380 The Naked City
- kinjitsu
- Joined: Sat Feb 12, 2005 1:39 pm
- Location: Uffa!
380 The Naked City
The Naked City
"There are eight million stories in the Naked City," as the narrator immortally states at the close of this breathtakingly vivid film—and this is one of them. Master noir craftsman Jules Dassin and newspaperman-cum-producer Mark Hellinger's dazzling police procedural, The Naked City, was shot entirely on location in New York. Influenced as much by Italian neorealism as it is by American crime fiction, this double Academy Award winner remains a benchmark for naturalism in noir, living and breathing in the promises and perils of the Big Apple, from its lowest depths to its highest skyscrapers.
SPECIAL FEATURES
• On the Blu-ray: New 4K digital restoration by TLEFilms FIlm Restoration & Preservation Services, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
• On the DVD: Restored high-definition digital transfer
• Audio commentary from 1996 featuring screenwriter Malvin Wald
• Interview from 2006 with film scholar Dana Polan
• Interview from 2006 with author James Sanders (Celluloid Skyline) on the film's New York locations
• Footage of director Jules Dassin from a 2004 appearance at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
• Stills gallery
• English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
• PLUS: An essay by author and critic Luc Sante and production notes from producer Mark Hellinger to Dassin
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
"There are eight million stories in the Naked City," as the narrator immortally states at the close of this breathtakingly vivid film—and this is one of them. Master noir craftsman Jules Dassin and newspaperman-cum-producer Mark Hellinger's dazzling police procedural, The Naked City, was shot entirely on location in New York. Influenced as much by Italian neorealism as it is by American crime fiction, this double Academy Award winner remains a benchmark for naturalism in noir, living and breathing in the promises and perils of the Big Apple, from its lowest depths to its highest skyscrapers.
SPECIAL FEATURES
• On the Blu-ray: New 4K digital restoration by TLEFilms FIlm Restoration & Preservation Services, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
• On the DVD: Restored high-definition digital transfer
• Audio commentary from 1996 featuring screenwriter Malvin Wald
• Interview from 2006 with film scholar Dana Polan
• Interview from 2006 with author James Sanders (Celluloid Skyline) on the film's New York locations
• Footage of director Jules Dassin from a 2004 appearance at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
• Stills gallery
• English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
• PLUS: An essay by author and critic Luc Sante and production notes from producer Mark Hellinger to Dassin
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
Feature currently disabled
Last edited by kinjitsu on Thu Feb 15, 2007 3:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Derek Estes
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:00 pm
- Location: Portland Oregon
- Jeff
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 9:49 pm
- Location: Denver, CO
- Derek Estes
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:00 pm
- Location: Portland Oregon
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- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 2:27 pm
- Location: London, UK
The commentary appears to be ported from the laserdisc that also had a second commentary by actor Don Taylor. If the Taylor track wasn't that great, as that review seems to indicate, it would have been nice to present excerpts as an audio interview, but never mind - what's there certainly looks comprehensive enough.
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 11:46 am
Really wish they could track down some of the "lost footage" of this film-- which disappointed Dassin so much upon it's excising by the studio-- which in brief sympathetically told many of the "lesser stories" to be seen all around the city's bleak alleys and byways. (Like the voices of the dj, building porters, in the opening montage... just a bit seedier.)
Either way, good to have something beyond the old Image/Kino transfer on this (which actually wasn't all that bad tell the truth).
We'll be hearing a lot about Houston Street, Rivington Street, Norfolk Street.. the old Bank territory. (Plus of course uptown, midtown, Queens). Williamsburg Bridge.
Cheers to my old friend mister MacGillicutty.
Either way, good to have something beyond the old Image/Kino transfer on this (which actually wasn't all that bad tell the truth).
We'll be hearing a lot about Houston Street, Rivington Street, Norfolk Street.. the old Bank territory. (Plus of course uptown, midtown, Queens). Williamsburg Bridge.
Cheers to my old friend mister MacGillicutty.
