The Extras - 5 for 2025: Warner Archive Year in Review
Episode Date: January 13, 2026Send us a textGeorge Feltenstein joins the podcast for a Warner Archive 2025 Year in Review. We discuss 5 THEMES for the year PLUS we each share 5 titles to highlight. If you've been with us al...l year, you'll enjoy this look back at the Warner Archive's best year in quite some time.Purchase links:RHAPSODY IN BLUE (1945) [EXTENDED PRE-RELEASE VERSION] Blu-rayTHE BEAST OF THE CITY (1932) Blu-rayBRIGHT LEAF (1950) Blu-rayMONOGRAM MATINEE VOL. 1 (1949) Blu-rayLEAN ON ME (1989) Blu-rayThe Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1921 Blu-rayCHEYENNE 1957-62 Complete Series Blu-rayGabriel over the White House 1933 Blu-rayINTRUDER IN THE DUST (1949) Blu-raySPLENDOR IN THE GRASS (1961) Blu-ray The Extras Facebook page The Extras TV YouTube ChannelThe Extras Twitter Warner Archive & Warner Bros Catalog Group Join our new public Facebook Group for Warner Archive Animation Fans and get the latest update on all the releases. As an Amazon Affiliate, The Extras may receive a commission for purchases through our purchase links. There is no additional cost to you, and every little bit helps us in the production of the podcast. Thanks in advance. Otaku Media produces podcasts, behind-the-scenes extras, and media that connect creatives with their fans and businesses with their consumers. Contact us today to see how we can work together to achieve your goals. tim@theextras.tv
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Gregory Orr, grandson of Jack Al Warner, and producer of the documentary Jack Al Warner
The Last Mogul. And you are listening to The Extras.
Hello and welcome to The Extras. I'm Tim Larger host. And joining me is George Feltonstein
of the Warner Archive. Hi, George. Hey there, Tim. It's our first podcast recording of
2026. So I'm excited because it's going to be a terrific year ahead. But we're actually going to
look back, George. And it's a good time to do that here at the beginning of the
the year. And I thought before we get into a few of the specifics, I'm going to kind of ask you
a broad question, but the Warner Archive is wrapping up its 16th year. That's correct.
Yeah. And just for kicks and grins, how does this last 16th year compare to some of the
previous years? I'd say the last three years have shown significant upticks. And each year,
we've been generating profit for the shareholders of this company
to be able to have your business continue to grow
a physical media business when everybody says
physical media is down.
It's not for us.
It's growing.
And right now, I just counted,
not counting television, not counting animation,
not counting special projects.
We have over 100 feature films that have been approved that are in the queue for this year, which is astounding.
And the familiarity of what we have planned for this year, I've seen all over the Internet and in our social media all these wish lists.
and in the past I've seen these wish lists and gone,
well, maybe some of those will happen.
And it's been kind of something where I've been chuckling
because I'm seeing that like anywhere from 60 to 70% of any given list
consists of titles that were in the midst of doing
or have been approved to be done.
Right.
So the recognition.
Fagnition factor is going to go up a little bit of a notch.
Yeah.
And we will still have plenty of things that only serious cinephiles will know about.
And our goal is always to try to please different groups of people.
And one of the other ways we're doing that within Warner Brothers as a company is what we're doing
with the partners that we licensed to.
There's going to be a lot of really exciting library activity
between our own boutique label of Warner Archive
and the other boutique labels that we deal with as partners.
That gets more of the library out to the people that want it,
and that's very exciting.
And I'm involved in it all, so I see the whole picture.
And the picture is very encouraging for 2020.
Well, every time we've talked recently, that number that you said have been approved kind of for this queue.
Yeah.
And just to clarify for people, that doesn't mean they're all going to come out in the next six months.
They're being worked on.
No, they will come out during 2026 and maybe some might not make it out until 2027.
There's one movie that we thought we were done with.
and then we found out that we didn't have the original N title or the original
entitled music and we're able to get that.
So that got delayed for three months, but it'll be worth it because it'll be authentic.
Right, right, right.
Well, I do know that in the years that you and I have been talking on the extras,
this is by far 2025 the best year that we've had so much to talk about.
And as a matter of fact, you and I've talked about how we're behind on our reviews because there's been so much that you've been releasing.
On average, anywhere from six to eight, it feels like looking back over the year.
Yes.
With only a few months, maybe a little lower and October, I think, a little higher.
So it's just been a terrific year and the best that you and I've had to just talk about here on the extras.
That leads me then to kind of our conversation today.
and I thought we'd commemorate the year with five themes that I kind of saw in looking back.
And then we'll follow that up with five releases that I've picked and five releases that you've picked just to highlight.
These are not a top list.
But films we wanted to highlight looking back over the year.
And I think that'll make for a fun conversation today.
Completely agree.
I think one of the reasons I wanted to do what you suggested was that thankfully,
there has been an enormous amount of attention to things like High Society in 4K
or Tom and Jerry, the Golden Era Anthology, or the Looney Tunes Collector's Vault,
you know, these mega important things that have just, you know, knocked it out of the park.
