Criterion Collection May 2018 Titles Announced

Discussion in 'Visual Arts' started by Myke, Feb 15, 2018.

Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. Myke

    Myke Trying Not To Spook The Horse Thread Starter

    Criterion Announces May Titles
    Posted February 15, 2018 06:07 PM by Webmaster

    [​IMG]
    The Criterion Collection has announced that it will add seven new titles to its Blu-ray catalog in May: John Schlesinger's Midnight Cowboy, Robert Bresson's Au Hasard Balthazar, Paul Schrader's Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters, Frank Borzage's Moonrise, Aki Kaurismaki's The Other Side of Hope, and Cristian Mungiu's Beyond the Hills and Graduation.

    Midnight Cowboy

    Synopsis: One of the British New Wave's most versatile directors, John Schlesinger came to New York in the late-1960s to make Midnight Cowboy, a picaresque story of friendship that captured a city in crisis and sparked a new era of Hollywood movies. Jon Voight delivers a career-making performance as Joe Buck, a wide-eyed hustler from Texas hoping to score big with wealthy city women; he finds a companion in Enrico "Ratso" Rizzo, an ailing swindler with a bum leg and a quixotic fantasy of escaping to Florida, played by Dustin Hoffman in a radical departure from his breakthrough in The Graduate. A critical and commercial success despite controversy over what the MPAA termed its "homosexual frame of reference," Midnight Cowboy became the first X-rated film to receive the best picture Oscar, and decades on, its influence still reverberates through cinema.

    Special Features and Technical Specs:
    • NEW 4K DIGITAL RESTORATION OF THE FILM, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
    • NEW selected-scene commentary by cinematographer Adam Holender
    • Alternate 5.1 surround soundtrack, presented in DTS-HD Master Audio on the Blu-ray
    • Audio commentary from 1991 featuring director John Schlesinger and producer Jerome Hellman
    • The Crowd Around the Cowboy, a 1969 short film made on location for Midnight Cowboy
    • Waldo Salt: A Screenwriter's Journey, an Academy Award–nominated documentary from 1990 by Eugene Corr and Robert Hillmann
    • Two short 2004 documentaries on the making and release of Midnight Cowboy
    • Interview with actor Jon Voight on The David Frost Show from 1970
    • Interview from 2000 with Schlesinger for BAFTA Los Angeles
    • Excerpts from the 2002 BAFTA LA Tribute to Schlesinger, featuring Voight and actor Dustin Hoffman
    • Original Trailer
    • PLUS: An essay by critic Mark Harris
    • Optional English SDH subtitles for the main feature
    STREET DATE: MAY 29.

    Au Hasard Balthazar

    Synopsis: A profound masterpiece from one of the most revered filmmakers in the history of cinema, Au hasard Balthazar, directed by Robert Bresson, follows the donkey Balthazar as he is passed from owner to owner, some kind and some cruel but all with motivations outside of his understanding. Balthazar, whose life parallels that of his first keeper, Marie, is truly a beast of burden, suffering the sins of humankind. But despite his powerlessness, he accepts his fate nobly. Through Bresson's unconventional approach to composition, sound, and narrative, this simple story becomes a moving parable about purity and transcendence.

    Special Features and Technical Specs:
    • NEW 2K RESTORATION, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
    • Interview from 2005 with film scholar Donald Richie
    • "Un metteur en ordre: Robert Bresson," a 1966 French television program about the film, featuring Bresson, filmmakers Jean-Luc Godard and Louis Malle, and members of Balthazar's cast and crew
    • Original theatrical trailer
    • Plus: An essay by film scholar James Quandt
    • Optional English subtitles for the main feature
    STREET DATE: MAY 29.

    Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters

    Synopsis: Paul Schrader's visually stunning, collagelike portrait of the acclaimed Japanese author and playwright Yukio Mishima (played by Ken Ogata) investigates the inner turmoil and contradictions of a man who attempted the impossible task of finding harmony among self, art, and society. Taking place on Mishima's last day, when he famously committed public seppuku, the film is punctuated by extended flashbacks to the writer's life as well as by gloriously stylized evocations of his fictional works. With its rich cinematography by John Bailey, exquisite sets and costumes by Eiko Ishioka, and unforgettable, highly influential score by Philip Glass, Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters is a tribute to its subject and a bold, investigative work of art in its own right.

