No, qué va, puf...Cita:
Iniciado por lurio
Ya me gustaría...
Versión para imprimir
No, qué va, puf...Cita:
Iniciado por lurio
Ya me gustaría...
No me suena Law and order, ¿podríais da más señas?: director, intérpretes... :?
Está basada en una novela de William R. Burnett, el autor de "La jungla de asfalto", "El pequeño César" y otros clásicos de la novela negra.
El director era un Edward L. Cahn en sus inicios; este director luego se haría famoso por sus pelis de ciencia-ficción en los 50. En el guión participó John Huston.
Se centra en la biografía de Wyatt Earp y el duelo de O.K. Corral. Sólo que aquí se cambiaron los nombres para evitar problemas legales: Earp aún vivía.
Protagonizan Walter Huston, Harry Carey y Andy Devine.
Hace poco alguien informó sobre la inminente salida en DVD de "Cielo amarillo", de William Wellman. ¿Se sabe la fecha aproximada? Espero que también saquen "Incidente en Ox-Bow", gran obra maestra.
Incidente en Ox Bow fue uno de los primeros títulos que salieron en la colección Fox Classics de zona 1. Imagen impecable y subtítulos en español.Cita:
Iniciado por Toshiro
Cielo amarillo tiene prevista su aparición, también en zona 1, el día 23 de mayo. Éstas son sus características:
Yellow Sky - Gregory Peck and Anne Baxter star in this western from director William A. Wellman.
Features include:
Full Frame
English Stereo
English and Spanish MonoSpanish subtitles
Posters & One Sheets Gallery
Production Stills Gallery
Behind the Scenes Gallery
Trailer
Aquí no acaba la cosa. DVDTimes ya informa de los contenidos de las colecciones que, en junio, dedicará a John Ford y a John Wayne:
The John Ford Collection in June
Warner Home Video have announced the Region 1 DVD release of The John Ford Collection for 6th June 2006. Celebrating one of the true masters of American cinema, Warner are honoring John Ford with this separate collection which goes beyond his best known Westerns and collaborations with John Wayne (showcased in The John Wayne-John Ford Collection). The John Ford Collection runs the gamut of genres and shows the diversity and genius of John Ford at his most impressive. Featured here will be the DVD debuts of five classic titles. The Lost Patrol, The Informer and Cheyenne Autumn will be available individually for $19.97 SRP. Mary of Scotland and Sergeant Rutledge will be exclusive to the five-disc boxed set which will sell for $59.92 SRP.
Ford is best known for his incredible series of classic westerns (Stagecoach, The Searchers); however, his impressive four Best Director Academy Awards® (The Informer, The Grapes of Wrath, How Green Was My Valley, and The Quiet Man) were for work outside the western genre and remain somewhat overlooked today.
The Informer, for which John Ford earned his first Best Director Academy Award and star Victor McLaglen took home a Best Actor statuette, makes its DVD debut here, restored and remastered from the original camera negative. It’s included in WHV’s new Collection along with political drama The Lost Patrol (1934) also starring Victor McLaglen as well as Boris Karloff, and restored to its original theatrical release running time, plus the poignant and impressive epic Mary of Scotland which starred Katharine Hepburn and Fredric March. Rounding out the collection is Cheyenne Autumn, a 1964 widescreen epic, restored to its full roadshow length and glory with a new 5.1 soundtrack. It turned out to be Ford’s last Western which ranks as one of his most ambitious and moving works. And lastly is the cult favorite Sergeant Rutledge, another landmark Western notable for exploring racism in the West, starring Woody Strode in the title role.
Orson Welles referred to John Ford as the greatest “poet” movies have given us. Welles actually viewed Stagecoach 40 times before filming began on Citizen Kane (1941), noting that his directing style was influenced by the old guys, the “classical” film makers. When asked who, he replied, “John Ford, John Ford and John Ford.”
