The Extras - 6 Cinema Classics: The Warner Archive June Blu-rays
Episode Date: August 13, 2025Send us a textGeorge Feltenstein joins Tim Millard to discuss the Warner Archive's June Blu-ray releases, spanning from 1938 to 1961 and featuring newly restored classics across multiple genres.�...�� The Citadel (1938) stars Robert Donat as a doctor whose idealism is tested when he moves from a Welsh mining town to wealthy London practice• A Date with Judy (1948) showcases Jane Powell and Elizabeth Taylor in a vibrant Technicolor musical with restored color that eliminates previous transfer issues• The Enchanted Cottage (1945) tells the story of a disfigured war veteran and plain young woman whose love transforms how they see each other• Executive Suite (1954) features an all-star cast including William Holden and Barbara Stanwyck in a corporate drama that remains relevant today• His Kind of Woman (1951) pairs Robert Mitchum and Jane Russell in a noir that transforms into comedy when Vincent Price's character appears• Splendor in the Grass (1961) presents Natalie Wood's powerful performance and Warren Beatty's screen debut in Elia Kazan's emotionally raw drama about young love• All releases feature 4K scans from original camera negatives, with Warner Archive addressing previous transfer issues• Many releases include period-appropriate shorts, cartoons, radio adaptations, and other special features that enhance the viewing experienceAmazon purchase links:HIS KIND OF WOMAN (1951)SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS (1961)EXECUTIVE SUITE (1954)A DATE WITH JUDY (1948)THE ENCHANTED COTTAGE (1945)THE CITADEL (1938) The Extras Facebook pageThe Extras Twitter Warner Archive & Warner Bros Catalog Group 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 Malar, your host, and joining me is George Feltonstein
to review the June Blu-ray releases from the Warner Archive. Hi, George.
Hello, Tim. We're now in August, and we're just getting to talk about June. That's how busy
everybody's busy. We've got summer vacations and all of those good things. I actually finished watching
these quite a while back, but we just weren't able to get this scheduled. But I'm looking forward to
our discussion today because these are all terrific films. And I thought, George, we'd go in alphabetical
order because we do have six films that we're going to review. And that means the first one is the
1938 drama, The Citadel, starring Robert Donat and Rosalyn Russell.
And this is a really well-done story of the life of an English doctor who starts off,
you know, very young and idealistic in his first posting in a Welsh mining town.
And then the cares of the world.
You know, he's got a wife and, you know, money and these things.
They moved to London.
And that leads him to become a doctor to the rich, uh,
I entailed London. It's really well written and really well acted. This is a really very good
movie. And I'm assuming that you had not seen it before. I had not. So it's great to have a
first time viewing of a film like this where you have the improvements we've been able to make
with the new master, seeing it in high definition, clean. It changes people's perception
of these films when there is
such a huge jump in quality
and we're very proud of the disc.
The film itself has always had
a prestigious reputation
and it was based on a novel
written by A.J. Cronin
who was himself a doctor
like before Michael Crichton, there was A.J. Cronin.
And I'm just thrilled with the
to the disc. We've gotten so many
wonderful comments
from people that said I didn't even know
about this movie
and
they just appreciated everything
about it. And Donat
screen performances
are not plentiful.
He did a lot of work on stage and he also
had health issues and he died
relatively young
and so
yet he's always remembered for something like
the 39 steps, goodbye Mr. Chips.
This isn't as well known as Goodbye Mr. Chips or certainly the 39 steps, but this is one of
his finest films.
And I just feel that it's still relevant and very timely, even almost 90 years since the film was
released.
But it's such a work of quality.
and Rosalind Russell is wonderful in it,
and I'm just so pleased that you enjoyed it as much as I hoped you would.
Well, you released Goodbye Mr. Chips on Blu-ray, I think, about two years ago.
