Kino
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm
Re: Kino
Who can say-- their "collections" can sometimes be little more than a disc w two films on it, a la the Dwain Esper Collection, w Maniac & Narcotic on it.
Just caught an odd thing on their site-- they are bringing out a DVD edition of Lang's The Spiders (Die Spinnen), with the tagline "For The First Time on DVD!" in the emailer they send out. Surely they must know that Shepard/Image put out on DVD in the late 90's/early 00's what Kino themselves had put out on VHS, which was Film Preservation Associates' reconstruction of the 35 print that Shepard retrieved from the Czech repub, with the help of the then-still alive Lang sitting in front of a viewer and rolling the worn yet highly watchable print. "For the first time on Kino DVD!" would be more accurate, gentlemen.
What's interesting is the difference in runtimes-- this is apparently a new "Restored Authorized edition," coming from FWMS. The old Image- Kino ran 137 total, and the new over 170 minutes. So I wonder if new material was discovered, or they just slowed the framerate to a more realistic pacing.
I quite like Die Spinnen. In it you can see so many of the core obsessions that would pop up through the rest of the man's career, all tightly packed into this very early project which-- in it's far-flung exotic lands, and conquering male hero, and generally pulpy material en toto-- bears resemblance to INDIAN TOMB as well. False realities being peeled away in layers, secret powers pulling strings, train rides to intrigue, subterranean worlds of mystery, hidden offices revealed beneath floors and behind walls, white-haired old men consulted for answers to exotic mysteries, flat out ( what would later be of the phildickian stripe) paranoia, one could go on and on.
Just caught an odd thing on their site-- they are bringing out a DVD edition of Lang's The Spiders (Die Spinnen), with the tagline "For The First Time on DVD!" in the emailer they send out. Surely they must know that Shepard/Image put out on DVD in the late 90's/early 00's what Kino themselves had put out on VHS, which was Film Preservation Associates' reconstruction of the 35 print that Shepard retrieved from the Czech repub, with the help of the then-still alive Lang sitting in front of a viewer and rolling the worn yet highly watchable print. "For the first time on Kino DVD!" would be more accurate, gentlemen.
What's interesting is the difference in runtimes-- this is apparently a new "Restored Authorized edition," coming from FWMS. The old Image- Kino ran 137 total, and the new over 170 minutes. So I wonder if new material was discovered, or they just slowed the framerate to a more realistic pacing.
I quite like Die Spinnen. In it you can see so many of the core obsessions that would pop up through the rest of the man's career, all tightly packed into this very early project which-- in it's far-flung exotic lands, and conquering male hero, and generally pulpy material en toto-- bears resemblance to INDIAN TOMB as well. False realities being peeled away in layers, secret powers pulling strings, train rides to intrigue, subterranean worlds of mystery, hidden offices revealed beneath floors and behind walls, white-haired old men consulted for answers to exotic mysteries, flat out ( what would later be of the phildickian stripe) paranoia, one could go on and on.
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Jonathan S
- Joined: Sat Jun 07, 2008 7:31 am
- Location: Somerset, England
Re: Kino
Re: Die Spinnen:
According to Ben Model (who has done the new score) on Nitrateville:HerrSchreck wrote:What's interesting is the difference in runtimes-- this is apparently a new "Restored Authorized edition," coming from FWMS. The old Image- Kino ran 137 total, and the new over 170 minutes. So I wonder if new material was discovered, or they just slowed the framerate to a more realistic pacing.
Ben Model wrote:Newly transferred from a tinted 35mm print from a foreign archive. Difference in running time between this and the 2002 version is because of transfer speed, although there are a few minutes here and there of add'l footage. Also, the tinting scheme is almost completely different from the the Image DVD.
- Tribe
- The Bastard Spawn of Hank Williams
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 11:59 pm
- Location: Toledo, Ohio
- Contact:
Re: Kino
I've always been curious about Die Spinnen, Shrek. If you recommend it, I'll certainly pick it up. I love early Lang, and this is one of the few I've never seen. Is this as exciting as say, Spione or Woman In the Moon? Or instead is it more a taste of things that Lang would rehash to better advantage later?HerrSchreck wrote: I quite like Die Spinnen. In it you can see so many of the core obsessions that would pop up through the rest of the man's career, all tightly packed into this very early project which-- in it's far-flung exotic lands, and conquering male hero, and generally pulpy material en toto-- bears resemblance to INDIAN TOMB as well. False realities being peeled away in layers, secret powers pulling strings, train rides to intrigue, subterranean worlds of mystery, hidden offices revealed beneath floors and behind walls, white-haired old men consulted for answers to exotic mysteries, flat out ( what would later be of the phildickian stripe) paranoia, one could go on and on.
