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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Mystery > WWII > Holocaust > Murder > Resistance > Documentary > Relationships > French > Revenge > Sl > Julia (1977/Fox/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray)/Night Will Fall (2014/Warner Archive DVD)/Paris Belongs To Us (1961/Criterion Blu-ray)/Remember (2015/Lionsgate Blu-ray)/Roots: The Complete Orig

Julia (1977/Fox/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray)/Night Will Fall (2014/Warner Archive DVD)/Paris Belongs To Us (1961/Criterion Blu-ray)/Remember (2015/Lionsgate Blu-ray)/Roots: The Complete Original Series (1977 TV Mini-Series/Warner Blu-ray Set)



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



PLEASE NOTE: The Julia Blu-ray is now only available from our friends at Twilight Time, is limited to only 3,000 copies and can be ordered while supplies last, while the Night Will Fall DVD is now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner Archive series. All can be ordered from the links below.



Here are a new set of releases dealing with serious issues of genocide, oppression, murder and terror you should absolutely be aware of and see...



Fred Zinneman's Julia (1977) is the fictionalized-but-palpable tale from a book by Lilian Hellman on how Hellman (played terrifically by Jane Fonda as an adult here; we get flashbacks) is staying with her good friend Dashiell Hammett (Jason Robards) trying to write a great play, when she finds out her childhood friend (aka the title character, played as an adult by Vanessa Redgrave) is in trouble in Europe as the darkness of WWII and Hitler start to set in. Despite being Jewish, Hellman agrees to travel to Europe via Germany to deliver money to help the resistance against the Axis Powers and their blatant invasion of country after country, something Julia is more involved with than Lilian first realizes.


A contact (Maximilian Schell) starts the ball rolling and the film that started smart gets more interesting and suspenseful all the way. I had not seen the film in a while, but it was always interesting and now, despite the downside that it is fiction, holds up very well and has aged very, very well. Add the great acting, fine supporting cast and solid locales to the smart screenplay and here's yet another gem worthy of rediscovery that Twilight Time has delivered a very special limited edition of. This ones definitely worth going out of your way for!



Andre Singer's Night Will Fall (2014) is a documentary about how to capture the ugliest side of the genocide of the Holocaust without anyone forgetting. Two films resulted, one of which was made by Alfred Hitchcock and was never released due to the needs of the Cold War, but had it footage used in endless other works after John Ford came up with his own documentary while the Soviets came up with theirs. Before all that however, was dealing with the ugly, horrific shock of the torture and murder, its extent and the unprecedented ways the Nazis went out to get rid of everyone they wanted to disappear forever, especially aimed at world Jewry.


Running a too-short 113 minutes, it is an amazing look at the artists and brave people who had to deal with how ugly this nightmare was, then had to keep looking at it by making a record of it and that many, many untold stories of this awful period remain. Needless to say Hitchcock's ideas and calls on all of it were vital, amazing and what I should have expected from one of the greatest filmmakers ever. Put this down on your list as a must see!!!



Jacques Rivette's Paris Belongs To Us (1961) may not seem immediately related to the rest of the works here, but its semi-French New Wave film at a longish 141 minutes about the empty lives of the would-be friends who may not be part of then-current Paris as much as they think or should be. Despite modernism and a modernist rebuilding of Europe after WWII, so much emptiness remained and the various cinematic movements worldwide after the war reflect that. The French New Wave usually sees this as a new rebirth and time for freedom, but this film has emptiness worthy of some Italian Neo-Realist films and Antonioni's original monochrome trilogy on that subject (starting with L'avventura), yet this film is not always involving and intriguing, the characters a mixed bag and I was not a fan of it when I first saw it years ago. Now, nothing much has changed. Even with this fine restoration, it is the same film for me, though worth a look just the same. Criterion has done a fine job fixing it up.



Atom Egoyan's Remember (2015) is a revenge tale that begins in an 'old folks home' with a very ill Martin Landau getting a relatively more mobile Christopher Plummer to find a now-old Nazi who tortured and killed at Auschwitz and bring him to justice... or just kill him. Needless to say there are a few darkly humorous moments, but the film tries to be serious when it needs to be in this darkest and oddest of road trip films. However, I was not convinced by the conclusion, any twists or some scenes that come across as Falling Down-llte, yet the actors are good including turns by Henry Cznery, Bruno Ganz and Jurgen Prochnow. Not awful, but another mixed bag, albeit an ambitious one, from Egoyan.



Roots: The Complete Original Series is the original 1977 TV Mini-Series now on Blu-ray, the first major classic Mini-Series to hit high definition, based on the late Alex Haley's huge-selling book dubbed non-fiction, but that did (had to?) take liberties to tell the story of all his descendants from Kunte Kinte (the stunning acting debut of the ever underrated LeVar Burton) to a whole family tree barely surviving the old slave trade in the United States. ABC-TV (with producer David L. Wolper) were taking advantage of the commercial and critical smash that Rich Man, Poor Man had been for the network, but ABC was not certain it would work, be watched or be liked. Instead of showing episodes every few nights or weekly, they scheduled each show back to back to back to back in case it failed. Instead, it set more ratings records and was a massive watershed of of critical and commercial success that kept the network #1 for the first time ever.


