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Monthly Archives: October 2014
WAYRA: THE DANCE OF THE WINDS
This music will mess with your mind . . .
A COMIC STRIP FOR TODAY
NOW IS THE HOUR
ESSENTIAL
It’s hard to convey how good this movie looks on Blu-ray. Digital technology makes it possible to align the elements of a three-strip Technicolor negative more precisely than was ever possible before, creating a clarity in the image that’s dazzling.
You can certainly make valid criticisms of the film itself, for its pious romanticizing of the antebellum South and slavery, for its distressing (if well-intentioned) patronizing of its black characters. What you can’t deny is that it’s one of the grandest entertainments ever concocted by anyone in any medium.
A fine cast, a literate and amusing script, sure-footed direction and the deployment of studio craftsmanship on a stupendous scale result in a film of breathtaking virtuosity — part soap opera, part melodrama, part epic, part lyrical romance, part tragedy.
Producer David Selznick put the package together with canny calculation and good taste but director Victor Fleming invested it with life, made the elements cohere into a timeless work of popular art. His direction of the film ranks among the highest achievements of Hollywood’s Golden Age.
It’s just the damnedest thing. The Blu-ray of Gone With the Wind belongs in every civilized home.
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A PULP MAGAZINE COVER FOR TODAY
BLUE HAWAII
POLYNESIAN PRINCESS
NOW AVAILABLE
. . . on Amazon for the Kindle (or just about any computer or portable device with the free Kindle reading apps you can get here.)
Black Pearl is a lurid pulp thriller with a supernatural edge, set in the South Pacific and New York City. Harry Jakes, an ex private eye from Manhattan, is running a cheap but charming bar on a remote Pacific island and thinks he’s left his gumshoe days behind—until a shady figure walks into his dive in the middle of a typhoon and sets in motion a fantastical chain of events that will embroil him and his two best friends in a web of uncanny terror and suspense. At the heart of it is a mysterious young Polynesian woman who may or may not be a ghost and a priceless black pearl that any number of people are willing to kill for. A spooky, sexy novella from the author of Bloodbath.
Buy it here for only $2.99.
ALTERNATE COVER
BLUE HAWAII
TEXAS
ESTHER WILLIAMS
. . . in Hawaii (doubling for Tahiti) — Pagan Love Song, 1950.
This was Arthur Freed’s only try at producing an Esther Williams film — his innovation was shooting a lot of it on location. The film made a little money but not as much as most Esther Williams vehicles, because of the cost of the location work.
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COMING SOON
BLUE HAWAII