You know, that's a fabulous film, and he's a, what, professor there or teacher,
and this has a little bit of that feeling, but in the medical field now,
where it tells this kind of epic story of a life.
right and there's a romance involved as well and that is such a well done movie and i think the citadel
like like you said it should become more well known because it has that same level of wonderful
storytelling and the romance is built in there as well so it's a it's a very very well done
movie and i'm sure you know you got to give donat a lot of the credit for that because he just
inhabits these characters and brings them to life over as they age and mature and go through
different phases of life. So it's really good. And Rosalyn Russell, you know, she doesn't have
a huge part to play in it, but she's very strong there as his supportive wife. And then is this
one that they actually filmed in the UK, George? Absolutely. It was filmed at the MGM. They had
established an MGM British studio and this was I think the second film made it was like a joint venture
with another British company where MGM set up shop and the first film was a yank at Oxford
was Robert Taylor and in a small role a woman who would become very famous world
worldwide for the rest of eternity, in my opinion, and that's Vivian Lee. She was really first
noticed by a lot of American audiences because of a Yankee at Oxford. And that was a big
success. And the idea was MGM would send over one big star from Culver City and one of their
big directors. It was a recipe for success, but not too many films were made there because of the
outbreak of World War II. And that certainly put a very serious dent on things. But the films that
were made there, while this was still an active joint venture with the UK, part of what spurred that
was that there was a quota system of you could only release so many American films
if there was an equal amount of British films.
And I don't really, I'm not an expert on that part of the history.
But MGM was not the only studio to start making movies in England.
Warner Brothers had the Teddington studios.
But it was really, really quite important when,
they made a film at the British outpost, shall we say, the little group of them that were made
there before World War II, they're all very, very notable and impressive. They're four-star movies,
if you will. So I'm glad that you enjoyed it, and I'm also so happy that it looks as good as it does.
That does change one's ability to appreciate a great film.
Yeah, yeah.
And I think if you're a fan of Donat and if you're a fan of Goodbye, Mr. Chips,
you should buy this one because you're going to want to have it in your home collection.
And you have a couple of classic short subjects on there and a classic cartoon, the Daffy Dog.
Yeah.
We have two MGM shorts from the same year, which happened to be directed by the great Jacques Turner as he was working his way.
from short subjects to features.
You know, four years later, he'd direct cat people at RKO for producer Val Luton.
It's a picture that we're a little bit familiar with around here.
And we also have a Warner Brothers cartoon, the Daffy Duck,
because you got Daffy Duck and Porky Pig with a medical story.
I just thought it would be a little funny to put that on.
It's a very serious movie, but when you went to the movies,
those days, you'd see two short subjects in a cartoon and trailers. And that's why we try to
put content, shorts, cartoons, trailers of the era on these discs to try to recreate the
theatrical viewing experience. Yeah. Yeah, it's really good. Really good one. Highly recommended.
Well, next we have a date with Judy, and that's from 1948, the MGM Technicolor Musical. And that
stars a young Jane Powell and an even younger Elizabeth Taylor. They're both terrific in this film.
I love seeing them together. And it's a charming high school story of romance. And of course,
there's the drama there. And as with all of your technicolor restorations, it just looks and
sounds terrific and is a lot of fun. You know, grab your, your fun evening snacks or whatever. And
this is a really, really fun musical.
It's light entertainment, and I often say it's a film that is not really a musical as much as it's a film that has a lot of music in it.
It has a nice balance, but it is remarkable that Elizabeth Taylor was basically 15 years old in this movie and looks like, you know, I think everybody looked older back then, but she looks like a woman in her early 20s, basically.
She certainly doesn't look like a 15-year-old, but her beauty is arresting.
And how Technicolor captured her violet eyes is really remarkable.
But the real center of the film is Jane Powell, who was one of the leading ladies at MGM.
At that time, the time this movie was made, she was probably 18.
And I happened to think very highly of her, and I thought she was a very, very attractive
leading lady in terms of her multiple talents.
She was a good actress.
She was charming.
She was very, very pretty.
She was a wonderful singing voice.
But she also had a special quality on screen that made you want to love her.
And I think a lot of people.
