Tag: Melodrama

  • Blu-ray Release: The Naked Fog / Moonlighting Wives – 2 Films by Joseph W. Sarno

    Blu-ray Release Date: April 11, 2023
    Price: Blu-ray $39.95
    Studio: Film Movement


    A pioneer of sexploitation cinema, American film director and screenwriter Joseph W. Sarno’s (1921-2010) prolific career spans the evolution of the genre. Called “one of the true pioneers of celluloid erotica,” by Anthology Film Archives, he was also dubbed the “Chekov of soft-core” by The Village Voice.

    Moonlighting Wives (1966)

    In this latest Blu-ray double feature from Film Movement Classics, Moonlighting Wives (1966), dripping with color, introduced Sarno’s psycho-sexual erotic dramas to popular audiences when it screened in mainstream cinemas and drive-ins. For his next productions, he returned to his trademark economical black-and-white dramas including The Naked Fog (1966) presented here for the first time to home media. Mesmerizing performances by star Tammy Latour link these prime examples of Sarno’s 1960s films.

    In Moonlighting Wives (90 minutes), 1960s suburbia becomes a hotbed of rampant adultery and illicit sexual encounters in this torn-from-the-headlines drama. Disgruntled housewife Joan turns her stenography service into a thriving prostitution ring that has local law enforcement baffled. Needing more housewives to grow her business with wealthy clientele, Joan gives adulterous and well-connected golf pro Frank a piece of the action, sparking a chain of events that lead her on an odyssey of blackmail and ever closer to the police. Latour, Gretchen Rudolph and John Aristedes star.

    The Naked Fog (86 minutes) has long been considered a “lost” film in Sarno’s filmography. In this classic, jaded jet-setter Marge (Tammy LaTour) starts a new identify as a writer in upper east coast suburbia. But when writer’s block hits, the town brothel – a hotbed of infidelity and blackmail – offers the perfect inspiration.

    BONUS FEATURES

    • Audio Commentary by film historian Tim Lucas (Moonlighting Wives)
    • Interview with director Joe Sarno (2006)
    • Interview with cinematographer Jerry Kalogeratos (2007)
    Buy or Rent The Naked Fog / Moonlighting Wives – 2 Films by Joseph W. Sarno
  • Blu-ray, DVD Release: Corridor of Mirrors

    Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Oct. 19, 2021
    Price: DVD $19.95, Blu-ray $29.95
    Studio: Cohen Media/Kino Lorber


    Eric Portman (A Canterbury Tale) plays an artist obsessed with the past. He surrounds himself with Renaissance artwork, infatuated with the notion that he and his lover (Edana Romney) are reincarnations of the lovers in a centuries-old painting. Portman’s delusions have deadly consequences.

    One of the most unusual British films of the 1940s, Corridor of Mirrors (1948) incorporates aspects of gothic horror, film noir, melodrama, fantasy, romance and thrillers. Newly restored for this release, this first feature from director Terence Young (Dr. No), was heavily influenced by Jean Cocteau’s Beauty and the Beast and David Lean’s Brief Encounter, and includes the feature film debut of Christopher Lee (The House That Dripped Blood).

    The disc contains a trailer as a special feature.

    Buy or Rent Corridor of Mirrors
  • Blu-ray, DVD Release: Moment by Moment

    Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Aug. 24, 2021
    Price: DVD $9.99, Blu-ray $16.59
    Studio: Kino Lorber


    Hot on the heels of Saturday Night Fever and Grease, John Travolta (Blow Out) teamed up with Lily Tomlin (Nashville, 9 to 5) for the 1978 May/December love story Moment by Moment.

    Trisha Rawlings (Tomlin), a lonely, middle-aged Beverly Hills socialite, meets Vick “Strip” Harrison (Travolta), a suave young drifter. Their initial flirtation turns into a passionate relationship despite their age and class differences. Oy…

    Tomlin’s longtime partner Jane Wagner (The Incredible Shrinking Woman) wrote and directed this romantic melodrama which was shot by ace cinematographer Philip H. Lathrop (They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?).

    Boasting a tagline that reads, “The only thing they have in common… is each other,” Moment by Moment is a weird one. Unintentionally hysterical at time, it’s still worth a look-see…

    Special Features:
    -NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historians Lee Gambin and Sergio Mims with Maya Montanez Smukler, Author of Liberating Hollywood: Women Directors & the Feminist Reform of 1970s American Cinema
    -3 Radio Spots
    -Theatrical Trailer

    Buy or Rent Moment by Moment
  • Blu-ray, DVD Release: The Furies

    Blu-ray Release Date: April 20, 2021
    Price: Blu-ray $27.99
    Studio: Criterion


    Barbara Stanwyck (Forty Guns) and Walter Huston (The Treasure of the Sierra Madre) are at their fierce finest in 1950’s The Furies, a crackling western melodrama by master Hollywood craftsman Anthony Mann (Strangers in the Night).

