the ransom demand is nearly equivalent to the amount Mifune has raised for his corporate coup. A philosophical dilemma emerges when it is revealed that the executive's son is safe, and that it is actually his chauffeur's son who has been taken. What follows is both a tense detective thriller, as the police attempt to track down the kidnapper, and a compelling illustration of class division in Japan-the "high and low" of the title. Far be it from Kurosawa to make a mere thriller, however; this loose adaptation of the Ed McBain novel King's Ransom provides the director with ample opportunity to develop a visual strategy that perfectly enhances the story's sociological themes. -Jeff Shannon.
Actors & Directors
- Claude Chabrol
- Gerard Blain
- Michele Meritz
- Jean-Claude Brialy
Release date: 2000-07-10 Run time: 95 min. Price: £15.99
Review Le Beau Serge [1958] / Second Sight Films Ltd.:On stepping off the bus from Paris, François (Jean-Claude Brialy) quickly registers that life in his native village, Sardent, has moved on. Beneath the calm surface, an explosive cocktail of gossip, boredom, and repressed sexuality has fermented. Ostensibly back to recuperate from a bout of tuberculosis, François soon embarks on an almost religious quest to save his former close friend Serge (Gérard Blain) from self-destructive despair and alcoholism, and so the film resonates with Christian overtones of suffering, redemption and salvation. But it's not long before François falls into the arms and bed of the voluptuous Marie (Bernadette Laffont), thereby fuelling the villagers' mounting hostility to what they widely perceive as intrusive meddling. "You examine us as if we were insects", Marie complains to François. Director Claude Chabrol began his career as a film critic for Les Cahiers du cinema, and observations like Marie's also operate as a running commentary on cinema itself. Le Beau Serge was instrumental in setting the agenda for what a vibrant modern cinema might be and do, and it was precisely in relation to this film that the very idea of a nouvelle vague (New Wave) in French cinema was first proposed at the end of the 50s. The passionate cinephilia that fuelled this new cinematic adventure feeds the film's innovative mix of a quasi-documentary neorealism and flights of Hitchcockian melodrama. Cinematographer Henri Decae provides stunning photography of rural France, and the film as a whole retains an extraordinary freshness: colloquial speech and local accent are juxtaposed with Emile Delpierre's score, and the carefully composed imagery is brought to life by a generation of actors whose faces have yet to acquire the iconic status they enjoy today in French cinema. -Michael Witt.
Actors & Directors
- Charles Vanel
- Yves Montand
- Folco Lulli
- Peter van Eyck
- Véra Clouzot
- Henri-Georges Clouzot
Release date: 2002-01-21 Run time: 147 min. RRP: £14.99 Price: £19.99
Review Wages Of Fear [1952] / Optimum Home Entertainment:In 1953, before any American studio exec used the phrase "high concept", Henri-George Clouzot's The Wages of Fear boasted a premise so literally explosive that audiences were excited before they got into the theatres. With an oil-fire burning out of control deep in the South American jungle, two lorryloads of highly unstable nitro-glycerin have to be driven through miles of unstable terrain littered with dangerous turns, crumbling planks, falling rocks and mediocre hardtop. One good jolt will vaporise truck, nitro, drivers and a substantial swathe of the countryside, so the company recruits desperate souls among the loser tramps who loiter around the nowhere town of Las Piedras, begging for any kind of work. On the road, Clouzot stages a string of unforgettable sequences: one stretch of badly paved track can only be crossed by driving at under six miles an hour or over 40; a mountain turn requires that the trucks back out onto a rickety, rotten wooden structure; a 50-ton boulder has fallen into the road, and one of the drivers calmly drains a litre of nitro into his thermos to blow it up, only remembering when the fuse is lit that this will rain pebbles all over the countryside and a few good hits on the cargo will set it off. This is perhaps as great a mix of action-adventure and contest as The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, and still a textbook example of sustained suspense. On the DVD: The print is in great shape, though the image is a little soft; the menu has a clever explosive aspect and uses the same vintage artwork as the sleeve cannily combined with a snippet. There are trailers for both Wages and Clozuot's other masterpiece, Les Diaboliques, as well as biographies of the principal cast, eight stills and three posters. -Kim Newman.