I know speak of her like I'll you know my dad was a little kid when this movie came out
but he had a crush on Jane Powell you know and I don't think he was the only one you know
people certainly had crushes on Elizabeth Taylor but the relationship between Jane Powell
and Elizabeth Taylor in the film is also kind of it's kind of unique because
Elizabeth Taylor's character is almost the more advising, has a little more grounded wisdom than teenage Judy Foster.
But we also created the disc in such a way where it was based on a radio show, and we have an episode of the radio show on there.
And that gives you a taste of these characters were so popular on radio that MGM invested in buying the rights to make a movie.
with the characters.
That didn't happen very much.
Sometimes they were radio,
well, often there were radio adaptations of movies,
but it was very rare that they took radio characters
and put them into a film.
It did happen at RKO earlier in the 40s
with Fibber McGee and Molly
and the Great Gildersleeve.
But this was a really,
it was a one-shot attempt
and a very,
very financially successful movie.
And the other thing that takes advantage
all these technicolor restorations
that we've been working on,
one after another, after another,
people are starting to run out of adjectives
to describe how gorgeous they look.
I still am amazed by how wonderful they look,
especially because how they looked previously on DVD
coming from interpositives,
some of which were really badly made,
by bad labs. I'll just say it out loud. They were gray and the alignment of the
Technicolor Records was completely a wacky and people were ghosting and we're making up for
the sins of the past of others by doing these the right way. A date with Judy is just a
technicolor spectacle and who better for Technicolor than Carmen Miranda. And Carmen Miranda had been
under contract to Twainth Century Fox, probably for, I'm guessing, seven years, and when her
contract was up, she eventually ended up at MGM for two films, both of which were with
Jane Powell, the other being Nancy goes to Rio. And I'd love to be able to put that out
someday. But right now, a day with Judy was far more successful and very popular. And Carmen
Miranda is delightful in it. And I just recommend it for audiences of
all ages. Yeah, and along with her, there's Xavier Cougat, his orchestra. I mean, the music
that's really fun. And then Wallace Berry as the father of Judy. He's good. And then it was fun to see
Robert Stack, a very young, handsome Robert Stack in there as a love interest for, well, between
the two girls, actually. But he's so much older. But he plays it pretty well.
you know, pretty straight, but pretty well.
And just, it was fun to see him in there as well.
So there, oh, and of course, we have to mention the actor, Scotty Beckett, who plays Ugi Pringle.
Ugi Pringle.
Yeah.
So it's a, it's a lot of fun, and there's some good performances in there.
And, you know, going back to the Technicolor, people are now just, you know, they're going to just assume.
It's got that Warner Archive Stamp Technicolor.
it's going to look great.
And I know you hate to take things for granted,
but in a way, it's a huge compliment to you, George,
and the Warner Archive and Warner Brothers,
that that's the new standard.
Well, we're very proud of that.
And again, this is very much a group effort.
I every year go to the preservation team and say,
we need to do these films.
They look dreadful.
and that starts the process.
We're fortunate where the technical or negatives still exist
or exist in, let's say, a partial form.
There are certain films, very important films.
I've talked about this before.
Singing in the Rain burnt in that awful fire in 1978
except for one real.
So we have to work from positive separation.
that were thankfully made on those films.
But in many cases, the full film does exist.
And when that happens, the results are fantastic.
And we never take it for granted.
But I do want to, again, I constantly harp on this,
but it's very much a team effort.
Preservation team works very hard on this.
then MPI steps in and the way we use our proprietary technology to create an alignment that
is down to the pixel, it's just a knockout. And every film deserves to be treated with the most
respect we can give it, regardless of what the film is. And when we're working with these
very popular of their era.
Technicolor films, it's an extra special treat, for sure.
Yeah.
And you've loaded this disc with a fair amount of extras as well.
You've got classic Tom and Jerry Professor Tom and the MGM musical short Martin
Blocks musical Merrygo Round short.
You've got audio episodes in there.
There's just a lot plus the trailer.
