Re: Network DVD
Posted: Fri Nov 21, 2008 4:47 pm
Anyone know for certain whether Ipcress File blu-ray is all-region?
It must be, as it played straight away when I inserted it - if a disc is A, B or C encoded, then I have to enter a 1, 2 or 3 respectively while the player is in stand-by mode. I didn't have to do this for Ipcress. Are certain ITV BDs region-encoded?fdm wrote:Anyone know for certain whether Ipcress File blu-ray is all-region?
Apparently not yet, but I don't want to be owning the first one that is...Person wrote:It must be, as it played straight away when I inserted it - if a disc is A, B or C encoded, then I have to enter a 1, 2 or 3 respectively while the player is in stand-by mode. I didn't have to do this for Ipcress. Are certain ITV BDs region-encoded?fdm wrote:Anyone know for certain whether Ipcress File blu-ray is all-region?
Seems to be the case. Thanks...Person wrote:There's no A, B, C marking anywhere on the cover - I guess that means that Ipcress is region-free.
26th January 2009:
Escape From Sobibor - £12.99 RRP - Alan Arkin, Joanna Pacula and Rutger Hauer star in this Holocaust film. On 14th October 1943, inmates of ‘death camp’ Sobibor, in Eastern Poland, carried out a terrifyingly audacious plan to escape. Those organising the revolt knew that the plan must include every prisoner – leaving no one behind to face reprisals from the SS. This film recounts those events.
Noel Coward’s This Happy Breed (Special Edition) - £14.99 RRP – Digitally remastered 2-disc set of what was David Lean’s first official credit as a director. The film adaptation from Noel Coward’s hit stage play would be one of several successful collaborations between Lean and Coward.
Features include:
* Brand new-digital restoration
* Original theatrical trailer
* Re-release trailer
* Restoration comparison featurette
* Extensive South Bank Show feature on David Lean
* Commemorative booklet by noted British film historian David Rolinson
* Extensive stills gallery, including behind the scenes images
* Original Pressbook and material in PDF format
Room at the Top (Special Edition) - £14.99 RRP - Directed by Jack Clayton (The Great Gatsby), Room at the Top chronicles the life of an ambitious young working-class man called Joe Lampton (Laurence Harvey) who moves into the Yorkshire town Warnley. There he pursues Susan (Heather Sears), against the wishes of her father, a powerful local industrialist. But Joe then falls in love with Alice (Simone Signoret), an older unhappily married French woman. Inevitably, their intense affair does not remain a secret and when Susan becomes pregnant, Joe is forced to choose between the two women – and the opposing worlds they represent.
Features include:
* Brand new transfer from the original 35mm film elements (1.66:1 Widescreen)
* Audio commentary with and commemorative booklet by noted film historian and writer Neil Sinyard
* Image Gallery
* Jack Clayton's press cuttings scrapbook (PDF)
West End Jungle - £16.99 RRP - Released through Strike Force Entertainment and Network, West End Jungle offers a comprehensive insight into the history and once referred to, ‘seedy reality’ of the sex industry of the early sixties in Soho. The film was banned in 1961 but is now coming to DVD.
Features include:
* 4:3, English Mono
* Newsreel: Clubs Galore! (Soho 1958)
* Newsreel: Sir John Wolfenden on Prostitution and the Street Offences Act 1959
* Director Arnold Miller in Conversation
* Viewing Notes Booklet
Who Killed Teddy Bear - £14.99 RRP - Refused certification on its original theatrical release in 1965 (and never subsequently seen anywhere in the UK) due to its sleazy subject matter, this psychological crime thriller stars Sal Mineo, Juliet Prowse, Jan Murray and Elaine Stritch.
Extras include:
* Court Martial: The House Where He Lived - an episode of the 1960s WWII legal drama guest-starring Sal Mineo and Anthony Quayle
* LSD: Insight or Insanity - a short documentary from 1967 aimed at teenagers about the dangers of LSD with narration by Sal Mineo
* Stills gallery for Who Killed Teddy Bear and Court Martial
* PDF of the original publicity and promotion brochure
* Trailer
23rd February 2009
Carnival of Souls - £14.99 RRP - This horror directed by Herk Harvey and first released in 1962 comes to DVD with the following features:
* Audio commentary with horror experts Kim Newman and Stephen Jones
* Booklet written by Kim Newman
The Ghoul (Special Edition) - £14.99 RRP - Boris Karloff stars in this “horror classic” that was thought lost for many years until a subtitled – but of poor quality – print surfaced in Prague. Many years later a copy of the uncut British print was found, and it is this version which has undergone extensive digital restoration for this release. Features include:
* Audio commentary with horror critics Stephen Jones and Kim Newman
* Commemorative booklet written by Stephen Jones
Just finished watching this. Mineo is wonderfully creepy. And what dance moves! The transfer is ragged in places, but certainly watchable. There are some great shots of vintage Times Square, including a porn shop that sells Naked Lunch and Tropic of Cancer alongside the skin mags. Network included a full little extra, narrated by Mineo, entitled LSD: Insight or Insanity? - one of those late 60's "LSD will make you jump off of a cliff!" shorts used to scare impressionable teenagers.Telstar wrote:Network appears to be taking the gloves off and will be releasing WHO KILLED TEDDY BEAR next month.
Sal Mineo's finest moment.
Having never seen the films in full (only extracts here and there) I am really intrigued by the films but am not sure whether to go ahead and buy them, they don't strike me as films I could watch more than once, am I wrong? I could always rent them but have no idea as to whether Network's DVDs appear regularly at LoveFilm.networkdvd.net wrote:This groundbreaking DVD release has been made with the co-operation of the Up production team and features an in-depth interview with Michael Apted on his time at Granada, as well as commentaries with producer Claire Lewis, film editor Kim Horton and cameraman George Jesse Turner.
It's a fantastic project and you'll probably want to watch some of the later ones more than once. The 'problem' of the series (but it's really intrinsic to the nature of the project) is that each installment has to sum up what's gone before and be self-contained, so certain clips, particularly from the earliest installments, where there's less to choose from, are repeated every time. I find that quite effective, because it ingrains the characters, but it can be offputting if you're watching the entire series as a kind of marathon.FSimeoni wrote:Having never seen the films in full (only extracts here and there) I am really intrigued by the films but am not sure whether to go ahead and buy them, they don't strike me as films I could watch more than once, am I wrong? I could always rent them but have no idea as to whether Network's DVDs appear regularly at LoveFilm.
TIVOLI wrote:Has anyone seen the cheapo edition of One-Eyed Jacks that Network released last month? I believe that R1 only has this in PD presumably horrible transfers, so I am curious to know about this release and its print quality.

I'm sorry to say that this title has not been remastered and there are no special features.
They're coming from ITV DVD (formerly Granada) who do license material to Network, but not on this occasion.tojoed wrote:Olivier's Hamlet and Henry V, and Hitchcock's 39 Steps are being released on BluRay from Granada ventures (who I think are Network) on October 12th.