Wasn't Corridors of Blood mentioned as a possibility a good while back?arsonfilms wrote:KARLOFF???
Criterion Newsletter
- Cinephrenic
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 6:58 pm
- Location: Paris, Texas
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm
It might have been caught by filters for 'inappropriate language' like mine was. I'm guessing Mike Leigh was the culprit.Matt wrote:I didn't get the newsletter (probably blacklisted at this point). Could someone post a linky?
As for the Karloff speculation, surely the mention of Lugosi is also significant. He doesn't appear in the Collection at the moment (does he?), so he'd have to be added as well if he's supposed to move over for Karloff.
- justeleblanc
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 10:05 pm
- Location: Connecticut
What a horribly mundane clue. I can't wait. I bet they're releasing another Equinox... a real winner.
I believe -- and I might be wrong -- that Bela Lugosi was supposed to be the lead in Good Burger, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film (ironically called Move Over) the studio went with Karloff.
I believe -- and I might be wrong -- that Bela Lugosi was supposed to be the lead in Good Burger, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film (ironically called Move Over) the studio went with Karloff.
- arsonfilms
- Joined: Wed Nov 02, 2005 4:53 pm
- Location: Philadelphia, PA
Karloff and Lugosi appear together in about a dozen films, so one of those could be a possibility, but Corriders of Blood sounds like the best guess so far...zedz wrote:Surely the mention of Lugosi is also significant. He doesn't appear in the Collection at the moment (does he?), so he'd have to be added as well if he's supposed to move over for Karloff.
- godardslave
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:44 pm
- Location: Confusing and open ended = high art.
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mikeohhh
- Joined: Sat Jul 09, 2005 3:22 am
How about The Black Cat? It's a Universal title, stars both icons and is from a well-respected director, Edgar G. Ulmer. The only thing is that Universal put it out just last year on the Bela Lugosi collection, where it and 4 other titles were crammed onto two discs. I doubt they'd be willing to fork over this film after only having it out on disc for barely over a year (since it'll be 2007 if this film is released by CC).
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mikeohhh
- Joined: Sat Jul 09, 2005 3:22 am
Nah, he was dead for 41 years so they decided to go with Kenan Thompson. Makes sense, he was in the All That skits of course.justeleblanc wrote:What a horribly mundane clue. I can't wait. I bet they're releasing another Equinox... a real winner.
I believe -- and I might be wrong -- that Bela Lugosi was supposed to be the lead in Good Burger, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film (ironically called Move Over) the studio went with Karloff.
- Brian Oblivious
- Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2004 8:38 pm
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- Contact:
This past June the Balboa Theatre in San Francisco hosted what they claimed was the largest Karloff retrospective ever mounted (I have no reason to disbelieve; it was pretty large!)
The full program is viewable here.
Unfortunately I only attended two evenings. (I'm still kicking myself. Apparantly Night World (1932) was incredible.) I saw gorgeous prints of the Body Snatcher (1945) and (unannounced on the program) the entire English-dubbed version of Black Sabbath (1963), and good ones of the Lost Patrol (1934) and the Mask of Fu Manchu (1932). The Walking Dead (1936) was sourced from an old LaserDisc because the print had deteriorated so badly.
The full program is viewable here.
Unfortunately I only attended two evenings. (I'm still kicking myself. Apparantly Night World (1932) was incredible.) I saw gorgeous prints of the Body Snatcher (1945) and (unannounced on the program) the entire English-dubbed version of Black Sabbath (1963), and good ones of the Lost Patrol (1934) and the Mask of Fu Manchu (1932). The Walking Dead (1936) was sourced from an old LaserDisc because the print had deteriorated so badly.
- justeleblanc
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 10:05 pm
- Location: Connecticut
Right right... Kenan Thompson (I can never remember his name!) from All That: Fear Eats the Soul.mikeohhh wrote:Nah, he was dead for 41 years so they decided to go with Kenan Thompson. Makes sense, he was in the All That skits of course.justeleblanc wrote:What a horribly mundane clue. I can't wait. I bet they're releasing another Equinox... a real winner.
I believe -- and I might be wrong -- that Bela Lugosi was supposed to be the lead in Good Burger, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film (ironically called Move Over) the studio went with Karloff.
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Mysterypez
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 9:12 pm
- Jeff
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 1:49 am
- Location: Denver, CO
I'm sure that this is an allusion to the Richard Gordon boxed set that was first mentioned over a year ago. Clearly, Criterion has decided to bag the Eclipse thing and will be releasing these themselves.
Let the pointless bitching, lists of more "worthy" titles, and ridiculous calls for a boycott begin!
Let the pointless bitching, lists of more "worthy" titles, and ridiculous calls for a boycott begin!
- blindside8zao
- Joined: Wed Apr 06, 2005 8:31 pm
- Location: Greensboro, NC
- luxetnox
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 12:07 am
- godardslave
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:44 pm
- Location: Confusing and open ended = high art.
no i think you have it perfectly, explains both the raven and the room references.luxetnox wrote:The Raven (starring Karloff and Lugosi) was released in 1935. In the same year Karloff performed in The Black Room (a Columbia release not currently on dvd) filling the roles of both main parts (twin brothers). Maybe that is carrying the deconstruction too far ...
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Cinesimilitude
- Joined: Tue Jul 09, 2013 4:43 am
- Brian Oblivious
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Except that the Black Room is already slated to be released in a Sony/Columbia set this October.
- reaky
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 12:53 pm
- Location: Cambridge, England
I can only think that this refers to last year's Universal "Lugosi Collection" DVD, in which four of the five films included (one of which was THE RAVEN) on a notoriously dodgy DVD-18 were actually Karloff-Lugosi co-starrers.
The dreamer in me would like to think that this is Criterion redressing the balance with an accurately-billed KARLOFF-LUGOSI set (hence, "move over Lugosi") of THE BLACK CAT, THE RAVEN and THE INVISIBLE RAY, decked out with commentaries, docos, All That Heaven Allows. There is of course a Criterion-Universal relationship, but I wonder about the commercial viability of such a swift rerelease.
The dreamer in me would like to think that this is Criterion redressing the balance with an accurately-billed KARLOFF-LUGOSI set (hence, "move over Lugosi") of THE BLACK CAT, THE RAVEN and THE INVISIBLE RAY, decked out with commentaries, docos, All That Heaven Allows. There is of course a Criterion-Universal relationship, but I wonder about the commercial viability of such a swift rerelease.
- dadaistnun
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:31 pm
- Le Samouraï
- Joined: Mon May 08, 2006 10:51 am
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