So it's a lot of fun to go through those as well.
So this is a terrific disc overall.
One of the things that I'm particularly happy about is I've been working with a lot of these films for quite some time in different formats.
And there was a DVD of a date with Judy, and it did have some of those extras on there.
But there's an extra on here, aside from the date with Judy radio show, there's that interview with Jane
Powell, and MGM did these promotional interviews that would be sent to radio stations,
and they were put out on a two-sided 78 record.
One side was MGM contract player, Dick Simmons, not a famous person,
who would interview the star, and then, of course, the star would answer his questions.
The other side of the disc would be open-ended
so that it would be like Joe Smith at WXX Radio.
And I'm speaking today with Jane Powell,
star with the date with Judy.
And then so they'd send out the record with a script
in case a local host wanted to speak where Dick Simmons was.
So many of these discs
we don't have.
And we've gone to private collectors
and various other sources
to try and add them to our releases.
It's been doing so for a long time.
But I love sharing a little tidbit
that we just found
amongst our corporate archives,
I would say several hundred discs.
that I didn't know existed.
Basically, nobody knew.
They opened up a box and found all of these treasures,
most of which not labeled.
They have codes on them that we don't have a reference to.
So I did find both Elizabeth Taylor and Jane Powell.
Unfortunately, the Elizabeth Taylor disc was deteriorated to a degree where we
couldn't include it because sentences were not completed.
These were acetate discs, and the more they were played, the more the sound would go away.
So a lot of work went into just putting that little five-minute interview on there,
but it's a piece of history.
It's a piece of time.
And whenever we can add something new, and whenever we're discovering we have something
that we didn't know we had.
I love that after all this time, we're still finding things.
And to be able to share them with the fans, when they buy their discs, they're getting a piece of history.
And that's something that I'm particularly proud of.
Yeah, that's exciting.
That's just a great release.
I'm sure that people are loving it who have got it.
And if you haven't got it yet, I think you'll really enjoy it for the Technicolor and the fun of the story and all these extras that are on there.
Well, next, George, we have a 1945 romantic war drama called The Enchanted Cottage, and that stars Robert Young and Dorothy McGuire.
And I did not know anything about this film, but this is a wholesome, delightful film that explores the romance between a disfigured war veteran and a plain, homely young woman who,
never felt attractive in her life, doesn't think she's going to ever get a husband.
And they meet at this cottage, which is kind of like a metaphor for a safe place where love can grow.
And, you know, it's definitely said in its time right after the war, but the story of beauty being in the eye of the beholder is timeless.
And very, very important, actually, because not only is it,
timeless, but it was representative of when this movie was made in 1945, that Dorothy McQuire,
who is a very beautiful woman, was planed down if that was the proper way of saying it.
They tried to minimize her beauty.
But the story of who you are inside your outside, you're out.
Shell, that is what made Oliver fall in love with Laura in this movie.
There are characters with Robert Young and Darth and McGuire.
It's based on a play by Sir Arthur Wing Pinheiro, and it was filmed as a silent movie
in 1924 with Richard Bartholmus.
And RKO was keen on remaking the movie, not only with sound, but also in a more
contemporary setting, as it were, because Robert Young's character has scars from World War II.
This film was released at the end, or toward the end of World War II.
So the film was so popular that RKO decided to re-release it a few years later, which was not unusual for them.
And what was also not unusual for them was they decided to trim the running time.
And for years, the film was truncated in its length.
The main titles had been replaced and updated.
So we had been distributing the complete version from inferior materials.
And that was all the more motivation for us to go back to the camera negative,
fix the titles as they were from another nitrate element,
and put back in the scenes that have been taken out from another nitrate element.
And it's really kind of, you can't tell where the camera negative ends
and the second generation element begins because they were so beautifully matched
by our colorists at Warner Brothers Motion Picture Imaging.
We're very proud of the release.
And I think it's a film people really, really need to discover and see
because it's not that famous.