Ford's directing style was one of measured simplicity. His pace is slow and his shots unpretentious. He keeps the camera at eye-level with hardly a dolly-shot in site. Early in his career, Ford talked about what he called "invisible technique" or making an audience forget they were watching a movie. And though it’s possible to trace the much-vaunted lighting style and deep focus of Orson Welles Citizen Kane to Ford's earlier films, his later Technicolor works are just as visually imaginative.
The Lost Patrol (La patrulla perdida)
Filmed in the scorching Arizona desert, John Ford guides this powerful tale of men and mortality set in World War I Mesopotamia. Victor McLaglen, who would claim the following year’s Best Actor (1935) Oscar® as Ford’s protagonist in The Informer, plays a stalwart sergeant who takes charge as he and his men try to escape the unseen snipers who felled their captain. Boris Karloff (Frankenstein) is a religious firebrand whose zeal turns to feverish madness. And the unforgiving terrain is as much an enemy as the snipers it conceals.
The Informer (El delator)
John Ford earned his first Best Director Academy Award and star Victor McLaglen took home a Best Actor statuette for this searing four-time Oscar® winner set in 1922 Dublin. Timely in its portrait of murderous political strife between occupier and insurgent and timeless in its exploration of the tortured netherworld of human guilt, The Informer is filmmaking for the ages.
Special Features:
New Featurette The Informer: Out of the Fog
Theatrical trailer
Mary of Scotland
Directed by the legendary John Ford and adapted from Maxwell Anderson’s powerful play, Mary of Scotland gave Katharine Hepburn (Bringing Up Baby, The Philadelphia Story) one of her finest early roles. Both fierce and fragile as the headstrong queen, Hepburn is brilliantly matched by Fredric March (Anna Karenina, I Married a Witch) as her courageous lover Bothwell and by Florence Eldridge (March’s real life wife) as Elizabeth, who is everything Mary is not: physically plain, politically shrewd…and victorious.
Sergeant Rutledge (Sargento negro)
Ford crafts the story of Sergeant Rutledge (Woody Strode), a 9th Cavalry officer on trial for rape and murder in 1866. Lt. Cantrell (Jeffrey Hunter) defends Rutledge as witnesses give testimony (relived in flashbacks) revealing the sergeant’s gallantry – and the shocking truth behind the alleged crimes. Ford, who attacked racism in The Searchers, explores similar territory in this landmark Western, the power of which still rings out with uncommon force decades later.
Special Features:
Theatrical trailer
Languages: English & Français
Subtitles: English, Français & Español (feature film only)
Cheyenne Autumn (El gran combate)
The last Western from director John Ford ranks as one of his most ambitious and moving works. Ford outfits his Trail-of-Tears-like saga with a strong cast, stunning cinematography by long-time collaborator William Clothier and a stirring Alex North score. To play the Cheyenne nation desperately struggling to return to the Yellowstone homeland across 1,500 treacherous miles, Ford recruited hundreds of Navajo tribesmen, many of them veterans of Ford movies dating back to 1939’s Stagecoach. The location (which Ford used for the ninth time) is “John Ford Country” – the canyons, buttes and mesas of Monument Valley. Cheyenne Autumn is compassionate, epic artistry from one of Hollywood’s most revered filmmakers.
Its all-star cast was headed by Richard Widmark (The Alamo, How the West was Won), Carroll Baker (Baby Doll, Harlow), Karl Malden (On the Waterfront, Gypsy), Sal Mineo (Rebel Without a Cause, Exodus), Dolores Del Rio (Wonder Bar, The Fugitive), Ricardo Montalban (Star Trek: The Wrath of Kahn, “Fantasy Island”) and Gilbert Roland (Our Betters, The French Line).