Looking back on it now, some things might not hold up as well as others, while network standards stopped the program from being as violent as things really would have been. However, the amazing teleplay is able to communicate the torture, imprisonment, hate, evil, anger, oppression and perpetual terror the U.S. slave business and culture entailed (more graphically and honestly than the recent remake for that matter) in a way only outdone a few years ago by Spielberg's Amistad and had been more graphic a few years ago in the underrated Mandingo. Yet, the heart and soul of the piece (now a time capsule of a better time in some ways) also communicates good people in Africa who should have just been left alone and the Africans who sold out and betrayed other Africans to get a little wealth from colonialists and exploiters for the U.S., et al. The scene when Kinte is chained after being chased by several other black men speaks volumes of what was lost and like the best parts of the mini-series, hit a nerve at the time that was profoundly honest and grown up. Too bad the 1980s wanted to forget all this (Ronald Reagan publicly put down the series just before becoming the next U.S. President).


But the cleverness of the series does not end there. The way the family tree is constructed is very thorough, the wide-ranging cast (including having actors known for playing happy, friendly TV dads in various dramas and sitcoms be slave owners) is terrific throughout, with turns by Ben Vereen, John Amos, Georg Stanford Brown, Scatman Crothers, Leslie Uggams, Raymond St. Jacques, Louis Gossett Jr., Lynne Moody, Moses Gunn, Maya Angelou, Ji-Tu Cumbuka, Lawrence Hilton Jacobs, Cicely Tyson, Madge Sinclair and an unfortunate early turn by O.J. Simpson. Note the sequel series covers the rest of the book, so some actors were not here. Supporting them are Ian McShane, Sandy Duncan, Ed Asner, Gary Collins, Chuck Connors, Ralph Waite, Lloyd Bridges, MacDonald Carey, Brad Davis, Linda Day George, George Hamilton, Carolyn Jones, Doug McClure, John Schuck, Robert Reed and so many others in separated segments that somehow cohere (this is the real reason the show works) in a way that makes it feel like a long feature film and not just episodic segments. Themes and spirit combine to deliver a synthesis of impact, for a sometimes very hard to watch (and rewatch) program. But it is the basic truth of an ugly past laid bare and that is the reason it holds up today. It got it all right from beginning to end. If you've never seen it, it is a must-see. If you've only seen the remake or not this original in a long time, one revisit is a great idea!



The 1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image on Julia was lensed by the great Director of Photography Douglas Slocombe, B.S.C., and is an amazing shoot, makes for an amazing-looking film often and this fine transfer rarely shows its age. You also get a few stunning demo shots and that makes watching the film all the more compelling.


The anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 image on Night is the only DVD here and has the expected rough footage considering the age of much of it, but this looks really good for the format and is a fine transfer under that circumstance.


The 1080p 1.66 X 1 black & white digital High Definition image transfer on Paris can show the age of the materials used in spots, but this is far superior a transfer to all previous releases of the film and is a 2K scan from an ARRISCAN from the original camera negative. That makes this one look really good throughout, we get a few demo shots as well and once again, Criterion gives us top rate work.


The 1080p 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Remember can look good, but there's nothing too outstanding about this digital HD shoot otherwise, save it is simply consistent and just fine for what it is.


The 1080p 1.33 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on the various episodes of Roots can subtly show the age of the materials used, and though this is far superior a transfer to all previous releases of the series, it lacks fine detail and depth we have seen on other 35mm-shot TV programs on Blu-ray. I don't know why this is a problem, but this might be a set of slightly older HD masters and the result is a bit disappointing, leading to the poorest of the Blu-ray releases here. Color is consistent and this still looks better overall than the remake series.


As for sound, Remember is the sonic champ as expected with the only DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix on the list, showing Egoyan knows how to handle sound, including subtly as he always has. Nice mix overall, if not always bombastic. Julia and Roots are here with DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) Mono lossless mixes (1.0 on Julia, 2.0 on Roots) and sound pretty good as expected for productions form the 1970s. Paris is over a decade older, but its PCM 2.0 Mono sound comes from a 35mm magnetic soundmaster at 24 bits, so it can more than compete.


That leaves the lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 mix on Night, which still has plenty of vintage monophonic audio that can even be rough, but this sounds good, what could be cleaned up was and this is also well edited, so a fine job for a very important work.


Extras in Julia and Roots include nicely illustrated booklet on the releases, including informative text and another essays on the releases. Julia offers another excellent, underrated essay by the great film scholar Julie Kirgo, while Roots offers a fancy episode guide I wish more TV on Blu-ray releases would try out. Paris has a paper pullout that serves the same function as the other two releases' booklets, but adds tech info on the restoration with its Luc Sante essay on the film and filmmaker.


Julia also adds a feature length audio commentary track by Nick Redman with no less than Jane Fonda that is an excellent listen throughout, plus Original Theatrical Trailer and Isolated Music Score by Georges Delerue with some sound effects. Night adds the Soviet Holocaust film Oswlecim (their spelling of Auschwitz), the U.S. Death Mills documentary on the same and on-camera interview with Professor Rainer Schulze on the British (and Hitchcock's) filming of the liberation in the film. Paris also adds an on camera interview with French New Wave scholar Richard Neupert and Rivette's important to that New Wave 1956 short film Le coup du Berger, including appearances by many figures of that movement.


Remember and Roots also offer Digital HD Ultraviolet Copy for PC, PC portable and other cyber iTunes capable devices, while the Blu-rays add Behind The Scenes/Making Of featurettes (two for Remember (one of which has rare color footage of a camp liberation!), seven for Roots) and Remember adds a feature length audio commentary track by Egoyan, Producer Robert Lantods & Writer Benjamin August.



To order the Julia limited edition Blu-ray, buy it and many other great exclusives while supplies last at these links:


www.screenarchives.com


and


http://www.twilighttimemovies.com/



...and to order the Night Must Fall Warner Archive DVD, go to this link for it and many more great web-exclusive releases at:


https://www.warnerarchive.com/



- Nicholas Sheffo


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