But there are a lot of things that didn't get as much attention that I think would be fun to discuss.
Yeah.
So we'll have it.
Well, let's talk this first theme, and you kind of just teased it right there.
But the first one that I wanted to kind of highlight was this year 2025, Warner Archive really established itself in 4K.
And the searchers technically came out in December 20th, 2024.
But in my mind, that kick started the year from day one because so much of the impact of that release fell in, in, in,
in 2025.
Because it had such a late December, 2024 street date,
we missed a lot of the 10 best list
because people had already kind of locked that in
before they got the disc.
Right.
But, you know, like media play news,
which is a trade paper,
you know, we won five awards
as the best release of the year and so forth and so on.
I wish we could be doing more, but we had some pretty impressive releases through 2025, just a few.
I always said it was only going to be any three or four or five, four K titles.
That's not going to change, but what we have planned for 2026 is very exciting.
Yeah.
Well, I'll just run through a couple of the others, or some of the others that released,
on 4K. And I have to do that because I absolutely love your high society 4K release. This is one of
my favorite releases of the year. I mean, obviously, it's a acknowledged classic film. And then to
see it looking and sounding so good and the presence of Grace Kelly and Bing and Frank and the music,
I just absolutely one of my favorite releases of the year, the 4K with the remastered Blu-ray, of course, always in there as well.
So that was fantastic.
And then Git Carter on 4K, which came out in August.
And that was that unique partnership with the BFI.
I thought that was fantastic.
And I hope it maybe means there could be more of that kind of thing in the future.
and then of course most recently the curse of Frankenstein
and that partnership with Hammer Films
and we talked a lot about that
and you mentioned that Hammer is just going to be releasing
and doing more with Warner Brothers
which is great news.
We're going to continue that partnership
and make a lot of people very happy.
Yeah, yeah.
And they are just, I'll just be very blatant.
I can't think of any partnership.
that has been more rewarding than working with the fine people at Hammer in the UK.
They're just great.
I hope we get a chance to talk about something in 2026 with them.
Well, the second theme that I wanted to get into is you touched on briefly with all the
great releases this year that drew some of the top headlines.
But that's what I'm calling animation explosion.
And I say explosion because it wasn't just, oh, you had two or three.
nice releases. You had two or three huge releases. Obviously, the Tom and Jerry in December,
the Golden Era Anthology. And then in the summer, you had Huckleberry Hound. And then earlier in
the year, you had both the Tom and Jerry Cinemascope and, and of course, the Looney Tunes Collectors
Vault, Volume 1, which has kicked off that series. You've already mentioned there's a volume 2 coming
very soon, and then just plethora of Hannah-Barbera
dolls throughout the year.
I just thought that was worth noting
because I think it's led to so much uplift
and interest in classic animation.
Well, and it's really wonderful as well
that it's not just that we're doing this in a vacuum.
There seems to be, and I think a lot of it,
Jerry would be the first person to speak to this
he's involved there, is the partnership that Warner Brothers Discovery has with
Weygo Broadcasting in Me TV Tunes.
The fact that people can see these great classic theatrical animation as well as television
animation, and the demographic of that audience is very much the demographic of people
who support Warner Archive.
Personally, it brings me great pleasure.
to see, you know, things that I fought for five, six years ago,
like the HD remastering of the true original Jetson series or Johnny Quest,
when, you know, I couldn't get anybody to, you know,
see that this was a great money-making opportunity
and something people were really passionate about.
Those things sold so well.
and now they're finding an audience through a television channel dedicated 24 hours a day to great animation.
I think people will be exposed to things on that channel that I hope they'll say,
gee, I want to own this and have it on my shelf so I can see it whenever I want and it won't go away.
We're amping up how much animation we're going to be releasing in 2026.
it will be probably unprecedented.
Wow.
And there are a lot of very cool ideas I'm trying to get approved.
Well, I've already had to remove some stuff on my shelves behind me here for those of you who are watching.
And I'm going to have to make sure and have more shelf space for this coming here for all of the animation.
I've got a whole area.
I've had to basically double it in this last year with all the releases that you had.
So it sounds like there's going to be more, which I'm looking forward to.
Well, the third theme is one that it's not new to this year, but just worth calling out again.
And that's what I'm calling the Technicolor Triumph.
You just continue to put out these Technicolor, fantastic-looking films.
And it's just worth calling out because I don't think it should be taken for granted because these films look fantastic.
Well, we have a proprietary technology that allows us to recombine down to the pixel.
I've spoken about that before.
All the work is done at Warner Brothers Motion Picture Imaging, and it starts with the evaluation of the element, the scanning,
the work done by their amazing colorists.
But there seems to be, like from things I've read, I think a lot of consumers,
are confused that like MPI has a restoration schedule and budget and MPI is is the facility where we do the
work that has nothing to do with you know what films are selected to undergo the process that's a
combined effort between myself and the preservation team and we will be amping that up it has
been increasing more and more. But we don't just look at this as what nitrate we have that is in
jeopardy due to age. We have to look at safety film with the same fear of jeopardy due to
potential vinegar syndrome problems with film elements. So we're being equal opportunity
between nitrate and safety at looking at the technical,
and frankly, looking at everything that we're doing.