- Antoine Doinel
- Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 1:22 pm
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Contact:
- jbeall
- Joined: Sat Aug 12, 2006 9:22 am
- Location: Atlanta-ish
Maybe I'm not being critical enough, but I think criterion's always on the ball. Even when the releases for a particular month underwhelm initially, I get them on netflix and am almost always pleasantly surprised, if not blown away. They release the occasional lemon from time to time, but they're consistently impressive in their releases.soma wrote:The cover design is CLASS. And the collection could use some fresh Dassin! Criterion is off to a great start for '07 I must say.
Judging from the enthusiasm I've seen on the criterion boards about this film, I may buy it sight unseen.
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- Joined: Sat Nov 05, 2005 2:08 am
The Naked City is in some ways a standard police procedural. A young woman is killed, and the department swings into action, led by the almost-but-not-quite-twee Barry Fitzgerald. Some twists and turns follow.
...What this synopsis misses, however, is the majestic and innovative cinematography, Dassin's unique and biting humor, and a quite moving piece of narration.
Some (Pauline Kael, among others,) call it unremarkable save for the camerawork. (Which still, I'd say, demands a viewing.)
Others (such as myself) would call it an utter and unqualified success, one of the essential noirs of the '40s.
...What this synopsis misses, however, is the majestic and innovative cinematography, Dassin's unique and biting humor, and a quite moving piece of narration.
Some (Pauline Kael, among others,) call it unremarkable save for the camerawork. (Which still, I'd say, demands a viewing.)
Others (such as myself) would call it an utter and unqualified success, one of the essential noirs of the '40s.
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- Joined: Fri Nov 26, 2004 4:38 pm
movie-vaultjt wrote:Can anyone give a short synopsis/ review?
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 11:46 am
What the hell is up with this rounded corner stuff popping up as a complaint now in his reviews? Is disc reviewing that uneventful that you need to erect straw men of this size?
Chalk another one up for the Damned If You Do & Don't Dept.
On one hand we hit Pictureboxing and cropping, then on the other hand we're now smacking the discmakers in the head for showing the edges of the frame thus proving that nothing's been cropped or overscanned. This is turning into a Comedy of the Very Serious TechDweebs!The comparison is fairly cut-and-dried - the, now out-of-print, Image Entertainment DVD is interlaced (see image below), shows frequent rounded corners and is very dark with highly visible damage marks (so dark that some background details are lost). The Image Ent. does show more information on all 4 sides, but with the rounded corners this is probably not meant to be shown theatrically. The Criterion transfer is again pictureboxed (see our description of 'pictureboxing' in our Kind Hearts and Coronets review).
Chalk another one up for the Damned If You Do & Don't Dept.
- Belmondo
- Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 9:19 am
- Location: Cape Cod
So, can we return to the key issue, which is that Pauline Kael is correct in calling the film "unremarkable, save for the camerawork"? Proponents of this movie are careful to say that it is "more a police procedural than film noir", which is another way of saying that it is tedious, by the numbers, and distinctly uninvolving in its storytelling. Bit players may be great, but we are stuck mostly with the twinkle eyed Barry Fitzgerald who resembles no Irish cop ever seen on the streets of the Naked City. Yes, the location photography of the city in the 1940's is just wonderful, and any reason to see the movie begins and ends there.
- Antoine Doinel
- Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 1:22 pm
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Contact:
The longest time this has been one my best-loved cops-and-criminals films. No, it's a noir in the traditional sense, but it is the absolute standard of what it does offer: phenomenal location shooting, a great story peppered with remarkable characters and an absolutely fantastic sequence that ends the film (I won't go too much into here for those who haven't seen the film).
And "police procedural" isn't just a euphenism for "shoddy noir". If you're a fan of Law & Order and Dragnet, The Naked City is pretty well where it started. And what a helluva start.
And "police procedural" isn't just a euphenism for "shoddy noir". If you're a fan of Law & Order and Dragnet, The Naked City is pretty well where it started. And what a helluva start.
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 11:46 am
Ditto, I love this film and always have. It never gets old, and the little slices of life, the vignettes of the strangers-- dj's, typesetters, cleaning ladies-- are entirely unique even for a non-'procedural'... and actually are remnants of the original lost cut of this film which got far deeper into the sad corners of NYC.
- Antoine Doinel
- Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 1:22 pm
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
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- colinr0380
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 4:30 pm
- Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK
Second DVD Talk review.
- denti alligator
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- Location: "born in heaven, raised in hell"
- Pinakotheca
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