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm
Re: Kino
I'm not a fan of Woman in the Moon so take this questionably to your tastes, but I think that it's broad aspects are different enough from what Lang would later do (aside from maybe the Indian films) that if you're interested in his legitimizing pulp at all you'll get a new enough kick out of it. I wouldn't put it with his best works, but it's still very good.
- neilist
- Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2011 9:09 am
- Location: Cambridge, UK
Re: Kino
I think I'd recommend 'Die Spinnen' more to someone who enjoys the work of a director such as Feuillade, rather than of Lang's films of a few years later, but it should still be very much on the radar for a fan of early Lang.
Incidentally, if this is from a new transfer from FWMS, I'm curious as to whether the transfer was done in HD and the possibility of a blu-ray release in the future?
Incidentally, if this is from a new transfer from FWMS, I'm curious as to whether the transfer was done in HD and the possibility of a blu-ray release in the future?
- eerik
- Joined: Sun Mar 22, 2009 8:53 pm
- Location: Estonia
Re: Kino
May 2012 schedule announced:
From KINO CLASSICS:
5/1 - DAVID O. SELZNICK COLLECTION: BIRD OF PARADISE (1932, King Vidor, Blu-ray & DVD)
5/8 - GANJA & HESS: REMASTERED EDITION (1973, Bill Gunn, Blu-ray & DVD)
From REDEMPTION:
5/15 - THE RAPE OF THE VAMPIRE (1968, Jean Rollin, Blu-ray & DVD)
5/15 - REQUIEM FOR A VAMPIRE (1973, Jean Rollin, Blu-ray & DVD)
5/15 - DEMONIACS (1974, Jean Rollin, Blu-ray & DVD)
And from our friends at THE FOUND FOOTAGE FESTIVAL:
5/29 - THE FOUND FOOTAGE FESTIVAL: VOL. 5 (DVD only)
From KINO CLASSICS:
5/1 - DAVID O. SELZNICK COLLECTION: BIRD OF PARADISE (1932, King Vidor, Blu-ray & DVD)
5/8 - GANJA & HESS: REMASTERED EDITION (1973, Bill Gunn, Blu-ray & DVD)
From REDEMPTION:
5/15 - THE RAPE OF THE VAMPIRE (1968, Jean Rollin, Blu-ray & DVD)
5/15 - REQUIEM FOR A VAMPIRE (1973, Jean Rollin, Blu-ray & DVD)
5/15 - DEMONIACS (1974, Jean Rollin, Blu-ray & DVD)
And from our friends at THE FOUND FOOTAGE FESTIVAL:
5/29 - THE FOUND FOOTAGE FESTIVAL: VOL. 5 (DVD only)
- matrixschmatrix
- Joined: Wed May 26, 2010 3:26 am
Re: Kino
Oh, wow, Ganja & Hess. I hope Kalat's All Day Entertainment got some money out of that license, I would never have heard of that movie if not for him.
- Jean-Luc Garbo
- Joined: Thu Dec 09, 2004 5:55 am
- Contact:
Re: Kino
Thank god Ganja & Hess will be back in print! Everyone buy a copy.
- SpiderBaby
- Joined: Wed Dec 15, 2010 10:34 pm
- dwk
- Joined: Sat Jun 12, 2010 10:10 pm
Re: Kino
The Early Films of Stanley Kubrick Blu-ray coming this fall. The release will include the following films: Day of the Fight, The Flying Padre, Fear and Desire, and The Seafarers.
- Roger Ryan
- Joined: Wed Apr 28, 2010 4:04 pm
- Location: A Midland town spread and darkened into a city
Re: Kino
Yeah, that's the way to do it. Having DAY OF THE FIGHT and THE FLYING PADRE on there will make it easier for me to stomach sitting through THE SEAFARERS and FEAR AND DESIRE againdwk wrote:The Early Films of Stanley Kubrick Blu-ray coming this fall. The release will include the following films: Day of the Fight, The Flying Padre, Fear and Desire, and The Seafarers.
- Roger Ryan
- Joined: Wed Apr 28, 2010 4:04 pm
- Location: A Midland town spread and darkened into a city
Re: Kino
But if I've got the disc (and I own every other Kubrick film on Blu-ray), I'm going to have to watch it all at least once. On an optimistic note, maybe my third time through FEAR AND DESIRE will really open my eyes to what this film has to offer!aox wrote:or you could just not watch those two altogether.