We're working on a big television series right now.
It's in the safety film era, of course.
Every once in a while we'll run into a problem
that relates to vinegar syndrome
and that we have to go back to a different element.
So how wonderful that we're opening up those cans
and making sure everything is appropriate
for work and got a lot of exciting things in the hopper. I will tell you that.
Well, the reason why I think this is so important is that sometimes people say, well, why should
I upgrade from my DVD to a Blu-ray? Is it really going to make that much difference? And I think
when it comes to these technicolor, this is one where you say, no, you absolutely need to upgrade
because of the process that you have now to go back to make these look so much better than they did if they were released on DVD.
It's dramatic.
It's dramatic.
It's dramatic.
And it also is dramatic because the older masters, even some of them that were, you know, done many years ago.
But even if they were done in HD, you know, let's say 20 years ago, we could not put that on a Blu-ray.
but also the interpositives that were made from the technical or negatives,
a lot of them were done at bad labs,
all of whom are now out of business.
Yeah.
But the film elements that were considered okay were not.
And they led to DVDs that were out of focus, out of register.
And there were some good ones too.
It weren't all terrible.
but even the best ones can't compare to what we're able to do now by going back to the original negatives
and scanning them at 4K recombining them.
Sometimes they're scanning at 8K.
It's just incredibly rewarding.
Yeah.
And the net result is I think people are almost getting spoiled by the fact that when we do something,
something, it's going to look great. We're certainly not going to backslide on our commitment to
quality. Right. And let me just... Very, very important. Let me just run through a few of these just to
remind people. You had Lily. You had a date with Judy, the master of Ballantre, lovely to look at,
two weeks with love, the prisoner of Zenda, a summer place, the iron mistress. I love Melvin.
And I think San Antonio as well. I mean, I may have missed one or two in there, but
Wow, like one a month almost really here is what we're looking at in terms of just pure volume.
Yeah.
And I know that that means that so many people there at Warner Brothers are spending so much effort to bring these two people, two fans.
It's like doing three movies and just for purists and getting everything clear.
A summer place was actually Eastman Color Negative.
It was color by technical color, but it wasn't three-strip.
But we were able to make it look phenomenally good,
which is all the more a testament to the talented people at Warner Bros.
Motion Picture Imaging because in 1959, Eastman Color Negative,
will almost certainly have some collapsed yellow layer blue channel condition
that could wreak fading in havoc.
in lesser hands.
Right.
And I thought a summer place came out so beautiful because they did such a great job with it.
So the laurels and the hardies, the laurels, the laurels really belong to my colleagues at MPI
and their artists and their work is sensational.
and I feel so grateful to be working with so many talented colleagues.
Well, our next theme, the fourth theme that I'm wanting to point out here is also not new
to the work you've been doing, but I thought this year there were just a large quantity
and it just showed your commitment to noir.
And I'm a big fan of noir, and I love the fact that you had, well, you had Mystery Street,
side street his kind of woman i died a thousand times the hard way out of the fog the racket i mean
these are in totality make a terrific year for noir fans and i think you have good news for the future as
well there we will have more noir in twenty 26 than 2025 yeah yeah well i and i love that but
uh i just wanted to point out how much uh you released this year and how much uh how much uh you released this year
and how great they looked and just wanted to bring that up as a theme I saw for the year.
And then the fifth and last one, this is maybe just kind of me here, but I'm calling it the stars are out.
And we all know the many stars of MGM and Warner Brothers.
And almost every movie you release has great stars.
But I thought there was some exceptional things to call out in terms of for Errol Flynn.
you had just four of his films come out this year, I believe.
Master of Ballantray, San Antonio.
They died with their boots on, an absolute terrific release this year.
And then one I just watched the other night, Silver River.
I loved it.
We're going to talk about those in more detail at some point, George.
But you had Errol, you had several Betty Davis.
It's love I'm after.
The Bride Came COD, which I just watched the other night.
It's so enjoyable.
You had Joan Crawford, who had Powell and Loy, multiple ones, multiple Jane Powell, Gary Cooper.
Like, there were just so many stars.
But I love the fact that those fans who have been waiting for more Betty Davis, more Errol Flynn, really got their wish to come true this year.
And like I said about the noir, there's even more in 26.
So that's the exciting part for me is I know there is some absolute top tier A titles, very famous titles, award-winning films that mean so much to people that I've been begging for the opportunity to get to give them a new shot at a new master.
and I got a lot of that approved.
And a lot of films that have been heavily requested will finally be available.
And people are going to hopefully be grateful and happy to able to put these things on their shelves.
So, the goal is to make the shelves so cramped that you have to get another shelving unit.
Yeah, well, that's what I've done.
That's what I've done to.
If so anybody watches the video from a year ago, you didn't see all these shelves behind me.
Well, now, George, I thought we'd talk about some highlights that you and I have both chosen for the year.
And I picked five and you picked five.
Well, you picked more than that, but we're just going to limit it to five.
So let's dive into some of those.
And I'll start here with a title that I just absolutely loved.
I watched this film multiple times.