    Special Features and Technical Specs:
    • NEW 4K RESTORATION OF THE DIRECTOR'S CUT OF THE FILM supervised and approved by director Paul Schrader and cinematographer John Bailey, with 2.0 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray
    • Two optional English narrations, including one by actor Roy Scheider
    • Audio commentary from 2008 featuring Schrader and producer Alan Poul
    • Interviews from 2007 and 2008 with Bailey, producers Tom Luddy and Mata Yamamoto, composer Philip Glass, and production designer Eiko Ishioka
    • Interviews from 2008 with Mishima biographer John Nathan and friend Donald Richie
    • Audio interview from 2008 with coscreenwriter Chieko Schrader
    • Interview excerpt from 1966 featuring Mishima talking about writing The Strange Case of Yukio Mishima, a 55-minute documentary from 1985 about the author
    • Trailer
    • Optional English subtitles for the main feature
    • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by critic Kevin Jackson, a piece on the film's censorship in Japan, and photographs of Ishioka's sets
    STREET DATE: MAY 22.

    Beyond the Hills

    Synopsis: With this arresting drama based on notorious real-life events, Cristian Mungiu mounts a complex inquiry into faith, fanaticism, and indifference. At a desolate Romanian monastery, a young novice nun, Voichiţa (Cosmina Stratan), reunites with her former companion Alina (Cristina Flutur), who plans to take her to Germany. But Voichiţa proves unwilling to abandon her calling, and Alina becomes increasingly desperate to reclaim her devotion, putting the outsider at odds with the monastery's ascetic priest—and precipitating a painfully misguided, brutal attempt to save her soul. A naturalistic tragedy with the dark force of a folktale, anchored by the fraught dynamic between cinema newcomers Flutur and Stratan (who shared the best actress prize at Cannes), Beyond the Hills bears powerful witness to individuals at cross-purposes and institutions ill-equipped to help those most in need.

    Special Features and Technical Specs:
    • 2K digital transfer, approved by director Cristian Mungiu, with 2.0 surround DTS‑HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray
    • New interview with Mungiu
    • The Making of "Beyond the Hills," a documentary from 2013, produced by Mungiu
    • Press conference from the 2012 Cannes Film Festival, featuring Mungiu and actors Cosmina Stratan, Cristina Flutur, Valeriu Andriuţă, and Dana Tapalagă
    • Deleted scenes
    • Trailer
    • New English subtitle translation
    • PLUS: An essay by film scholar Doru Pop
    STREET DATE: MAY 22.

    Graduation

    Synopsis: Blending rigorous naturalism with the precise construction of a thriller, this Cannes award–winning drama from Cristian Mungiu sheds light on the high stakes and ethical complexities of life in contemporary Romania. As his daughter nears high-school graduation, Romeo (Adrian Titieni), an upstanding doctor, counts on her winning a competitive scholarship that will send her to university in England. But when an injury sustained during a sexual assault compromises her performance on an important exam, Romeo's best-laid plans for her threaten to crumble, leading him to seek favors in a world that runs on backscratching and bribery. Suffused with quiet dread, Graduation takes a humane and deeply ambiguous look at how corrosive rampant corruption is to moral convictions.

    Special Features and Technical Specs:
    • 2K digital master, approved by director Cristian Mungiu, with 5.1 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray
    • New interview with Mungiu
    • Press conference from the 2016 Cannes Film Festival, featuring Mungiu and actors Adrian Titieni, Maria Drăguș, Mălina Manovici, and Rareș Andrici
    • Deleted scenes
    • Trailer
    • New English subtitle translation
    • PLUS: An essay by film critic Bilge Ebiri
    STREET DATE; MAY 22.

