Bad DVDs

Due to the Los Angeles subway workers’ strike currently underway, I managed to ride my bike about 80 miles in two days and caught six feature films over the weekend: Long Gone, Condor: Axis of Evil, Bright Leaves, Dolls, What the Eye Doesn’t See, and The Runner. And I loved five out of six. Stay tuned for reviews…

In the meantime, reader James Tata alerts us to last Sunday’s New York Times article, “When Bad DVD’s Happen to Great Films”, which, like my own response to Columbia’s shabby Apu Trilogy release, criticizes highly-touted …

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Film choices…

Argh! One of the most frustrating aspects of seeking revival films and festivals and one-day screenings is when they inevitably pile up together and cruelly force a choice between them.

After what seemed like a mild dry spell for interesting L.A. screenings, the American Film Institute’s international AFI FEST launches tonight, the UCLA Film & Television Archives’ rare Frank Borzage retrospective heats up, and to make matters worse, the sporadic film club here at Caltech (where I work) has decided to plant a screening of the Iranian film The Runner (1985) in the midst of it all this on Sunday, …

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Tokyo Story

Although Yasujiro Ozu (1903-1963) was one of the more popular filmmakers in Japan for decades, his work wasn’t widely distributed in the West until 1972, when Tokyo Story (1953) debuted at the New York Film Festival. Since that time, several somewhat daunting studies of Ozu’s work have been published in English (Paul Schrader’s Transcendental Style in Film, Donald Richie’s Ozu, David Bordwell’s Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema), more of his films have been released on video, and many of the filmmaker’s idiosyncratic films have gradually joined the ranks of the world’s most highly esteemed movies.

Just …

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Stone Reader

I’ve just spent the last few days enjoying the company of my Canadian friend, Candace, who alerted me to the unorthodox release of Mark Moskowitz‘s documentary, Stone Reader (2002), via Barnes & Noble’s exclusive distribution. Candace joined many critics in enthusiastically lauding the documentary after she recently encountered it at the Calgary International Film Festival, and last night a few of us got together and screened the new DVD.

The film is the debut feature of Moskowitz, an enthusiastic and driven creator of political commercials, part salesman and part investigative journalist. But he relegates his professional career to the …

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Cowboy Pictures RIP

Awful news from indieWIRE:

After six years in business, Cowboy Pictures has closed its doors. The New York based indie distribution company, which was founded by John Vanco and Noah Cowan, recently let go of its employees and last week filed for bankruptcy. Greg Williams and his Lot 47 team joined Cowboy at its Laight St. offices this summer and he remains with Lot 47 following a split with Vanco and Cowboy.

“We’ve had a great run and I’m extremely proud of the wonderful films we’ve brought to audiences across North America,” said Vanco. “Cowboy could have never grown

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Apu DVDs

There’s always a bit of tension as movie studios release film classics on DVD. The technology should offer an ideal introduction to the films if a 35mm print isn’t handy–I mean, the resolution and freeze frame capabilities and multiple, removable subtitles, CD-quality sound, and special features are always trumpeted any time Digital Versatile Discs are ever mentioned, right?

Unfortunately, studios often don’t treat the classics with the care they deserve and cinephiles are inevitably caught in a Catch-22: do we recommend these discs because the films are landmark works of art and we hope to support their availability, or do …

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