    In 1870s New Mexico Territory, megalomaniacal widowed ranch owner T. C. Jeffords (Huston, in his final role) butts heads with his firebrand of a daughter, Vance (Stanwyck), over her dowry, choice of husband, and, finally, ownership of the land itself.

    Sophisticated in its view of frontier settlement and ablaze with searing domestic drama, The Furies is an often-overlooked treasure of American filmmaking, boasting Oscar–nominated cinematography and vivid supporting turns from Judith Anderson (Rebecca) and Wendell Corey (The File on Thelma Jordon).

    Criterion’s Blu-ray edition of the film—a DVD was issued back in 2008—contains the following features:

    • High-definition digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
    • Audio commentary from 2008 featuring film historian Jim Kitses
    • New program featuring critic Imogen Sara Smith
    • The Movies: “Action Speaks Louder Than Words,” a 1967 television interview with director Anthony Mann
    • Rare on-camera interview with actor Walter Huston, made for the movie-theater series Intimate Interviews in 1931
    • Interview from 2008 with Nina Mann, the director’s daughter
    • Trailer
    • English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
    • An essay by critic Robin Wood and a 1957 Cahiers du cinéma interview with Mann, as well as a new printing of the 1948 novel by Niven Busch on which the film is based
    Buy or Rent The Furies
  • DVD, Digital Release: Little England

    Digital, DVD Release Date: March 16, 2021
    Price: DVD $19.99
    Studio: Corinth Films


    Set in the 1930’s on the picturesque and provincial Greek island of Andros (affectionately called ‘Little England’, as its small society imitates the social organization of the English naval empire), the Greek melodrama Little England tells the tale of two sisters falling in love with the same man.

    As the story is indeed a melodrama, veteran Greek director Pantelis Voulgaris’s 2013 film swerves between drama, romance and tragedy as it ultimately winds down in the throes of World War II in a dramatic masterpiece from veteran Greek director Pantelis Voulgaris.

    Greece’s entry for Best International Film in 2014, Little England captured six Greek Film Academy Awards while also winning three Golden Goblet Awards at the Shanghai International Film Festival for Best Feature Film, Best Director and Best Actress.

    Buy or Rent Little England
    on DVD | Digital
  • Film Review: X

    Film Review: X

    STUDIO: Cinedigm | DIRECTOR: Scott J. Ramsey | CAST: Hope Raymond, Elia Boivin, Brian Smick, Zachary Cowan, Valerie Fachman
    RELEASE DATE: Feb. 9, 2021 | PRICE: DVD $14.99
    SPECS: NR | 127 min. | Melodrama thriller | 2.35:1 widescreen

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes): Movie  1/2

    The just-released 2019 indie film X is marketed as a Hitchcockian erotic thriller, a claim that will undoubtedly raise the expectations of audiences who may eventually feel wrongly teased when a satisfying climax is not fully reached.

    The chair of a mysterious foundation Christian King (Hope Raymond, Sleep Away), known to her guests as “X,” hosts charity balls that double as masked sex parties where everyone’s sexuality is welcomingly fluid and no fantasy is too obscene. Though she creates an open, sexually free environment, Christian is ashamed of her own personal fetish – gratifying herself while watching her guests via a hidden camera in her bathroom. When an unexpected criminal act takes place at Christian’s latest party, it threatens to expose her dark secret.

    With an alluring plot the film sets out to use titillation and subversion to teach the lesson of self-acceptance through a mixture of melodrama, thriller and camp. However, X lacks any steamy eroticism as well as any tension or suspense — two necessary drivers in any Hitchcockian thriller. In his feature film debut, director Scott J. Ramsey seems to have attempted too much and is unable to thread the multiple genres together into a cohesive narrative tone that works throughout the overly long two-hour running time. Additionally, the dialogue tracks seem disconnected from the action on the screen, making it feel like a foreign film that has been dubbed and thus hindering deeper engagement in the material. Raymond puts in a go-for-broke performance but it’s not nuanced enough to adequately oscillate between the dramatic and comedic themes asked of the character.

    It is amazing that any independent film can get off the ground and be made, so props to Ramsey and his team for getting it done and creating a story that can resonate with the LGBT community or anyone that has sexual desires that don’t fit into what society deems “normal.” There are some interesting points of view on hand here, just don’t expect X to be the scintillating, campy thrill ride it hypes itself to be.