    Moonrise

    Synopsis: A small-town fable about violence and redemption, Moonrise is the final triumph of Frank Borzage, one of Hollywood's most neglected masters. Stigmatized from infancy by the fate of his criminal father, young Danny (Dane Clark) is bruised and bullied until one night, in a fit of rage, he kills his most persistent tormenter. As the police close in around him, Danny makes a desperate bid for the love of the dead man's fiancée (Gail Russell), a schoolteacher who sees the wounded soul behind his aggression. With this postwar comeback, Borzage recaptured the inspiration that had animated his long and audacious early career, marrying the lyrical force of his romantic sensibility with the psychological anguish of film noir in a stunning vindication of faith in the power of love.

    Special Features and Technical Specs:
    • NEW 4K RESTORATION OF THE FILM, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
    • New conversation between author Hervé Dumont (Frank Borzage: The Life and Films of a Hollywood Romantic) and film historian Peter Cowie
    • PLUS: An essay by critic Philip Kemp
    STREET DATE: MAY 8.

    The Other Side of Hope

    Synopsis: This wry, melancholic comedy from Aki Kaurismäki, a response to the ongoing global refugee crisis, follows two people searching for a place to call home. Khaled (Sherwan Haji), a displaced Syrian, lands in Helsinki as a stowaway; meanwhile, middle-aged Finnish salesman Wikström (Sakari Kuosmanen) leaves his wife and his job and buys a conspicuously unprofitable seafood restaurant. Khaled is denied asylum but decides not to return to Aleppo—and the paths of the two men cross fortuitously. As deadpan as the best of the director's work, and with a deep well of empathy for its down-but-not-out characters (many of them played by members of Kaurismäki's loyal stock company), The Other Side of Hope is a bittersweet tale of human kindness in the face of official indifference.

    Special Features and Technical Specs:
    • NEW 2K DIGITAL TRANSFER, approved by director Aki Kaurismäki, with 5.1 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray
    • New interview with actor Sherwan Haji
    • Footage from the 2017 Berlin Film Festival press conference for the film, featuring Kaurismäki and the film's actors
    • Aki and Peter, a new video essay by Daniel Raim about the friendship between Kaurismäki and film critic Peter von Bagh, to whom the film is dedicated
    • Music videos
    • Trailer
    • PLUS: An essay by critic Girish Shambu
    STREET DATE: MAY 15.
     
  2. Myke

    Myke Trying Not To Spook The Horse Thread Starter

    I have waited about 39 years to buy Midnight Cowboy on home video, but I always knew Criterion would eventually cover it, so I waited.
    In May, my patience is rewarded.
    .
     
  3. Daniel Plainview

    Daniel Plainview God's Lonely Man

    MIDNIGHT COWBOY MY FAVORITE MOVIE I HAVE CHECKED THE MONTHLY CRITERION ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR A DECADE WAITING FOR THIS DAY!!!!!!!!
     
    Last edited: Feb 15, 2018
    apesfan, joelee, jwoverho and 3 others like this.
  4. Myke

    Myke Trying Not To Spook The Horse Thread Starter

    I said 39 years, since that was when I bought my first VCR.

    So at least two of us have had patience. Happy for both of us.
    :tiphat:
     
    Daniel Plainview likes this.
  5. I love Midnight Cowboy but it’s so depressing I don’t think I can watch it again so I will pass. But it does look like a really nice release.
     
    Kubricker likes this.
  6. Al Kuenster

    Al Kuenster Senior Member

    Location:
    Las Vegas, NV - US
    Looks like Midnight Cowboy only for me, I can now replace my dvd.
     
    Myke likes this.
  7. Daniel Plainview

    Daniel Plainview God's Lonely Man

    Oh, I've purchased every version thats come along. VHS (with some great bonus content that I'd wish they'd port over), DVD, special ed dvd, mgm bluray.... but I knew that one day Criterion would bring it back to the collection and do it up right.
     
    mikeyt likes this.
  8. Daniel Plainview

    Daniel Plainview God's Lonely Man

    I watch it at least once a year. I find it strangely uplifting!
     
