Not that I know of. Go for the French set, if you have the money. If you know German or French, even better, though I don't think that you need to know German to follow Moses und Aron.life_boy wrote:Did Moses und Aron ever receive the New Yorker DVD release that was rumored at one point in time (seems like a year ago, now)?
New Yorker
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- What A Disgrace
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I'm not sure if anyone is aware, but.HerrSchreck wrote:Although the transfer is slightly cropped versus the sublime AEye Complete Vigo, I like the subs in the NYer L'Atalante better. They capture the humor, and the AE leaves some spots untranslated that the NYer does not. And it has its own perfectly charming documentary by Eisenschitz and co that is not on the AE (but at all costs get the AE for, at very least, all the rest of the Vigo canon!)
New Yorker's L'Atalante is now OOP, and selling fairly high. And good as the subs are, I need money.
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CELINE AND JULIE GO BOATING later this year
At the bottom of this page Rosenbaum states:
No mention of interviewing Rivette at all.Jackie Raynal taped my interview in Paris with screenwriter Eduardo de Gregorio for New Yorker Video’s upcoming DVD release of CELINE AND JULIE GO BOATING, to be released later this year.
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- justeleblanc
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Really? I think the only other Rivette title waiting in their queue is L'Amour fou, and it's been disputed somewhere here on this forum that they may not still own that title. Paris Belongs to Us is Janus, The Nun is Lionsgate (those are definite) and it's been rumored that Kino is working on Spectre. That leaves the full Out 1, Duelle, Noroit, and Merry-Go-Round (of the 60s and 70s works) and I don't believe New Yorker owns these.
But I agree that I hope the New Yorker release of Celine and Julie leads to more Rivette. Similarly, I hope Criterion's upcoming Rivette title(s) will help as well. I'm guessing he's off the radar for a lot of people, and both releases will cause cinephiles with money to ask "Who is Jacques Rivette?"
On a side note, would anyone else like to see Project X work on Rivette now that their Watkins work is nearly complete?
But I agree that I hope the New Yorker release of Celine and Julie leads to more Rivette. Similarly, I hope Criterion's upcoming Rivette title(s) will help as well. I'm guessing he's off the radar for a lot of people, and both releases will cause cinephiles with money to ask "Who is Jacques Rivette?"
On a side note, would anyone else like to see Project X work on Rivette now that their Watkins work is nearly complete?
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ptmd
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They do not. The international rights are with Tamasa in France; nobody owns the rights in North America right now and it's consequently very hard to imagine this coming to DVD in the US in the foreseeable future unless somebody like Criterion got involved (and they don't seem particularly interested in doing that). MoC could potentially try to license this in the UK, but there may be other issues in play there.I think the only other Rivette title waiting in their queue is L'Amour fou, and it's been disputed somewhere here on this forum that they may not still own that title.
- justeleblanc
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Yes but isn't their work British cinema focused? Perhaps Oliver Groom needs to be sent an email or two. I'll give him my money for a L'Amour Fou/Out 1 DVD before it comes out.justeleblanc wrote:On a side note, would anyone else like to see Project X work on Rivette now that their Watkins work is nearly complete?
- justeleblanc
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- justeleblanc
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I don't see any Rivette listed on their site, but I do see that they hold the rights to almost all of Eustache's oeuvre.
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I recall pointing out that Weekend, Fireworks, and numerous other NYer titles by major directors went OOP months ago, and said the more or less the same thing.justeleblanc wrote:Looks OOP to me.
It would also be nice to know what their plan is with much of their catalog. They really need to start licensing out their titles to companies willing to take care of their films if they plan on having any sort of business model on home video.
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ptmd
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 5:12 pm
Are you referring to Out 1: Spectre? New Yorker controlled hundreds of titles back in the 1970s (when their focus was on distributing international art cinema rather than contemporary documentaries) that they no longer have the rights to, so while the prints may still have the old labels, that has no bearing on future releases/screenings. The only Rivette titles New Yorker controls now are La Belle Noiseuse, Divertimento, and Celine and Julie. They also have non-theatrical rights for Va Savoir, but that's because of a special arrangement with Sony.