Blu - ray extras consist of audio
commentary by film historians Julie Kirgo and Nick Redman; the theatrical trailer; and an isolated track of Thomas Newman's score.
Blu - ray extras consist of audio commentary
by film historians Julie Kirgo, Lem Dobbs and Nick Redman; a piece on Thomas More; the post-Oscars theatrical trailer; and an isolated track of Georges Delerue's score.
Extras include audio commentary
by film historians David Del Valle and Steven Peros; the theatrical trailer; and an isolated music track.
The Blu - ray release features commentary
by film historian Stephen Farber and two well made (if overly admiring) documentary featurettes among the supplements, and comes in an illustrated Blu - ray book case with a soundtrack sampler CD.
That includes commentary
by film historian Rudy Behlmer (an expert on Warner Bros. studio history), the 45 - minute documentary Let Freedom Sing!
Blu - ray extras include audio commentary
by film historian Gregory W. Mank; the half - hour featurette Abbott and Costello Meet the Monsters; the theatrical trailer; and two featurettes tied to Universal's 100th anniversary: Unforgettable Characters and The Lot.
The sequel The Return of Count Yorga (Scream Factory, Blu - ray), which reunites director Bob Kelljan and star Robert Quarry, comes from another label and features commentary
by film historian Steve Haberman and actor Rudy De Luca.
This release offers commentary
by film historian Lem Dobbs with in - house historians Julie Kirgo and Nick Redman (who also founded the label), a trio that has done more than a few commentary tracks together, and their ease gives the track an easy - going quality as they dig into the film and offer historical and critical perspective.
Don't miss: Extras include a comparison between the alternate and theatrical versions with an introduction
by film historian Robert Gitt.
An excellent audio commentary and essay
by film historian Gene Youngblood are also included, as well as an hour - long documentary on Michelangelo Antonioni from 1966.
The final bonus feature is an audio commentary
by film historians Travis Crawford and Bill Ackerman, who prepared a discussion that covers the movie from its origin to its release, with plenty of information about Marvin, Mifune, Boorman, and others.
Extras include audio commentary on one of the 1929
versions by film historian (and NC State grad) Jon C. Mirsalis; the complete film script; and two short travelogues (Paris from a Motor and A Trip on the Seine) showing life in Paris in 1925.
Blu - ray extras include audio commentary
by film historian Dana Polan and an isolated track of Frank DeVol's score.
The commentary
by film historian Jon C. Mirsalis, also carried over from the Image release, is on the 1929 reissue at 24 fps, and accessed through the audio options available on that version.
Bonus materials on the Blu - ray release include a Wurlitzer organ score by Gaylord Carter, audio commentary
by film historian Toby Roan, booklet essay by film scholar Matt Hauske, and the one - reel 1932 spoof, The Pie - Covered Wagon, starring Shirley Temple.
Most films in the collection, which includes shorts by Melies, Lumiere and Edison, are
introduced by a film historian whose comments provide crucial guidance.
What distinguishes this DVD is the superb commentary
by film historian Bob Gilpin, who persuasively presents the premise that this frivolous film has serious things to say about America in the Depression.
Often
overlooked by film historians, «Lucille» putting on a show for the convicts as she washes her car, is a scene that is meant for more than titillation.
The comment was somewhat facetious, but it underlined a curious fact: not only are most film - lovers unaware of Freed's huge influence on Band Wagon, Silk Stockings, Singin «in the Rain, and the 40 - odd other films produced by his unit, but the very roles of producer and production unit have been little
studied by film historians, much less commented on by theorists and critics.
Bonus features on the Blu - ray release include audio commentary by Frederic Lombardi, author of Allan Dawn and the Rise and Decline of the Hollywood Studios; booklet essay
by film historian Farron Smith Nehme; and piano score composed and performed by Andrew Simpson.
Blu - ray extras consist of audio commentary
by film historian Derek Botello and trailers for The Magnetic Monster, Donovan's Brain (already available from Kino on Blu - ray), Journey to the Seventh Planet (ditto) and Invisible Invaders (due July 12).
Bonus materials on the widescreen unrated Blu - ray release include audio commentary
by film historian Troy Howarth and the original theatrical trailer.
A
compilation by film historian Leonard Maltin of four episodes from the Disneyland TV anthology series, this 2 - disc set offers a glimpse into the past and a look at the groundbreaking work done by Walt and his «Imagineers» in the early years of the park.
There are three special features on the disc, the lengthiest of which is a feature audio commentary
by film historian Bruce Block.
Titled «Une Femme Coquette» (literally: «Pretty Woman»), the nine - minute film was previously though to be
lost by film historians.
The discussion will be
moderated by film historian and art critic Marion Wolberg Weiss and will center around the topic of artistic inspiration.
Features commentary
by film historians David Del Valle and Tim Sullivan, an interview with Uta Levka, and a featurette on director Gordon Hessler, along with the trademark isolated score audio track, and booklet with an essay by Julie Kirgo.
Extras: Feature - length audio commentary track
by film historian Richard Suchenski, interview with Rivette, interview with co-writers Pascal Bonitzer and Christine Laurent, the 2017 re-release trailer.
The final supplement is of the tangible variety: a staple - bound booklet devoting four of its eight pages to an admiring essay
by film historian Julie Kirgo that celebrates the two actors that drive the picture, especially Mitchum.
It features new commentary
by film historian Stephen Prince, new interviews with assistant director and restoration supervisor Kiyoshi Ogasawara and literary scholar Christopher Benfey, who discusses Lafcadio Hearn's stories, and a 1993 discussion between Kobayashi and fellow filmmaker Masahiro Shinoda, plus trailers and a fold - out insert with a new essay by Geoffrey O'Brien.