  9. longdist01

    longdist01 Senior Member

    Location:
    Chicago, IL USA
    Thank you MYKE for post!

    Several interesting titles, most likely for me "The Other Side Of Hope"
     
    Myke likes this.
  10. zonkaraz

    zonkaraz Forum Resident

    Location:
    Livonia, MI, USA
    Very happy about the release of Moonrise
     
  11. Myke

    Myke Trying Not To Spook The Horse Thread Starter

  12. yamfox

    yamfox Forum Resident

    Location:
    USA
    I love Midnight Cowboy’s cover art!
     
  13. townsend

    townsend Senior Member

    Location:
    Ridgway, CO
    I have seen two Cristian Mingiu films: 4 Months 2 Weeks & 3 Days and Graduation. Of these two, I prefer 4 Months . . . But anything he touches is golden. 4 Months is about the difficulties of obtaining an abortion in Communist-era Romania. It sounded like a snorefest, but I said, hey, it got some good reviews, I'll take a chance. I could not take my eyes of the screen. It is extremely well done, fascinating, like watching a brilliant chess match (which again, sounds like another snorefest!). I'll just glad someone is making intelligent movies. No special effects, car chases, guns that don't need reloading, or villains that can take a magazine of lead in their chests and keep tickin . . .

    BTW, 4 Months on blu-ray has just been announced here: 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days Blu-ray

    Another movie I think Criterion should do is The Tribe -- no dialogue, no subtitles, just real deaf people (guys and gals) telling the entire store with their sign language and actions. Has to be seen to be believed. Brilliant.
     
    Claus LH likes this.
  14. Leviethan

    Leviethan Forum Resident

    Location:
    Portland, OR
    I've been waiting twenty years for them to release my favorite movie, O Lucky Man! Every time I see these threads I hope it's in the list.
     
    Spadeygrove, Solaris and Jerry Horne like this.
  15. DrewHarris

    DrewHarris Forum Resident

    Location:
    Good ol' Alaska
    Midnight Cowboy sounds like a fascinating film and I'll watch it before I consider getting it. Same for Mishima. I do hope they retain the gorgeous digipack design of the past DVD release.
     
  16. Jerry Horne

    Jerry Horne WYWH (1975-2025)

    Location:
    NW
    I freaked when they announced Midnight Cowboy! Release of the year thus far!
     
    Myke likes this.
  17. Jerry Horne

    Jerry Horne WYWH (1975-2025)

    Location:
    NW
    My all time favorite film as well. A Criterion edition would be a dream come true.
     
    Solaris and jwoverho like this.
  18. jojopuppyfish

    jojopuppyfish Senior Member

    Location:
    Maryland
    Is the dvd of Midnight Cowboy bad?
     
  19. Jerry Horne

    Jerry Horne WYWH (1975-2025)

    Location:
    NW
  20. Leviethan

    Leviethan Forum Resident

    Location:
    Portland, OR
    They did If.... so long ago. That's a really cool film, but OLM is better, IMHO. I bought the 1080p version from iTunes and it looks fantastic. So much better than the old DVD. But I want to see it on my shelf with a "C" on the spine.
     
    Jerry Horne likes this.
  21. stepeanut

    stepeanut The gloves are off

    “Chocolate sandwich! Chocolate sandwich!”
     
    Leviethan and Jerry Horne like this.
  22. 93curr

    93curr Senior Member

    Definitely in for upgrading 'Mishima.' Probably going to pick up 'Balthazar.' Not sure I care much about the rest.
     
    johnnyyen likes this.
  23. Leviethan

    Leviethan Forum Resident

    Location:
    Portland, OR
    What's there to smile about?
     
    stepeanut and Jerry Horne like this.
  24. Oatsdad

    Oatsdad Oat, Biscuits, Abbie & Mitzi: Best Dogs Ever

    Location:
    Alexandria VA
    No "Midnight Cowboy II", no sale! :mad:

     
  25. I hate the digipak packaging. The artwork may be great but the design for some of them (Night of the Living Dead) is pretty crappy.
     
    alexpop likes this.
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.

Share This Page

molar-endocrine