    Buy or Rent X
  • Blu-ray, DVD, Digital Release: Caro Diario

    Digital, Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Sept. 8, 2020
    Price: DVD $19.95, Blu-ray $22.99
    Studio: Film Movement


    Nanni Moretti recounts three entries from his “diary” in 1993’s Caro Diario, a self-reflective comedy-drama which follows the filmmaker’s musing on cinema atop a Vespa, a trip to the Aeolian Islands to work on his new screenplay, and his search for health and wellness after breaking out in a nagging skin rash.

    Winner of Best Director at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival, Moretti’s award-winner and festival favorite alternates between wry encounters and lovely restful interludes, the latter presented so soothingly that they create a contemplative mood. And all presented in front of beautiful Italian backdrop…

    The Blu-ray and DVD of Film Movement’s reissue of the film includes a new 2K digital restoration and a “Making of” featurette and a deleted scene.

    Buy or Rent Caro Diario
  • Blu-ray: Leave Her to Heaven

    Blu-ray: Leave Her to Heaven

    STUDIO: Criterion | DIRECTOR: John M. Stahl | CAST: Gene Tierney, Cornel Wilde, Jeanne Crain, Vincent Price, Mary Philips, Ray Collins,  Darryl Hickman
    RELEASE DATE: 3/24/20 | PRICE: Blu-ray $27.87 DVD $21.99
    BONUSES: Interview with critic Imogen Sara Smith
    SPECS: NR | 110 min. | Film noir melodrama | 1.37:1 widescreen | monaural |

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes): Movie  | Audio  | Video   | Overall 

    The best example of the very small subset of film noirs that are called “color noirs,” Leave Her to Heaven (1945) is not only a great noir, it is also a great melodrama that features unforgettable images of its star, Gene Tierney (Whirlpool).

    It’s a beautiful example of the kind of craftsmanship that can be found in vintage Hollywood major studio films, but it also does say a lot about men’s fear of a “possessive” woman and the way in which a woman who rejected certain norms in the 1940s — most especially the “sacred” institution of motherhood — was instantly perceived as “evil.”

    For the film – which was a box-office hit at the time of its release — definitely has the psychological undercurrents that are found in noir, but its heroine, played by Tierney, is far from the “black widow” archetype in many noirs (or even the obscure object of desire that Tierney played a year earlier in the perfect Laura). She is a woman with a father fixation who falls so deeply in love with a man that she can’t stand anyone intruding on their love – even a relative or a child.

    The plot is the stuff of great melodrama (and it was indeed based on a bestselling novel). The aforementioned love junkie, Ellen (Tierney), falls deeply in love with and marries novelist Richard (Cornel Wilde, The Naked Prey), and is willing to eliminate any obstacle to their relationship. In the film’s best-remembered scene (evoked on the box art for this Criterion release), she allows his disabled brother (Darryl Hickman) to drown while swimming so that he will not be “in the way” of their affection.

    She moves on from there to “deal” with her pregnancy, throwing herself down a staircase to miscarry the baby. The third act is a court trial in which the prosecutor (a wonderfully over-the-top Vincent Price) — who happens to be Ellen’s jilted ex-boyfriend — accuses Richard of murdering Ellen in a plot that she herself set up before committing an oblique form of suicide.

    These overwrought actions take place in a beautifully bucolic environment, with gorgeous rural images courtesy of cinematographer Leon Shamroy (Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing), who won an Oscar for his work on the film. The characters wear primary colors that blend in with their environment, while Ellen is “color-coded” in different scenes to reflect her mood and behavior.

    Director John M. Stahl, who was a master of melodrama (referred to as “women’s pictures” in the Golden Age), accents Tierney with appropriate noir lighting at points, but in other key scenes she is photographed with no Expressionistic distortions, as in the memorable moment when she talks about how she loathes being pregnant (“I hate the little beast — I wish it would die!”).

    As is the case with many melodramas and noirs, Ellen is not only the most interesting character in the film (as the rest are bland stereotypes — except for Price’s prosecutor), she is also the most sympathetic. Her crazed passion for her (excessively boring) husband leads her to extreme behavior, but she is clearly motivated entirely by jealousy and fear that he will leave her. She is, in effect, the kind of character who is far more interesting to watch than a virtuous, homespun heroine.

    Each member of the cast does an admirable job of incarnating their role, but the way the film is scripted it’s Tierney’s show all the way. She gives a wonderfully subdued yet manic performance and is a vision in all of her scenes, with her blue-green eyes and ruby red lips seeming like special effects to make her stand out against the natural “country” environment that Ellen inhabits.