You felt like you almost did this as a 4K, but this is Rhapsody in Blue, but it looks and sounds that good to me.
Like it's a 4K.
It's stunning, the restoration, the music, I mean, the film was just filled with that wonderful music.
And then the coup de grace, this additional 12 minutes of footage that you found and put into this film.
I mean, it comes off as something that I just really wanted to remind people and highlight.
I loved Rhapsody in Blue.
Stay with us.
We'll be right back.
Hey, are you a fan of the Warner Archive Animation releases?
Do you want to get the latest updates and news right away?
If you're on Facebook, we have just created a brand new Facebook group called the Warner Archive Animation Fans Group.
And we celebrate past releases, but really, we created this group.
because of all of the great releases that have come in this year and are anticipated in the coming
years. So there have been a lot of great releases from the Looney Tunes Collectors Vault series.
There's the Tom and Jerry releases. There's all of the Hanna-Barbera releases.
I mean, there's just a wealth of animation coming from the Warner Archive.
So we celebrate all of it.
It's a community with other people who enjoy these releases and want to talk about them
and share the latest news, reviews, and updates from the Warner Archive.
So if that sounds interesting to you, check out the link here in the podcast show notes,
and we hope to see you soon.
I felt the same way about it, and it was a thrill to be able to,
before the Blu-Rae came out by a few weeks,
to introduce it at the TCM Film Festival.
Because I knew the extra footage had been shot.
I had heard pre-recordings of the Porgy and Best sequence and knew it had been twice as long.
There had been documentation in many different areas that when Irving Rapper finished the film,
it was 12 minutes longer, not counting the 10-minute overture, which was just used in New York and Los Angeles.
The fact that we were able to finally confirm all that footage,
did exist meant bringing in every single element because all the elements were mounted on 18 reels
and what they did with some of the reels would be cut down to just like 250 feet wow uh they kicked the
reels the same they just cut the footage out of the reels so the original negative was the original
running time which i believe was 139 minutes and we ended up at 151 not counting the overture
but we were able to release the film the way the director had wanted it.
And I think I spoke at length about that when we did the podcast
because we had to find the production records from Irving Rapper,
the director finished the film at 151 minutes.
It went to the armed services before Jack Warner finally released it to the public
in September of 1945.
And our sound department really kicked.
Derrier with their fine balance of getting rid of any external cracks and pops, but keeping the
frequency response of the music for an optical monotrack to sound that dimensional, if you will,
is kind of remarkable. And I happen to think that the Warner Brothers sound, and this goes
This is not genre specific.
And it carried through from, I would say, the mid-30s all the way to Bonnie and Clyde.
You always knew the sound of a Warner Brothers movie.
There was something that they did in the sound department that made their audio tracks distinct.
Whether it's Rhapsody and Blue or a great Bugs Bunny cartoon, you hear the sound of the music stage.
And it's very distinctive and quite wonderful and very proud of that release.
And I'm so grateful that you mentioned it.
Yeah, you should be.
It's a, I just, like I said, I watched it, listened to it multiple times after receiving it.
Well, let's go to your first highlight.
And that is a TV series, Cheyenne.
Tell us why you picked that.
Well, I was particularly thrilled that we were able to bring
a really integral piece of the company's history,
the first Warner Brothers television hit series.
It began within the Warner Brothers Presents
Anthology series, which was the company
dipping its toe into the television water.
The Warner Brothers Presents Anthology series was basically a failure,
but the Cheyenne Episcayette
episodes were not and it became its own series over the course of seven seasons, all inclusive.
And the fact that we could put those out, scanned in 4K from the camera negatives,
with the bumpers that still existed within the negatives, and to be able to package each
season in its own case and not subject a consumer to one of these big blobby cases where the disc disc,
are stacked or whether they're, you know, you open it up and it all falls out on the floor,
Warner Archive will not do that.
And I think it's a beautiful package.
And I have a personal affection for the series, which I had not seen at all, because it was
already off the air by the time I was, you know, able to watch television and remember it,
It was really the release of the series on DVD at the beginning of the Warren Archive Collections DVD activities.
Season 1 had been released to retail stores.
We did seasons 2 through 7 in our early days.
And I think I spoke about this when we released it,
that I developed a close telephonic and once or twice in person relationship with Mr. Clinton Walker and his lovely wife.
Susan, I will always treasure the memory of when he would call and when we would talk.
And he was so delighted that we had the whole series out on DVD.
But the difference between what it looked like on DVD and what it looks like now with those beautiful Blu-rays.
And it's a very handsome set.
I see it's right behind it.
Yep.
I've had it up.
I've had it up all year.
It's very proud of that.
And we got so many very, very, very.
nice, you know, we get letters in the mail sometimes with a stamp and an envelope and everything.
But also through messaging, social media, people are just thrilled with the release and it
sold very well and it is open the door for more of the same.
That's great news.
It is a wonderful release to celebrate and we look forward to its successors.
Right. Yeah. Yeah, I so enjoyed it. And as you
mentioned, I've had it up on display all year because I love the packaging and how well you put that
together. Well, let me go to my second one that I wanted to highlight here.
