This was banned in the UK, it was one of the so called 'video nasties'zedz wrote:I can gingerly admit to having seen Let Me Die a Woman
It's terrible, although the naked rolling around made me chuckle.
I agree with Gordon. As important as the film is, I think that the 2-3 already available versions are probably enough. Even with part of the proceeds going to the Holocaust memorial, I still get a twinge knowing that I'm buying a Nazi-era film (or rather the Nazi-era film). And when one considers what still is not out there, I wonder if we really need a "perfect" copy of Triumph.Gordon McMurphy wrote:The film is one of the great documents of any era in History, though and is visually stunning in places, but shouldn't Synapse be concentrating on new titles?
That's right - there are a few other editions from different companies out there, to boot.dmkb wrote:As important as the film is, I think that the 2-3 already available versions are probably enough. Even with part of the proceeds going to the Holocaust memorial, I still get a twinge knowing that I'm buying a Nazi-era film (or rather the Nazi-era film). And when one considers what still is not out there, I wonder if we really need a "perfect" copy of Triumph.
At least in R1. There are a couple versions in R2.Gordon McMurphy wrote:And still no Olympia on DVD.
I don't see the point in questioning this re-release any more so than a re-release of anything that Criterion or any other company has done to date. And it's just my opinion, but I feel that if this film wasn't based on the content matter that it is (But still as important a film none the less), then all these posts wouldn't exist.Gordon McMurphy wrote:That's right - there are a few other editions from different companies out there, to boot.dmkb wrote:As important as the film is, I think that the 2-3 already available versions are probably enough. Even with part of the proceeds going to the Holocaust memorial, I still get a twinge knowing that I'm buying a Nazi-era film (or rather the Nazi-era film). And when one considers what still is not out there, I wonder if we really need a "perfect" copy of Triumph.
I don't mean to start rumour-mongering or generally being a dickhead, but isn't it a bit weird for a company like Synapse to be releasing this film - let alone a lovingly-restored, hi-def transfer reissue? Most of Synapse's output is of cult horror movies and that new cover for Triumph makes the film look like a fiction film, regardless of it's artistic qualities. It sends a mixed message; the previous cover was, for all its minimalism, much more appropriate.
Obviously this info is a bit out of date, but evidently Synapse is still going forward on these projects. I kind of question the need for an HD version of Lemora though, since I've heard that watching the DVD on an upconvert player makes having a high-def copy unnecessary.COMING TO HD-DVD (Mid 2006)
DOCUMENT OF THE DEAD: RE-MASTERED
Preparing a brand-new HD version from Original Camera Negative! New Extras!
THE IMAGE (aka THE PUNISHMENT OF ANNE) (1976)
Radley Metzger's Erotic Classic Re-Mastered in HD from the Original Camera Negatives in 1080p HD
LEMORA: A CHILD'S TALE OF THE SUPERNATURAL (1974)
One of the most beautiful transfers ever done by Synapse Films will be available on HD-DVD. Mastered in 1080p HD from the original camera negatives.
His first and third movies, Thou Shalt Not Kill...Except (featuring Raimi in an acting role) and Running Time (a black-and-white homage to Alfred Hitchcock's Rope, filmed in one continuous shot and starring Campbell as an unrepentant ex-con), are being rereleased as high definition, deluxe edition two-disc sets, complete with new interviews and Becker's earliest Super 8 movie experiments, by Novi-based Synapse Films.
I think it was Walter Benjamin who said that Communism is the politicization of aesthetics, and fascism is the aestheticization of the political. Anyway, I'm willing to bet Cohen's paraphrasing someone associated with the Frankfurt School.zedz wrote:While we're talking Nazi aesthetics, I'd like to put in a plug for Peter Cohen's brilliant The Architecture of Doom - one of the best pieces of criticism of Riefenstahl and her fellow travellers in any format. Cohen makes a very persuasive case that Nazi ideology was aesthetically driven and that the idealistic drive exhibited by Nazi-endorsed art and architecture is inextricable from the party's genocidal impulse.
I've only just noticed this comment. From memory, Cohen's theory seems almost a reversal of this, in looking at Fascism as more like "the politicization of aesthetics" (i.e. the aesthetics were primary, and much of the political decisions were the reductio ad atrocitam of aesthetic premises).jbeall wrote:I think it was Walter Benjamin who said that Communism is the politicization of aesthetics, and fascism is the aestheticization of the political. Anyway, I'm willing to bet Cohen's paraphrasing someone associated with the Frankfurt School.
I think we're saying the same thing. Under Soviet-style communism, for example, all art had to pass political muster, hence a lot of idiotic "socialist realism". What Benjamin (or Adorno, or one of those guys) meant by "the aestheticization of the political" was exactly what Cohen seems to be arguing, i.e. that the political is derived from premises that can be viewed as aesthetic. I'll see if I can find the quote later this week.zedz wrote:I've only just noticed this comment. From memory, Cohen's theory seems almost a reversal of this, in looking at Fascism as more like "the politicization of aesthetics" (i.e. the aesthetics were primary, and much of the political decisions were the reductio ad atrocitam of aesthetic premises).jbeall wrote:I think it was Walter Benjamin who said that Communism is the politicization of aesthetics, and fascism is the aestheticization of the political. Anyway, I'm willing to bet Cohen's paraphrasing someone associated with the Frankfurt School.