Special Features:
New digital transfer from restored roadshow length picture and audio elements
Archival behind-the scenes featurette Cheyenne Autumn Trail
Commentary by Joseph McBride
Soundtrack remastered in Dolby Digital 5.1
Theatrical trailer
Subtitles: English, Français & Español (Feature Film Only)
The John Wayne-John Ford Collection in June
Warner Home Video have announced the Region 1 DVD release of The John Wayne-John Ford Collection for 6th June 2006. One of the greatest director–star combinations in the history of Hollywood gets the Warner Home Video deluxe DVD treatment with the June 6 release of The John Wayne-John Ford Collection, a ten-disc set featuring eight of the team’s finest collaborations. Anchoring the Collection, and arriving just in time for Father’s Day, is The Searchers: Ultimate Collector’s Edition which includes a Two-Disc Special Edition DVD with extensive all-new bonus features, plus a full color 36-page press book, a 36-page reproduction of the original Dell comic book, filmmaker memos and correspondence, several behind-the-scenes photos and a mail-in theatrical poster.
The collection also features a Stagecoach: Two Disc Special Edition, newly remastered and restored from original VistaVision film elements and loaded with new bonus content and three titles making their DVD debuts: the classic western Fort Apache, and the stirring war films The Long Voyage Home and Wings of Eagles. Rounding out the set are the timeless classics She Wore a Yellow Ribbon and They Were Expendable (in new Amaray packaging) plus 3 Godfathers, which is available for the first time in wide release with this Collection.
The Searchers will be available individually in both the 50th Anniversary Two-Disc Special Edition for $26.99 SRP and the Ultimate Collector’s Edition priced at $34.92 SRP. The Stagecoach: Two-Disc Special Edition will be available for $26.99 SRP and the single disc titles will sell individually for various prices from $12.97 - $19.97 SRP. The price for the entire ten-disc Collection is $79.92 SRP.
In the now well-established WHV DVD Classics tradition, The Searchers has been painstakingly remastered and restored from original VistaVision film elements. Also restored from original and best available elements are Fort Apache and Stagecoach and Wings of Eagles is newly remastered in 16x9 format, enhanced for widescreen televisions (1.85:1 aspect ratio). The Collection bonus materials include an introduction by Patrick Wayne (John’s son), an all-new feature length documentary American Masters: John Ford/John Wayne: The Filmmaker & the Legend produced by WNET/American Masters, commentaries by noted film director Peter Bogdanovich and Ford biographer Scott Eyman, several new featurettes, audio only segments plus John Wayne home movies.
The Searchers: Ultimate Collector’s Edition & The Searchers: 50th Anniversary Two-Disc Special Edition (1956) (Centauros del desierto)
John Wayne and John Ford made The Searchers a landmark Western with an indelible image of the frontier and the men and women who challenged it. Although not nominated for any awards at the time of its release, the film has since been widely acknowledged as one of the supreme triumphs of the genre. The Searchers was placed on the National Film Registry in 1989 and ranked number 96 on the American Film Institute’s list of “100 Greatest Movies.”
Wayne plays an ex-Confederate soldier searching for his niece (Natalie Wood), captured by the Comanches who massacred his family. He won’t surrender to hunger, thirst, the elements or loneliness. And in his five-year search, he encounters something unexpected: his own humanity. Beautifully shot by Winton C. Hoch (four-time Academy Award winner), thrillingly scored by Max Steiner (21 Academy Award nominations, 3 wins) and memorably acted by a wonderful ensemble including Jeffrey Hunter (King of Kings, The Longest Day), Vera Miles (The Wrong Man, Psycho), Natalie Wood (Rebel Without a Cause, Gypsy, West Side Story) and frequent Ford cast member Ward Bond (My Darling Clementine, The Quiet Man), The Searchers endures as “a great film of enormous scope and breathtaking physical beauty.” (Danny Peary, Guide for the Film Fanatic).
Disc 1:
Newly remastered and restored from original VistaVision film elements
Introduction by Patrick Wayne (John’s son)
Commentary by Director Peter Bogdanovich (The Last Picture Show, What’s Up, Doc?)
