post #91 of 189
4/1/08 at 7:22pm
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Originally Posted by Jon Hertzberg
Thrilled to see Baby It's You and French Postcards on the list. I'm concerned, however, that the original soundtracks will not be restored for these DVDs, especially since they are not actually being released by Paramount. Still, I will hold out hope until the discs actually materialize.
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Originally Posted by Ken Koc
I still can't find the Paramount titles.............Is there a link?
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Originally Posted by William Miller
Money From Home! Great.
As most of you know, for mysterious reasons, Money From Home and Three Ring Circus were not in the Martin & Lewis DVD sets that Paramount released. Some speculated that Money From Home was caught in the Damon Runyon problem. No one knew what the Three Ring Circus problem could be. It was strange because both films were shown several times on TCM in the past few years. But now, Money From Home has been announced as one of the new Paramount - Legend titles. It doesn't make any sense. (But I am happy) |
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Originally Posted by walter o
Yeah, the opening credit tune of FRENCH POSTCARDS (French version of DO YOU BELIEVE IN MAGIC) was replaced on the home video one. They ran it on Cinemax couple of years ago with the tune back in, so hopefully, Paramount cleared it.
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Originally Posted by Mark Edward Heuck
FRENCH POSTCARDS was also unusual in that the film initially was one of a few Paramount titles that were exclusive to Fotomat, when they had a video-rental program. Moreover, I'm willing to bet that those VHS tapes did have the music intact, much like the early MCA releases of SLAP SHOT and NIGHT HAWKS, and it was only when Paramount released their own tape that they rescored the songs.
AMERICAN HOT WAX and FRATERNITY ROW were two other Paramount titles that Fotomat offered which never received any other VHS release, though HOT WAX did get issued in the defunct CED Videodisc format. |
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Originally Posted by Jeffrey:K
I never thought I'd see a DVD release of WON TON TON, THE DOG WHO SAVED HOLLYWOOD. I'm probably the only one buying a copy.
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| Jonathan, Thank you for your email. Yes, some music has been changed for our home entertainment versions on both of these movies. Please let me know if you have any other questions. Maria T. Mason Vice President of Marketing Legend Films, Inc. |
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Originally Posted by Jon Hertzberg
Have you ever seen one of these Fotomat tapes in person? I'd love to know what the artwork looked like and if it was anything similar to the old Magnetic Video design. I knew of the American Hot Wax Fotomat VHS and later CED release, but not about Fraternity Row.
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Originally Posted by Bradley-E
The titles are now available for sale on the Legend site, but with shipping and taxes they are about $23.00 each. I may hold off until they are sold by Amazon, DVD Pacific etc. I'm curious if anyone has ordered any titles yet and recieved notification they are shipping.
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| Quote: Originally Posted by Bradley-E The titles are now available for sale on the Legend site, but with shipping and taxes they are about $23.00 each. I may hold off until they are sold by Amazon, DVD Pacific etc. I'm curious if anyone has ordered any titles yet and recieved notification they are shipping. Hmmm; extras free Paramount discs at near Criterion prices - I suspect they may be slightly disappointed with the initial sales figures. |
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Originally Posted by Jim_K
I paid $19.90 total including shipping (no sales tax) for The Skull. Hardly near Criterion gouging pricing.
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Originally Posted by Jim_K
For those who can wait until the official release in June, Amazon will most likely carry the titles for less than $10 each.
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Originally Posted by Louis Letizia
Judging fro their eclectic titles-I soon envision other Paramount titles heretofore unreleased in any video format finally seeing the light of day after trial runs on cable (TCMs recent showing of SKIDOO)
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Originally Posted by JeffMc
The STUDENT BODIES disc includes the trailer. It's a lousy trailer, but it's cool to have.
MANDINGO is the uncut 127 minute R-rated version. BABY IT'S YOU appears to be the same music-modified version that was on VHS (it includes the Springsteen songs). POSSESSION OF JOEL DELANEY - the controversial full-frontal of the young boy is matted out on this widescreen version (the VHS was open-matte and showed below the waist). |
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Originally Posted by Louis Letizia
I was very pleasantly surprised at this 'legend'ary arragement that paramount has set up. It truly is a barometer that the studios-even one as seemingly beligerent in releasing catalog titles as Paramount-do listen to their fans "of a certain age"(most of us fit into that category) and are trying to satiate our wants. I commend them for doing so and I think the $15 pricetag for seeing most of these obscure titles (THE OPTIMISTS? THE BUSY BODY? WON TON TON...!!!!!?) that I never thought would see the light of day beyond the terrible bootlegs (the new flickers) and foreign out of print videos they were on in a previous lifeform, is very reasonable. I have ordered all of these with the exception of BLUE CITY-a truly awful 80s brartpack noir.
Judging fro their eclectic titles-I soon envision other Paramount titles heretofore unreleased in any video format finally seeing the light of day after trial runs on cable (TCMs recent showing of SKIDOO) and on Amazons Unbox (my guilty pleasure SHEILA LEVINE IS DEAD AND LIVING IN NEW YORK as well as TR BASKIN , INNOCENT BYSTANDERS and MAN ON A STRING all are available there as well as MANDINGO ). these titles seem a cinch soon. It seems as if Paramount will soon become the premiere releasing unit for the mostly forgotten 60s and 70s era films. I can see them leasing their prestige pix to Criterion (ala THE NAKED PREY and the never released on video ACE IN THE HOLE) such as the terrific 1980 thriller THE OUTSIDER, WHITE DOG , LADIES AND GENTLEMAN THE FABULOUS STAINS, BREAKING GLASS, Ingmar Bergmans seemingly lost FACE TO FACE,LEADBELLY , AMERICAN HOT WAX the beguilingly mia CITIZENS BAND from Jonathan Demme and LOOKING FOR MR GOODBAR among others and more popular movies such as ONCE IS NOT ENOUGH, ASH WEDNESDAY, A SEPERATE PEACE, FIRST LOVE, ROUGH CUT ,PLAYERS, BLOODLINE going via Legend. With the never released WON TON TON and THE PIED PIPER (as well as the surprising release last year of O WHAT A LOVELY WAR!) I would like to see them also release FRATERNITY ROW, THE LAWYER, THE PENTHOUSE , WUSA and LITTLE FAUSS AND BIG HALSY and others. Very exciting! The only question remaing: What is left for Paramount proper to release? Now if Universal/Legend would make a similar licensing agreement we may finally get THE GREEK TYCOON, MOMENT BY MOMENT and NUNZIO..... |
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Originally Posted by John Stell
I think the $14.95 SRP is very reasonable for these. MGM/Fox are releasing a slew of War and Western films in May with the same SRP, while Universal is asking $19.98 for The Man of a Thousand Faces. Shipping charges seem to be the deal-breaker here for some. Luckily within a few months that won't be a factor.
I soooo hope Legend and Paramount are satisfied with how this turns out. Getting anamorphic R1 releases of Dr. Terror's House of Horrors and Blood & Roses actually seems possible now. |
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Originally Posted by John Hodson
Jim; you know that nearly $20 is a little rich, even if my playful Criterion comment doesn't apply (though I'd have preferred to be 'gouged' by a release through Criterion, complete with their usual thoughtful extras.)
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Originally Posted by Jim_K
It's funny how Criterion still gets a free pass for charging a standard $40 MSRP in this day and age, the standard excuse always being being those dreaded "licensing fees" yet Legend's $15 MSRP for these licensed titles is a little rich?
I just don't get it. |