The key items are a very good documentary on Amarcord featuring Fellini and an audio commentary by
film scholars Peter Brunette and Frank Burke.
There are also some archival interviews: Terry Gilliam in discussion with
film scholar Peter von Bagh as the 1998 Midnight Sun Film Festival and actress Shelley Duvall with Ton Snyder on Tomorrow from 1981.
PLUS: A booklet featuring essays by
film scholar Peter Cowie and screenwriter Ulla Isaksson and the medieval ballad on which the film is based
PLUS: A booklet featuring a new essay by
film scholar Peter Matthews, excerpts from Algeria's National Liberation Front leader Saadi Yacef's original account of his arrest, excerpts from the film's screenplay, a reprinted interview with cowriter Franco Solinas, and biographical sketches of key figures in the French - Algerian War
Conversation between Gilliam and
film scholar Peter von Bagh, recorded at the 1998 Midnight Sun Film Festival
There is a conversation between Gilliam and
film scholar Peter von Bagh which was taken from the Finland's Midnight Sun Film Festival dating back to 1998.
Not exact matches
Audio commentary written by
film scholar Alexander Sesonske and read by filmmaker
Peter Bogdanovich
Features newly - recorded commentary by
film critic Jonathan Rosenbaum and Iranian
scholar Mehrnaz Saeed - Vafa, a 90 - minute Q&A with director Abbas Kiarostami hosted and moderated by New York
Film Festival director Richard Peña at the University of Indiana and a booklet with an essay be
Peter Tonguette.
Extras: New program on the
film's cinematography featuring a conversation between Lassally and critic
Peter Cowie; excerpt from a 1982 episode of «The Dick Cavett Show» featuring Finney; new interview with actor Vanessa Redgrave on director Tony Richardson, to whom she was married from 1962 to 1967; new interview with
film scholar Duncan Petrie on the movie's impact on British cinema; illustrated archival audio interview with composer John Addison on his Oscar - winning score for the
film; new interview with the director's - cut editor, Robert Lambert; an essay by
scholar Neil Sinyard.
The Blu - ray and DVD editions both feature a new interview with
film critic David Thomson, who offers a crash course introduction to the art and themes of Hawks (it runs about 17 minutes), the new 20 - minute program «Howard Hawks and His Aviation Movies» with
film scholars Craig Barron and Ben Burtt, and excerpts from
Peter Bogdanovich's 1972 interviews with Howard Hawks (audio only, about 19 minutes), plus the 1939 «Lux radio Theatre» adaptation of the
film with stars Cary Grant, Jean Arthur, Rita Hayworth, Richard Barthelmess, and Thomas Mitchell all reprising their roles, and the trailer.
Both editions feature a new visual essay on the
film by Bergman
scholar Peter Cowie and two archival interviews: a brief (under four minute) clip with Bergman discussing the
film from 1967, and a longer audio - only interview with Bergman conducted (in English) by filmmakers Olivier Assayas and Stig Bjorkman in 1990.