Theatrical trailer
Disc 2:
The Searchers: An Appreciation
A Turning of the Earth: John Ford, John Wayne and The Searchers
Behind the Cameras:
Meet Jeffrey Hunter
Monument Valley
Meet Natalie Wood
Setting Up Production
Stagecoach Two-Disc Special Edition (1939) (La diligencia)
Nine disparate travelers are thrown together on a stagecoach destined for Apache territory…and movie immortality. In the lead role of the Ringo Kid, director John Ford cast a lanky veteran of 70 B-movies, serials and shorts named John Wayne. Each rifle shot and close-up rang out the news: a new star is born. This first collaboration between director and star made both their reputations as talents to watch in the Western genre yet focuses on carefully etched character studies. Marked by deft and efficient editing, as well as remarkable camera work, Stagecoach transcends the traditional shoot-'em-up.
Winner of two Academy Awards (Best Supporting Actor and Best Music, Scoring) and nominated for an additional five (including Best Picture and Best Director), Stagecoach was placed on the National Film Registry in 1995 and ranked number 63 on the American Film Institute’s list of “100 Greatest Movies.” In addition to a stellar performance by Wayne, Stagecoach boasts an unusually strong cast, including Claire Trevor (Best Supporting Actress winner for Key Largo), Thomas Mitchell (in his Oscar-winning performance), Andy Devine (Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves), John Carradine (The Grapes of Wrath, Satan’s Cheerleaders) and silent star George Bancroft (Old Ironsides, 3 Bad Men, Underworld). This adventure ushered in a 30-year era of great Westerns, many featuring its top practitioners – Ford and Wayne.
Special Features:
Newly remastered from best available film elements.
New feature-length American Masters: John Ford/John Wayne: The Filmmaker & the Legend retrospective profile
New documentary Stagecoach: A Story of Redemption
Commentary by Scott Eyman, author of “Print the Legend: The Life and Times of John Ford”Audio-only bonus: radio adaptation with Claire Trevor and Randolph Scott
Theatrical trailer
Subtitles: English, Français & Español (feature film only)
Fort Apache (1948) - First Time On DVD
John Wayne and many familiar supporting players from master director John Ford’s “stock company” saddle up for the first film in the director’s famed cavalry trilogy (She Wore a Yellow Ribbon and Rio Grande are the others). Roughhouse camaraderie, sentimental vignettes of frontier life, massive action sequences staged in Monument Valley – all are part of Fort Apache. So is Ford’s exploration of the West’s darker side. Themes of justice, heroism and honor that Ford would revisit in later Westerns are given free rein in this moving, thought-provoking film that, even as it salutes a legend, gives reasons to question it.
The stellar cast includes the distinguished Henry Fonda (The Grapes of Wrath, On Golden Pond), former child star Shirley Temple (reunited with her director from Wee Willie Winkie), Temple’s then-current husband John Agar making his film debut and Ford regulars Victor McLaglen, Ward Bond and George O’Brien.
Special Features:
Digitally remastered and restored from original nitrate elements
New featurette Monument Valley: John Ford Country
Theatrical trailer
Subtitles: English, Français & Español (Feature Film Only)
The Long Voyage Home (1940) (Hombres intrépidos)- First Time On DVD
Director John Ford and screenwriter Dudley Nichols adapted four Eugene O’Neill one-act dramas into this compelling, lyrical look at men at sea that O’Neill considered his favorite of all his filmed works. As his sailors, Ford cast members of his so-called “Stock Company”: Thomas Mitchell (Gone with the Wind), Barry Fitzgerald (Academy Award winner for Going My Way), Arthur Shields (How Green Was My Valley), Ward Bond (It’s a Wonderful Life), John Qualen (Casablanca) and the star of the previous year’s Stagecoach, John Wayne. As sunny, sweet-natured Ole Olsen, Wayne does winning work in an atypical role that required the stalwart star to sport a Swedish accent. Nominated for an impessive six Academy Awards incuding Best Picture, The Long Voyage Home is a journey to remember.