Sure. And that is the beast of the city from 1932. And you didn't have as many pre-codes this
year as you did of some of the other genres, but this one I really enjoyed. And I mean,
I'm a sucker for these pre-codes anyway, because the restorations make them so, it's a
accessible. And I love the fact that because they're pre-code, they feel more modern in terms of
the grittiness, the modern sensibilities, just the way they handle sexuality. Like, there's just
so much to the precodes that are accessible to a modern audience if you can get past poor image
quality, poor sound quality. And your Blu-rays help us do that. And of course, this is an early
Gene Harlow. She's fantastic in it. And it's also kind of nice to mention because you've got
another one coming out here in just a matter of weeks, red dust. So it's going to be fantastic to get
another one. But I thought this one, The Beast of the City, was worth highlighting. I really
enjoyed this film. I think the world of it too. And as with other things we've been talking about,
there will be more precodes in 2026 than there were in 2025.
That's fantastic news.
All right, well, let's go to your second one, George.
And that is also a bit of an older film, and that's Gabriel over the White House.
Well, we released this.
I believe, if my memory is correct, it came out at the end of January of last year.
I think the last Tuesday in January.
That's usually when we do our releases is the last Tuesday.
day of each month. And it was a very prescient film and remains so today. It is basically about
a president who decides that he's going to basically be a dictator, but a dictator for good.
It is a political allegory. It is jaw-dropping when a lot of people see it because they can't
believe a film was that far reaching. I don't recall it running on local television in New York.
My first exposure to it was in film school. This is a tremendous film from Gregory
La Cava, the director of Stage Door. Walter Houston is amazing in it. You have to see it to
experience it, to believe it. It's remarkable. And it is a film that couldn't have been
released a year and a half later because the production code was enforced after July 1934.
This is very much a pre-code movie.
Yeah.
And it looks tremendous.
Yeah.
And what we had previously looked like garbage.
Right.
So it needed the upgraded.
It needed the TLC and I'm very proud of it.
Yeah.
And I kind of wanted to bring that up right after the beast of the city because it was literally
the next year fits that same era and the restoration on that one as well because of the age
really makes it accessible and I really enjoy that film. I agree with you the you know,
the topicalness after all these years still works, still stands when you watch that movie
and the performances were really good. So, well, let me jump here to my third film I wanted
to highlight. And this one, some people might.
to miss this one. I don't know. And that's part of why we want to highlight these. But this is
Bright Leaf. And this stars Gary Cooper, Lauren Bacall, and Patricia Neal. I mean, right there,
you know, that should get your attention. But this is an absolutely stunning restoration.
It's a southern melodrama about the tobacco industry. It brings the goods. This is directed by
our friend Curtis. And I just think that it's worth bringing back up because I'm a sucker for a good
epic film that doesn't pander to the audience, but it keeps you gripped. And then at the end,
it doesn't make it all easy. It's a real hidden jam in my mind. It's worth rediscovery for people.
I know it didn't necessarily get the best reviews when it came out in the day. But I think it's an
absolute gem of a film and the restoration you bring to it really highlights how good the
directing, the acting, and the script is in this film. Every year we kind of have a huddle with
the film foundation and we find out what films of ours they would like to see us work on.
It's then something that is the promotional support of the Film Foundation.
So we do the work, we fund it, but occasionally on some of the Film Foundation projects,
we have a champion director that loves a specific film,
as Mr. Spielberg did for the searchers and sat in with our colorist.
With Brightleaf, there was no one individual that was,
involved. But the Film Foundation said, we really would like to see you do a restoration on Bright Leaf.
And we said, that's an excellent idea. We've been thinking about it ourselves. And we went back
to the negative and scanned it in 4K and it was a gorgeous master. And with Curtis behind the camera
and a cast like that, you really can't lose. And a lot of films that didn't quite ring the bell
in their initial release are worth rediscovering.
And Brightleaf was certainly one of those.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I definitely recommend people if they want to do a blind buy.
All the ones we're highlighting are there,
but this Bright Leaf, don't let it fall off your list.
All right.
Third for you, George, and it was on my list too here,
but I love this release from earlier in the year,
and that's Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse from 1921.
Well, this was a project.
I think I spoke about this when we released it.
This was over three years of work.
Yeah.
And this was during its time in 1921 when it was released.
It was a huge blockbuster at the box office.
And it made a star of Rudolph Valentino.
But the film had gotten a photochemical,
restoration through the good people at PhotoPlay. Kevin Brownlow and his associates worked with
Turner Broadcasting, who at the time owned the pre-86 MGM Library before we bought Turner Broadcasting
in 1996. And I wanted to bring this 1921 film into a
the 21st century, the last master had been made in 1993 from that special 35 millimeter
print that the photoplay people had worked with and had shown theatrically as well as it had
been on TCM. The master was standard definition. Its origins were PAL. It was basically
only something we could use as a guide.
And is an incredible music score
written by the late great Carl Davis.
And this is the film that made Rudolph Valentino a star,
directed by Rex Ingram,
an underrated director who in the 20s did many impressive films.
We have so many great silent films in our library.