Actors & Directors
- Ligia Branice
- Pierre Brasseur
- Ginette Leclerc
- Fernand Bercher
- Jean-Pierre Andréani
- Walerian Borowczyk
Release date: 2000-07-10 Run time: 90 min. Price: £15.99
Review Goto L'Ile D'Amour [1969] / Nouveaux Pictures:
Actors & Directors
- Pierre Barbaud
- Eiji Okada
- Alain Resnais
- Bernard Fresson
- Emmanuelle Riva
- Stella Dassas
Release date: 1997-10-13 Run time: 86 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £22.99
Review Hiroshima Mon Amour [1959] / Nouveaux Pictures:An extraordinary and deeply moving film that retains much of its power since its original release in 1959, Alain Resnais's Hiroshima, Mon Amour is the story of a French woman (Emmanuelle Riva) and a Japanese man (Eiji Okada) who become lovers in the city of Hiroshima, where the US dropped a nuclear bomb to end World War Two in the Pacific. Written by Marguerite Duras and juggled, as if by wandering thoughts, in chronology and setting by Resnais, the film reveals the miserable and mortifying experiences of each character during the war and suggests the obvious healing properties of their relationship in the present. An emotional allusion or two can certainly be made with the more recent The English Patient, but nothing can quite prepare one for Resnais's extreme yet intuitively accessible experiments in fusing the past, present and future into great sweeps of subjectively experienced memory. Yet audiences have never had trouble relating to this bold milestone of the French New Wave, largely because at its heart is a genuinely affecting, soulful love story. -Tom Keogh, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Miguel Del Castillo
- Sergio Santos
- Martine Carol
- Antonio Román
- José Portes
- Carlos Muñoz
Release date: 2000-06-05 Run time: 111 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £20.00
Review Lola Montes [1955] / Nouveaux Pictures:German-born, French by adoption, Viennese by sensibility, Max Ophüls was the ideal choice to film the life of one of the great cosmopolitan femme fatales. Lola Montés, dancer and courtesan extraordinaire, cut a swathe of scandal through Europe in the mid-19th century, becoming mistress of the composer Liszt, of the king of Bavaria, and of plenty more. Ophüls' poignant last film, his only one in colour, is no conventional biopic. Instead, he mounts a sumptuous baroque extravaganza, part circus, part pageant, packed with flashbacks, and sends his restless camera scaling and prowling around the elaborate décor. In the title role, Martine Carol gives a sullen, emotionally glazed performance, but for all her limitations she fits Ophüls' conception. His Lola is simply the passive blank on to which men project their fantasies, and her final destiny as a sideshow attraction, selling kisses for a dollar each, reduces her career to its most brutal logic. Originally running 140 minutes, the 1955 film was butchered by its distributors; this 111-minute version is the fullest that's known to survive. -Philip Kemp.
Actors & Directors
- Theodor Loos
- Inge Landgut
- Peter Lorre
- Otto Wernicke
- Ellen Widmann
- Fritz Lang
Release date: 1998-07-08 Run time: 101 min. Price: £12.99
Review M [1931] / Bfi Video:Fritz Lang's first sound movie, the serial-killer film M, has often been voted the best German film of all time, but, until now, most of us have never seen it properly. What we have seen is a heavily cut 1950s re-edit with extra sound and music patched in, where Lang was deliberately economical with the new technology. This new "Ultimate Edition" is dominated by a marvellous restoration which is true to his intentions and oft-voiced complaints about what had been done to his best film. The young Peter Lorre is terrifyingly ordinary as the child-murderer whom police and criminals hunt down in what is still one of the best forensic police procedurals ever made, while Gustaf Grundgens has effortless charisma as the chief gangster. Lorre's Hollywood exile and decay, and Grundgens' betrayal of old friends and principles under the Nazis, merely add a layer of irony to all this. Lang's ironic cuts-a gangster's gesture is completed by his police equivalent-and dark, studio-bound cinematography make this one of the great precursors of American film noir. Simply, seen without cracks and pops and lines running down the screen, M is revealed as a true classic-a film that shames everything made in its genre since. On the DVD: M on disc has a great deal of documentary material featuring scholars and technicians telling us just how clever they have been in preparing this splendid restoration. The film also comes with a detailed commentary into which has been spliced interview material with Lang talking in English about specific sequences. There is a German-language film interview with Lang in which he talks through his career and re-enacts the interview with Goebbels that led to his exile; an audio interview with Peter Bogdanovich; and an intelligent video critical essay by film historian R Dixon Smith. [+]
The restored film is shown in its correct, unusual visual aspect ratio of 1. 90:1 and has vivid cleaned-up digital mono sound: the murderer's whistling of "In the Hall of the Mountain King" has never sounded so chilling. -Roz Kaveney.
Actors & Directors
- Lyudmila Tselikovskaya
- Sergei M. Eisenstein
- Mikhail Nazvanov
- Serafima Birman
- Nikolai Cherkasov
- Mikhail Zharov
Release date: 1996-08-23 Run time: 95 min. Price: £15.99
Review Ivan The Terrible - Part 1 [1944] / Tartan Video:
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Models & Brands: Innocence Unprotected [1968], La Grande Illusion (1937) [1998], Rome, Open City [1945], L'Eternel Retour [1943], L'Avventura [1961], Belle De Jour (1967), Pandora's Box [1928], Le Plaisir [1951], Orfeu Negro [1958] a.k.a. Black Orpheus, Aparajito [1956], Drunken Angel [1948], La Guerre Est Finie [1966], High And Low [1967], Le Beau Serge [1958], Wages Of Fear [1952], Goto L'Ile D'Amour [1969], Hiroshima Mon Amour [1959], Lola Montes [1955], M [1931], Ivan The Terrible - Part 1 [1944] |