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Category:    Home > Reviews > Melodrama > Musical > Romance > Drama > WWII > Nuclear Weapons > History > Espionage > Biopic > Revolution > I > April Love (1957/Fox/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray)/Manh(a)ttan: Season One (2014/aka Manhattan: Season One/Lionsgate Blu-ray)/Michael Collins (1996/Geffen Pictures/Warner Archive DVD)/Richard

April Love (1957/Fox/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray)/Manh(a)ttan: Season One (2014/aka Manhattan: Season One/Lionsgate Blu-ray)/Michael Collins (1996/Geffen Pictures/Warner Archive DVD)/Richard III (1995/United Artists/MGM/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray)


Picture: B/B/C+/B Sound: B-/B-/C+/B+ Extras: B-/C+/C+/C+ Main Programs: C+/C+/C+/B


PLEASE NOTE: The April Love and Richard III Blu-rays are now only available from our friends at Twilight Time, are limited to only 3,000 copies each and can be ordered while supplies last, while Michael Collins is now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner Archive series. All can be ordered from the links below.



The following take us to the dark side of the past, even if the opening film seems like just a lite musical...



Henry Levin's melodramatic sometimes-musical April Love (1957) showed off then-popular Pat Boone (who made the title song one his 6 #1 hits and possibly the biggest hit single he ever had) with Shirley Jones and Dolores Michaels competing for his 'affections' in this sappy CinemaScope romp that has as many cliches as it has stocks of wheat or hay. Boone was at his early peak, doing better his own new material than watered-down Soul and Rock records, while Jones was a rising star known for Musicals, but who could do more.


The boy meets/looses/gets gal story is of the 'perfect' post-WWII America kind, yet there are some dark sides to the tale, the kind of darkness that would inevitably creep into such stories (but are usually absent from their cleansed revival since the 1980s) making this a nice-looking time capsule of the time and an America that never really existed. Jeanette Nolan and Arthur O'Connell show up to give the proceedings some weight, but this remains a for-fans-only affair and I can see why Fox is giving it the Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray treatment. Nice it is all fixed up.


Extras include a nicely illustrated booklet on the film including informative text and an essay by Julie Kirgo on the film, while the Blu-ray adds a new feature length audio commentary track by film scholar Nick Redman and co-star Shirley Jones, Original Theatrical Trailer and Isolated Music Track of the music including vocals.



Manh(a)ttan: Season One (2014) is an ambitious, if somewhat disappointing TV series on the making of the nuclear bombs that saved the free world and ended WWII via The Manhattan Project. The cast is really good, the clothing and sets add up and there are some good moments here, but the teleplays are hit and miss, sometimes having more dull stretches than a show on this subject should ever have. We meet a few famous names involved in the affair, but most are representative of those usually nameless persons who had to live in the middle of a makeshift town to get the bomb(s) made.


This runs a somewhat lucky 13 hours and the downs were somewhat worth bearing for the up moments, but this show is going to really need to pick it up in its sophomore season or it should get axed. It is not bad-looking overall and will remind many of Mad Men, but a little more on the actual making (think the underrated film Fat Man & Little Boy, for instance) would help. It's worth a look, but have some patience.


Extras include Digital HD Ultraviolet Copy for PC, PC portable and iTunes capable devices, a paper slip of paper with episode guide synopses, while the Blu-ray adds audio commentary tracks on select episodes and four Making Of featurettes.



Neil Jordan's epic biopic of Michael Collins (1996) is remarkable in that it got made in any version and by a major movie studio considering it is about a man (pre 9/11 or not) who got tougher using terroristic tactics to get Great Britain to start to give Ireland (at least some) autonomy. It has a great cast with Liam Neeson as the title character, Aidan Quinn, Alan Rickman, Stephen Rea, Sean McGinley, Brendan Gleeson, Gerald McSorley, Charles Dance, Johnathan Rhys Myers and even Julia Roberts.


It looks good, has the money in it and also gets its period detail correct for the most part. The use of more vintage film footage than usual is not a problem, but the film is flat throughout and never picks up, especially since Jordan (by his own admission, though it feels manipulated)

even admits to taking more than a few liberties with history and that backfires on a film that needed all the help it could get in dealing with such a serious subject. The British do not become too cartoonish, but there are too many close shots and pacing problems throughout that stopped it from being a great film. It still has its admirers and credit to Geffen Pictures for backing it when they could, made before David Geffen co-founded DreamWorks SKG. It too is worth a look, but I was as disappointed now as then when I first saw it.


Extras include the Original Theatrical Trailer and a vintage documentary running just over 53 minutes.



Last but not least is the best release on the list, Richard Loncraine's film of Richard Eyre's WWII-esque updating of Shakespeare's Richard III (1995), starring Sir Ian McKellen (who did the role on stage, then co-wrote and co-produced this film version) as the title character, now recast as a founder of Classical Fascism and the Axis Powers in what was part of a cycle of adaptations of The Bard set in more contemporary surroundings and even in a post-modern (think mix of styles) mode. This was a smart move since Sir Laurence Olivier made his stunning 1955 big screen VistaVision version of the original in its time period, as issued by Criterion in this terrific edition reviewed at this link:


http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/12139/Richard+III+(1955/Olivier/London/Lopert/Criterion


The makers had to do something different and they did, pulling off a pretty impressive transformation of the work and making I work just fine for the big screen like Julie Taymor's version of Titus (also issued by Twilight Time on Blu-ray, also on this site) and other various updatings. Maggie Smith, Kristin Scott Thomas, Annette Benning, Jim Broadbent, Nigel Hawthorne, Robert Downey Jr., Jim Carter and John Wood in a film that was well promoted and received, but did not do as well or get the credit it deserved at the time. This new Blu-ray helps correct that, even if only 3,000 copies will be pressed. See it if you are a fan of any of the cast or have not seen enough Shakespeare on film. You won't be sorry.


Extras include another nicely illustrated booklet on the film including informative text and solid Julie Kirgo essay on the film, while the Blu-ray adds an Original Theatrical Trailer and Isolated Music & Sound Effects track.



All three Blu-ray releases have solid picture performance with only minor issues, starting with the 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image on April and Richard, which use their wide scope frames well, but April has some minor rough spots due to the age of the film and use of older CinemaScope lenses, while Richard has some dated effects and minor image flaws at times from an otherwise impressive Super 35mm film shoot which is clearer that April with some good color throughout.


The 1080p 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Manh(a)ttan is a digital shoot styled down to look slightly dated to signify it takes place in the past, but we get many shots where there is slight softness that gets in the way of detail and legibility of some text. Otherwise, the presentation is consistent to what is being attempted and very watchable.


The anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 image Collins is the poor performer here, but also nicely shot and stylized throughout, so the lower standard definition of the DVD is the main culprit, as a Blu-ray would surely be able to more than compete with the other releases on the list.


As for sound, all three Blu-rays offer DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mixes that may be too laid back for some as is the case on April and Manhattan, or bombastic (maybe too much for some, but not for me, even if it can be slightly edgy) on Richard. Despite some minor reservations, Richard is easily the sonic winner here and its punch really helps.


That leaves the lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on Collins, showing some life, but really needing a lossless 5.1 mix on Blu-ray to bring out the good sound mixing and design on the film. This is passable, but by no means a representation of what the film really sounds like.



To order April Love and Richard III limited edition Blu-rays, buy them while supplies last among other great exclusives, at this link:


www.screenarchives.com


and to order the Michael Collins Warner Archive DVD, go to this link for them and many more great web-exclusive releases at:


http://www.warnerarchive.com/



- Nicholas Sheffo


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