We would like to release more of them,
and I'm hoping that people who haven't yet gotten their copy of Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
will do so so that we can bring more silent films.
It's making everything as possibly perfect as it can be.
And I think there were a couple of skipped frames in the material,
but other than that, we were able to restore the image in a full throttle way.
way. There are other silent films that come to the market that still shows signs of film damage
and breathing and other things that are very distracting. I think the better that you can make a
film look like it would have when it came out, the better chance you have of engaging a modern
audience. And I think this presentation does that. And I'm hoping that we're going to
going to be able to follow it with more.
Well, the word superior comes to my mind.
It's superior than most, if not all, releases of films from that era, 1921.
When you watch it, when you look at it, you hear the sound.
And you've gone into great detail about why that is, the partnership that you had on that.
So it's...
We made sure that we were going back and forth sending things to London.
We wanted Kevin's approval and sign-off.
He is, I can't even find the right word.
The Oracle of the silent cinema, I think so highly of him and I respect him and like him so very much.
And I'm so grateful for all that he has done for all of us who love classic film.
I wanted to be able to put his name on it, photo play's name on it, with their blessing.
And that's one of the reasons what took so long is you got people 6,000 miles away with an ocean in
between and you want them to be able to see it under the best possible circumstances,
hear it under the best possible circumstances, and have them bless it.
And that's what we were able to do.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
If you haven't checked that one out, it is fantastic.
Okay, we'll go to number four for me.
and this one might catch people by surprise,
but I really wanted to highlight this monogram matinee volume one that you released.
And my take on this is the package,
the three films that you put in there.
And these films could, you know,
they could easily be forgotten if it isn't for the work that you,
the Warner Archive does to keep these and bring these back to people.
This Mississippi rhythm with Jimmy Davis,
I thought that was especially good.
I love the music.
I love that old time music that's in there and the performances.
The film is entertaining as they go down the Mississippi River.
That's one fact I love about these old films.
I wasn't alive at this time, you know, but I get to see what the world looked like,
at least through the lens of the story and the music of that era and everything.
I thought this one was worth highlighting for that reason.
The other two films with Johnny Mac Brown and Whip Wilson,
they have their moments.
The stunts and horsemanship in those are superb.
I love seeing that.
And you get clean cowboys.
Notice that in these cowboy movies,
nobody's ever got a dirty shirt or a pair of jeans.
You know, they all look so pressed.
but I joke.
The thing that I'm happy to say about monogram matinee is we said volume one,
and I was hoping it wouldn't be one and done.
I was hoping we could do more,
and it looks like we'll probably have at least one, if not two, possibly three.
And you said, forgotten.
These films, by and large, were forgotten.
I have documentation going back to the days when Allied artists was still in business and owned this library.
Allied artists and then Lorimar, who bought them,
and even Warner Brothers Television from the early 90s memorandums from executives involved saying,
the Warner Brothers Memos didn't say this, but the Loramar and Allied Artist memos did.
It's like there's not much potential here.
It's okay to let these rot.
We don't have to worry about preserving them.
It, in fact, was Warner Brothers that made the commitment to preserve them
and is continuing that commitment.
There are some really terrific films just on the monogram matinee side,
not to mention some of the great noires and other dramas that they did.
So there's more monogram coming in 20th.
That's great news. That's great news. And I think people will enjoy them. You know, here, you
probably haven't heard most of the titles for these films. Don't see that as a negative. See
that as something fun, something to, uh, to purchase and enjoy. I got a great, great entertainment
value out of these. The nostalgia alone was fantastic. And, uh, they've been priced, I think,
for what you're getting very reasonably as well.
Well, let's go to number four for you, George, and that is Intruder in the Dust from
1949. What caused you to want to highlight this one?
I think this film deserves to be better known. Once I discovered it, which was probably,
I would guess probably sometime in my 20s, I had seen it on television.
And I just couldn't really believe what I was seeing because it was a very,
very modern take on addressing prejudice and racial issues, sociological issues, but also in a way that
was responsible cinema. Clarence Brown had been a director at MGM for over 20 years, starting in
the Sun era, when he went to the MGM management and said, I want to make this film. It's based on a
novel by the amazing William Faulkner, and it deals with a black man who is accused of a crime
he did not commit, a theme that would be revisited into kill a mockingbird. It was shot in the
South, it was shot in Oxford, Mississippi. MGM shot on location, which was a rare thing for them to do.
Phenomenal performances by Juano Hernandez, who I, like, in everything I've ever seen him do,
I just can't, more people need to know about him. And he's phenomenal in the movie.
David Bryan is terrific in the movie as the lawyer who's going to defend him.
and the great late he passed away this past year, which was heartbreaking.
Claude Jarman Jr., who was more famous than anything for being Jody in the Yearling,
which was made three years before Trudeau in the Dust.
He was in his mid-teens when he did this film.
He's terrific in it.
And Elizabeth Patterson, who most people recognize as Mrs. Trump,
from The I Love Lucy Show.
She's wonderful in this movie, too.
They're really the key figures in telling the story.
And the film takes no prisoners.
It is not afraid.