Special Features:
New featurette Serenity at Sea: John Ford and the Araner
Subtitles: English, Français & Español (feature film only)
Wings of Eagles (1957) (Escrito bajo el sol) - First Time On DVD
Cmdr. Frank “Spig” Wead was a pioneer aviator, renowned screenwriter (whose work included John Ford’s They Were Expendable) and a man of war. The skies beckoned Spig to action; a crippling injury ultimately left him powerless to act, propelling him to discover the power of his pen. He was talented, driven, flawed, a friend of Ford –- and the subject of this compassionate biography.
John Wayne plays Spig and Ford directs The Wings of Eagles, which also offers a fascinating glimpse into the ways and world of Ford. Ward Bond plays moviemaker John Dodge, a role modeled on Ford. Maureen O’Hara, Wayne’s five-time co-star (including Ford’s The Quiet Man), and Dan Dailey (of Ford’s 1952 What Price Glory?) play Spig’s indomitable wife Min and cigar-chomping sidekick “Jughead” Carson.
Special Features:
Newly remastered in 16x9 format, enhanced for widescreen televisions (1.85:1 aspect ratio)
Theatrical trailer
Languages: English & Français
Subtitles: English, Français & Español (feature film only)
3 Godfathers (1948)
John Ford remade one of his classic silent Westerns 3 Bad Men (1926), a story of three bandits who come upon a dying mother and child while escaping the law. Two of them die trying to get the child to town and safety. Starring John Wayne (in the role originated by George O’Brien), the cast also features Pedro Armendáriz (The Fugitive, Fort Apache), perennial Ward Bond, the luminous silent star Mae Marsh (Birth of a Nation, Intolerance), who frequently appeared in uncredited roles in Ford’s films and, making his screen debut, Harry Carey, Jr. (son of Ford’s “stock company” regular Harry Carey, in whose memory the film is dedicated).
Features:
Theatrical trailer
She Wore A Yellow Ribbon (1949) (La legión invencible)
A masterpiece of mood and heroics, She Wore A Yellow Ribbon, was the centerpiece in director John Ford's renowned cavalry trilogy (Fort Apache and Rio Grande bookend it) and features one of John Wayne's most moving performances as a cavalry officer in his final week of service on the frontier.
Under makeup aging him some 20 years, Wayne inhabits the role of a wily veteran who knows the sting of war and vows to make his last mission one of peace. The ritual of outpost life, the sweep of battle, the advance of the patrol beneath ominous skies: She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, an Academy Award winner for its color cinematography, paints a memorable portrait of the honor, duty and courage in the finest tradition of the cavalry.
With Wayne in She Wore A Yellow Ribbon are Joanne Dru (Red River, All the King’s Men), John Agar (Fort Apache), Ben Johnson (Mighty Joe Young, Shane), Harry Carey, Jr. (3 Godfathers) and Victor McLaglen (The Informer).
Special Features:
John Ford home movies
Theatrical trailer
Languages: English & Français
Subtitles: English, Français, Español & Português
They Were Expendable (No eran imprescindibles) (1945)
Director John Ford’s World War II tale knows its battle-scarred topic firsthand: Robert Montgomery (The Big House, Here Comes Mr. Jordan) was a Pacific PT-boat commander and a valorous Bronze Star recipient and Ford filmed the Academy Award-winning documentary Battle of Midway. John Wayne creates a portrait of patriotic resolve as only he can. They Were Expendable salutes all who dedicated themselves to the cause of freedom during some of the war’s bleakest hours.
Supplies are dwindling. Troops are hopelessly outnumbered. But even in defeat, there is victory. The defenders of the Philippines -- including PT-boat skippers John Brickley (Montgomery) and Rusty Ryan (Wayne) -- will give the U.S. war effort time to regroup after the devastation of Pearl Harbor.
Special Features:
Theatrical Trailer
Subtitles: English & Français (NO HAY SUBTÍTULOS)
Ambas colecciones son esenciales. Habrá que estudiar cuáles son las copias en propiedad de Manga (todas las RKO) y decidir si merece la pena esperar, en nuestro país, a las que pertenecen a Warner. Ya que todas las dudas fueran como éstas.