    This Criterion release has only one visual supplement, an interview with critic Imogen Sara Smith, who discuses Stahl’s work and Tierney’s character in detail. She outlines how Stahl’s most famous films (the original Imitation of Life and Magnificent Obsession) were marked by “female devotion” and that Ellen is sketched as a “demonic caricature” of the average woman of the 1940s. Stahl and Shamroy’s visuals are also explored, in particular the use of deep focus and the evocative and stylish approach to color.

    An essay by crime novelist Megan Abbott is included in the booklet. Abbott directly explores the ways in which Ellen’s actions and dialogue reflected the secret longings of women viewers in the immediate post-war period:

    “…Ellen says the things women think but cannot say. Her unspeakable acts may have offered female viewers a cathartic relief from the era’s gender imperatives and an exorcism of their own forbidden feelings and longings.”

    Plus, she looks incredibly chic in sunglasses while watching her tedious teenage brother-in-law drown.

    Buy or Rent Leave Her to Heaven
  • Blu-ray Review: Indiscretion of an American Wife

    Blu-ray Review: Indiscretion of an American Wife

    STUDIO: Kino Lorber | DIRECTOR: Vittorio de Sica | CAST: Montgomery Clift, Jennifer Jones, Richard Beymer, Gino Cervi
    RELEASE DATE: March 30, 2020 | PRICE: DVD $14.99, Blu-ray $19.99
    BONUSES: eight-minute prologue, 2K restoration of the original longer version
    SPECS: NR | 63 min. | Drama romance | 1.37:1 widescreen | stereo | English subtitles

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes): Movie  | Audio  | Video  | Overall 

    As can frequently be the case with many cinematic misfires, the story behind Vittorio De Sica’s (Bicycle Thieves) 1953 romantic melodrama Indiscretion of an American Wife is more intriguing than the film itself.

    The romantic drama about an American housewife (Jennifer Jones, Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing) vacationing in Italy who decides to ends her affair with an Italian academic (Montgomery Clift, Red River) in Rome’s Stazione Termini, the international co-production between De Sica and producer David O. Selznick (who commissioned the film as a vehicle for his wife Jones) was reported troubled frmo the very beginning

    A number of notable writers hired to write the script were fired during the process including Carson McCullers, Alberto Moravia, Paul Gallico and Truman Capote (who ultimately received the screen credit). Selznick would send lengthy daily letters to De Sica every day of the production, which took place on location at the large Roman station. De Sica, who apparently didn’t read English, apparently agreed to everything Selznick said, but then did things his own way. The stars were reportedly unhappy as well.

    The original release of the film ran 89 minutes and retained its original title, Terminal Station. After disappointing previews, Selznick re-edited it down to a lean 64 minutes and changed the title to Indiscretion of an American Wife without De Sica’s permission. Neither the critics or the movie-going public much enjoyed either version.

    Kino Lorber’s Special Edition includes shimmering restored editions of both versions of the film, with the American one fleshed out with an eight-minute prologue of Patti Page singing “Autumn in Rome” and “Indiscretion” in a travelogue-ish bit photographed by the great James Wong Howe (Sweet Smell of Success).

    The performances are good; the film is dull. But G.R. Aldo’s cinematography is solid, the Stazione Termini is sprawling and young Richard Beymer (West Side Story) is adorable as Jones’ nephew.

    Buy or Rent Indiscretion of an American Wife
    on DVD | Blu-ray
  • Blu-ray, DVD Release: Accident

    Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Feb. 18, 2020
    Price: DVD $12.99, Blu-ray $19.99
    Studio: Kino Lorber


    From Joseph Losey, the legendary director of The Lawless, Figujres in a Landscape and The Romantic Englishwoman, comes the 1967 melodrama Accident, with a screenplay by the great Harold Pinter (The French Lieutenant’s Woman).

    When one of his students is killed in a car accident, an Oxford professor (Dirk Bogarde, Death in Venice) recounts the circumstances of their meeting. But as these turbulent memories unfold, they reveal a series of shocking relationships betrayed by adultery, obsession and self-destruction in which nothing is what it seems and everything has its cost. Accident was the second of three brilliant collaborations between filmmaker Losey and playwright Pinter; the first was the 1963 masterpiece The Servant and the third, the 1971 classic The Go-Between.

    Michael York (Something for Everyone), Vivien Merchant (The Maids), Delphine Seyrig (Last Year at Marienbad) and Freddie Jones (Juggernaut) co-star in this stunner based on a novel by Nicholas Mosley (The Assassination of Trotsky) and shot by Gerry Fisher (Man on Fire, The Offence).

    Special Features:
    -NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historian Kat Ellinger
    -Optional English Subtitles
    -Dual-Layered BD50 Disc
    -Theatrical Trailer

    Buy or Rent Accident