Everybody associated with this movie was very proud of it.
It wasn't the kind of film that was designed to be a lighthearted MGM box office hit.
It was made to make a statement about social injustice.
And that's a timeless thought.
And I heartily urge anyone who hasn't seen this movie to see it.
Hopefully added to your Blu-ray collection, you won't regret it.
And it is the kind of film that you can watch more than once.
Because each time you see it, you'll find it's so meticulously nuanced in its production
that it is overwhelming in the...
the quality and care of the finished film.
I just can't say enough good things about it.
We did put it out early in the Warner Archive remastering program on DVD,
which did not have the kind of budget that allowed us to go back and do what we were doing
for the Blu-ray, go back and scan it 4K and make sure that every frame was immaculate.
We did a lot of films in the early days where we didn't have those kind of
budgets and when we can go back and revisit them and do them right with 2026, 2025 technology,
it's incredibly rewarding. So I'm really glad that we're talking about this film. It can't be,
I can't say enough good things about it. Yeah. Well, it's another terrific example of what the
Warner Archive can do within, being within the larger Warner Brothers, being that boutique label that
can bring films like this and all the ones really that we're talking about. But something like
this that would be difficult, wouldn't be large enough for the bigger home entertainment group to
release. And yet it's such a fantastic film. And then of course with the remastering that you're
doing on these, how accessible they are to watch now. So terrific film. I really, everything you
said, I enjoyed for the exact same reason. So it's a terrific film.
Well, we'll finish up here with mine and then we'll go to your final one, but we're going to jump to a few decades ahead from the ones we've been dealing with here.
And that is, for me, from 1989, lean on me. Now out on Blu-ray. I couldn't believe that it hadn't been out on Blu-ray considering how it's, you know, called in an important film of the time when it came out with an important actor, Morgan Freeman, playing the high school principal.
Joe Clark with themes and something that has been from the 90s, 2000s. This film has been mentioned
over and over again. So it's great that it finally came out in HD looking as good as it does
and now available for people to revisit, or if they've never seen it, to see it for the first
time looking this good because the story, the acting, everything really endures.
I couldn't agree with you more.
And 2026 marks the 20th anniversary of the Blu-ray disc.
So Blu-ray has been a viable format and remains a viable format for exceptional quality in film viewing.
And, of course, 4KUHD Blu-Rae builds upon that for even finer.
quality. But for certain films, like Lean on Me, when we scan the camera negative at 4K, as we did,
and have a beautiful master that is faithful to the film, it looks like it did when it opened.
What they used to do, they would make a print off the camera negative for one theater in Los Angeles
and one theater in New York, and that would be like the super,
duper places where, you know, executives and people involved in the film could see it projected
with that kind of quality. In regular mass theater runs, the prints would be made off
an internegative that was made from an inter-positive that was made from the original negative.
So you were a couple of generations away. This brings you as close to what it would look like
if you saw a release print made in 1989 off the camera negative. It feels very filmic,
feels very organic. It has the proper amount of film grain you would have seen on a first
generation print. Right. And I'm delighted we were able to get it out. With our library being
as huge and vast as it is, the amount of films that still linger in Standard
definition is staggering. And we're trying to eke away at that to finally make progress. And with
some films that never made it to Blu-ray, we can go the extra step like we did with I Society
and make it available on Blu-ray and 4K if the visuals and the very nature of the film require it.
It's just very exciting what is in store that we're able to build a library that isn't just focused in one particular decade or genre,
but span many decades and many genres and many different kinds of films.
There were other films this year like Clean and Sober had never been on Blu-ray.
And Michael Keaton's performance, if people only know him from,
You know, his recent work like Birdman or back to Batman in 1989.
I mean, man was incredibly gifted, talented, and he will always be Beetlejuice too.
So, like, it's endless what he is capable of.
And clean and sober was really the first film he did that showed the dramatic side.
Everybody had known him from Mr. Mom and Johnny Dangerously and all these, you know,
light-hearted films.
It is also one of the best films I know of that deals with addiction.
And it's really, really important.
And I bring that up just because we're not just focused on the 30s and the 40s and the 50s.
We want to address films from more recent decades as well.
And the mothership takes care of the Big A titles and the blockbusters that,
are going to be of greater mass appeal.
But we're there to be the boutique within the Biamoth
and look back at jewels in the library
and bring them back to audiences
or bring them for the first time to new audiences.
That's what we're here to do.
Yeah.
And the Warner Archive, because of that,
so many of your films are the gems of the library.
Yes, they're not the brand new,
you know, a four-quarterant blockbuster that's going to be out there that may or may not survive
10, 15 years of look back. A lot of these, like lean on me, though, they're standing the test
of time and it's great that they're coming out to Blu-ray. Let's finish up with your fifth one here,
George. It fits right into the discussion of what you just said too, because it goes back to
1961, but that's considered maybe a little bit more of the modern era. And that's
Splendor in the Grass. Why did you want to highlight this one? Well, this is one of those
films that people were saying this was a very, very acclaimed box office hit. It was
Natalie Woods' first substantial adult role. And it was the first film to interest.
introduce Warren Beatty to the big screen, and it was directed by Eliah Kazan, and written by
the great William Inge, how this was not on Blu-ray 18, 20 years ago when they were doing the
first runs of library essentials to be on Blu-ray. I don't really understand what everybody was
thinking around here. And I would raise my voice, hey,
What about?