Un saludo.
She Wore A Yellow Ribbon y They Were Expendable supongo que serán las mismas ediciones que ya había. La primera si lleva subt. en español y se ve muy bien.
Un saludo.
Imagino que muchas de ellas serán editadas en España, en concreto las distribuidas por la propia Warner: EL GRAN COMBATE, SARGENTO NEGRO, CENTAUROS DEL DESIERTO y ESCRITO BAJO EL SOL. Las de RKO (FORT APACHE, EL DELATOR etc..) habrá que pillarlas en zona 1.
Me ilusiona mucho esa remasterización de EL GRAN COMBATE. Debe ser impresionante verla en condiciones.
Creo que lo que procede es comprarse los dos packs y ya está... :babas :babas
¡la virgen!
Ya estoy preparando el hueco en mi coleccion.
:babas
Impresionante noticia, pero desgraciadamente seguimos sin ver editada en condiciones El hombre tranquilo. ¿Alguien sabe exactamente cuáles son los problemas que la mantienen retenida? ¿Quién tiene sus derechos? La edición actual de zona 1, de dudosa calidad y sin subs, es de Lions Gate Home Entertainment.
Es inconcebible que aún no esté editada en DVD como Ford manda...
Sin duda las editará Warner aquí pero ¿mantendrá todos los extras? Espero que sí porque esta vez me interesan más que nunca y yo necesito subtítulos para entenderlos.Cita:
Iniciado por Toshiro
Pepe, con tu permiso me gustaría pegar ese post informativo en el de Manga de General (o lo haces tú si lo prefieres). Editor me aseguró que negociarían la compra de los derechos y quisiera darle esta información.
Toda tuya, Huw, la noticia es de dominio público. Lástima de que, personalmente, no crea mucho en las negociaciones de Manga.Cita:
Iniciado por Huw Morgan
Seguramente, quizá la mejor opción sea comprar los dos packs de zona 1 y hacerse/repetirse aquí con las de Warner en el "San Trespordós".
Un saludo.
Me acabo de mojar los pantalones tras leer esta noticia. ¡¡¡¡Por fin Ford en DVD como es debido!!!! Solo nos faltan El hombre tranquilo, Siete mujeres, La salida de la luna, Caravana de paz, El juez Priest, El fugitivo, La ruta del tabaco, El joven Lincoln, Prisionero del odio...
:ipon
Atención, aviso:
Me compré una serie de películas en zona 1 y hoy me han llegado. Tanto en Amazon como en deepdiscount ponía que llevaban subtítulos en español, PERO ES MENTIRA. Inglés mondo y lirondo.
Es una colección llamada Zane Grey Wester Classics y edita Lions Gate, de la cual tengo alguna peli con subtítulos en español. Las pelis son:
THUNDER MOUNTAIN, con Tim Holt
CODE OF THE WEST, con James Warren
THE ARIZONA RIDERS, con Larry Buster Crabbe
NEVADA, con Robert Mitchum
Hay más de la colección, pero imagino estarán en iguales condiciones. Eso sí, en deepdiscount baratísimas. Pero...
¿Y te parecen pocos títulos los que faltan? Bueno, con la vasta filmografía de Ford se pueden considerar pocos.
P.D: No os olvideis del episodio de la guerra civil de La conquista del Oeste, a ver cuando le da la gana a MGM/Fox de sacarla en España.
P.D.D:Ahora que me acuerdo de MGM/Fox, la última hornada que nos mandaron, uséase, la de El hombre del Oeste, El vengador sin piedad... ¡¡¡¡¡¡La descatalogaron en menos de seis meses!!!!!!
Ya que estamos hablando de Ford os voy a contar lo que me ha pasado hace un rato: Voy al Fnac a recoger un pedido (Un vaquero sin rumbo, con Tom Selleck y Alan Rickman), cuando al pasar junto al estante de bélicas, de repente miro y me veo la cara de James Cagney: cojo el DVD intrigado, lo miro y empiezo a leer: James Cagney, Dan Dailey, El precio de la gloria (¿me suena mucho este título?)... miro un poco más abajo y de repente me da un vuelco el corazón: ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡John Ford!!!!!!
No sabía que habían editado What Price Glory en España.
Por supuesto, ha caído en la saca y ya me la tragado. suevia podría haber hecho una edición bastante mejor aunque es suficientemente aceptable. Vale la pena gastarse 15 euros en esto antes que en Almodóvar....
Se dice que se ha inventado un sistema con el cual eliminar los empalmes del Cinerama, y que la primera peli con la que lo probarán será... "La conquista del Oeste"...Cita:
Iniciado por Duke
Quizás esa edición especial merecerá los honores de su edición aquí...
Y digo yo: ¿para cuándo la edición ampliada en dvd de "El Álamo"? Salió en vídeo, pero la de dvd es la "normal"... Y recordad que casi todos los planos añadidos estaban dirigidos por John Ford.
Me apunto a reivindicar (y si hace falta, desenfundamos los Colts y los Winchester y nos vamos a por los de MGM/Fox :martillo ) la edición extendida de El Álamo. :cabreo :cabreo :cabreo
Peaso de banda sonora de Tiomkin (y también la de Newman de La conquista del Oeste). :palmas :palmas :palmas
Remember the Alamo!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Podríais explicar un poco mejor todo eso de los formatos de pantalla, es que no me manjo mucho con el tema. :? Aunque prefiero que dejen las cosas como se hicieron originalmente.
¿Tiene algo que ver con, por ejemplo, el caso de los DVD de, por enésima vez, MGM que, por lo menos yo, tengo que reducirles el zoom de la pantalla puesto que se salen de ella? :cabreo
Solo queda un mes y tres días para que salga la colección Peckinpah. :sudor
P.D:No creeis que Forajidos de leyenda es un western que podría haber sido dirigido perfectamente por Sam. Los otros dos westerns de Hill son más flojos pero aún así apreciables.
Si no me equivoco, creo que hoy salía una colección de westerns de John Wayne de la Fox: La gran jornada; Alaska, tierra de oro; y los comancheros. La semana que viene sale en Studio Classics Los indestructibles, ¿les habrán hecho alguna modificación? Le habrán puesto algún regalito a la última citada como en Pasión de los fuertes :palmas o La marca del zorro :martillo :cabreo :chalao
Cuando no encuentres referencias suficientes y fiables prueba en DVD Empire, por ejemplo.Cita:
Iniciado por Bela Karloff
Yo también me apunto a la reivindicación de la versión ampliada de "El Alamo". Guardo la edición en VHS como oro en paño. Para mí esta película fue durante muchos años algo mítico y una obsesión, ya que la ví de pequeño cuando la estrenaron y me encantó (por supuesto, en Toddao y con un sonido estereofónico que parecía que se caía el cine cuando disparaban los cañones), y después pasaron más de 10 años hasta el primer reestreno en cines a principios de los 70, con lo que yo pensaba que era una de esas películas perdidas que ya no volvería a ver. Por cierto, cuando la estrenaron vendieron la banda sonora en un EP de Philips de 5 canciones que aún lo conservo, eso sí bastante rayado, pues lo habre puesto miles de veces. :amorCita:
Iniciado por Bela Karloff
Y ya que hablamos de Ford, hay una película de la que casi nadie habla y que no está nada mal, si bien es una isla en su filmografía, tanto por su temática como por la forma de desarrollar la historia, "Un crimen por hora". Yo la ví en TV hace un montón de años, pero creo que no la han vuelto a poner. ¿sabeis si está editada en algún sitio?
La única película británica de John Ford protagonizada por jack Hawkins. Cosecha del 58.