And they're like, go away, kid, you bother me.
You know.
So we were trying to do this for a long time, but it meant going back to the original
negative.
This film has a very decided look to it.
And we needed to give it just that level of perfection.
There already was a high definition master of this floating around for television and
so forth and so on.
that just did not do the film justice.
And there was a rush to do a lot of high-definition masters
20 years ago, 22 years ago.
Most of those masters are not acceptable.
They're not acceptable to my standards
for what we were going to release as a Blu-ray disc
or as a 4K disc.
So if the opportunity arises,
and I'm able to get a title approved, and I've gotten a lot of titles approved for 26,
we're able to do justice and do things right that may not have been possible
with the technology of 20 years ago.
People were still working with CRT monitors in those days.
Our technology is moving in such an impressive, speedy direction,
that even something we did four or five years ago can be better now.
We're using all of our resources within the company to continue to improve
and really do justice to what I consider to be undoubtedly the most impressive library
within the entertainment industry by far.
So it's our honor to be stewards of that and to bring it to the people.
people so that there's a disc on their shelf with a nice package that they can be proud to own
in their library.
Well, George, we only picked five each.
That's true.
You had, how many releases did you have this year of films and animation and TV?
It's close to 80?
I think we're somewhere between 75 and 80 for 2025.
Yeah.
Not counting our multi-feature set.
Right.
We had started to do that before the pandemic,
and then it kind of wasn't possible to reignite the flame,
but we've reignited it big time,
and we're doing two or three of these a month as a way for people,
if they haven't got an Arrow Flynn movie in their library,
they can get six movies for a 59-98 list price,
and sometimes they go on sale for even less.
We're going to continue to do this
so that it provides an entry point
into a particular genre,
particular director, particular star, particular writer.
We've got all sorts of additional volumes planned.
If someone is going to buy,
hesitate to buy a film when it comes out because they think, like the Thin Man movies, they think,
oh, well, they're all going to be together and a set, so I'll wait. Don't wait because there may
never be a set. We have to have a film be in profit in order to put it into one of these collections.
I mean, fortunately, almost everything we do becomes profitable within six months
to nine months. And so the world of what is possible for these multi-feature sets is wonderful.
What I'm hoping is that people who aren't as aware of films that were made before their
time, that they will find a way, oh, this film noir set looks really great. It's got four
films in it. Oh, this Hitchcock set looks really great. It's got four films in it. And the
Price is very attractive, and the Bogart and Bacall set, which was one of the first we did.
That was before the pandemic.
It's an entry point, and then you're going to start saying, well, now I want to try this and
this and this.
And so for those who have yet to jump into a particular genre or performer or director,
the multi-feature sets provide a very economical way to build a home library of beautiful
Blu-rays. So that will continue as well as the new releases. I really want to make clear that when we
put these multi-features out, it's not taking a release slot away from a new title. It's a totally
separate process and nothing is going to interfere with us having loaded months. Once we get past the
you know, kind of semi slowdown that it occurred around the holidays,
we should be back up to snuff and ready to rock and roll for an amazing year this year.
Well, there's no way we could go through all of the fantastic releases from this year.
I'm glad we were able to go through at least 10 of them and then mention a few of the others as well.
We did talk about pretty much everything.
So if people want to hear more, they can go back and check Boulder podcasts with the announcements
and other things if they would like to check those out.
Those are always available.
But this is a fun episode, George, looking back and revisiting some of this.
So I always appreciate it when you come on the extras and we're able to do these.
So thank you again for doing that.
Thank you.
It's a pleasure.
And thank you to all the people who are supporting the Warner Archive Collection,
Words can't describe how much we appreciate your support.
It keeps us alive and thriving.
I hope you enjoyed that review of 2025.
George is so gracious to come on the experts and share his memories of the year
and so many of the stories of what went into this last year.
It really was a terrific year for the extras to be able to talk with George
about so many high-calibre releases.
So I really am thankful to him and to Warner Brothers for allowing us to do that.
If you have interest in learning more about these, I'll put in some links.
Obviously, I can't put in links to every single release from the year,
but I will put in links to the ones that we discussed in this podcast.
I'm sure many of you who have actively been buying the Blu-rays this year have your own top five,
and maybe on Facebook will ask you guys to share what some of your favorites were from this year coming up soon.
So if you're not on a Facebook page, you can find the link for that if you'd like to join either the Warner Archive and Warner Brothers group or our animation group, which is also available as well.
Well, looking ahead to 2026, George did mention that there is a lot coming for noir fans, for animation fans, and of course for classic TV and film fans.
That pretty much covers the whole shebang.
So I think there'll be something for everybody coming up.
You may want to subscribe if you haven't so that you don't miss any of our podcast.
as they come out when we're talking about these great releases.
Until next time, you've been listening to Tim Millard.
Stay slightly obsessed.