But it has been a very strong seller for us,
even when we put out our Warner Archive DVD back in 2009,
which frankly didn't look very good,
but that was the best we had to work with.
So having this restoration now,
which has also preserved the film in a way
it hadn't been preserved before,
it means it will look great and sound great
for many, many years to come.
And that's the important part, the byproduct of our work.
Yeah, it's a universal story.
And that's why I think it probably is so popular that people want to own it because we all crave love and we all crave companionship.
That's human nature for that.
And this story really does a terrific job of telling that story in an entertaining way.
And you have some nice extras on here as well that round out the difference.
with the audio broadcasts and the trailer on here.
Well, and what I like about the radio shows is the first one is pretty straightforward.
Lux Radio Theater with Robert Young and Darth McGuire reprising their roles
and the whole visual aspect of it of beauty versus unattractive.
It has to be handled in a different way when there's no visual.
But the other radio program we have, which is half the length, it's only a half hour, with Joan Fontaine from a General Electric Theater broadcast, the early 50s, takes a very different tack in telling the same story.
And it's interesting to compare the two.
But it's a terrific disc.
We're very proud of it.
And it's selling really well, which makes us very happy.
That leads the way to more restorations.
Yeah, yeah.
It's one of those hidden gems that coming out on Blu-ray looking so good is going to hopefully
increase the audience beyond just the fans of the DVD.
Well, next we jump to 1954 to a very different kind of film.
This is a corporate drama, executive suite, and boy, does it have a cast, George.
I mean, the lineup of talent in this film.
Let's go down here.
William Holden, June Allison, Barbara Stanwyg, Frederick March, Walter Pigeon, Shelley Winters.
I mean, it is a terrific cast, and it's directed by the sure-handed Robert Wise.
He does a terrific job.
I thoroughly enjoyed it because it feels very modern in its storytelling.
Well, this was when I just couldn't wait for us to release because it's got just when the movie opens.
and they just flash all the star's names one after the other after the other.
It's so exciting.
And what I love about this film is it was based on a book by Cameron Hawley,
but the person who adapted the book was none other than one of my favorite screenwriters, Ernest Lehman,
who wrote the screenplay for Sweet Smell of Success
and most notably adapted the King and I
and West Side Story and the sound of music
from stage musical to cinema.
And then he also wrote this Hitchcock movie,
if I can remember the name of it.
Carrie Grant isn't...
Of course, I'm joking.
North by Northwest, which is my favorite Hitchcock movie,
that was Ernest Lehman.
So you had the combination of Robert Wise and Ernest Lehman,
who would later collaborate on so many things.
I think this was their first collaboration.
And then to add that cast of just so many great stars,
really at the top of their form,
And you have a reunion of Barbara Stanwyck and William Holden.
And Barbara Stanwyk was the leading lady in William Holden's first important film,
Golden Boy in 1939, 15 years before this.
And it's also a look at corporate America of 1954
that isn't that different from what is corporate America in 2025.
Some of those issues are still present.
I think, you know, I don't want to get into a political discussion,
but it's, it kind of lays out there a lot of the machinations that go on within a corporate structure.
Something I would have no possible experience in living through.
A little private joke there.
But in any event, everybody in the film was excellent.
I think Robert Wise was just starting to expand from his period at RKO into being more defining of his excellence as a director.
And handling that cast, making the decision to have the movie, have no music.
It was a very unconventional film deciding to take a cast like that and a big important project like that and to make the choice to film it in black and white.
Everything was starting to go cinemascope at that time and they wisely decided to keep it in a more traditional what is close to a,
185, it actually was MGM's widescreen, meaning non-cinemascope, but not Academy Square,
MGM's ratio, when they decide to make films in widescreen, was 1.75.
And if people had seen this movie on our DVD or they had seen it on TV,
they would be used to seeing it as a traditional 4x3 open-mat film.
We have, there was a laser disc in the late 90s that was in the 1.75 aspect ratio, but our DVD was not.
And thankfully, this is a 4K scan off the camera negative, and it's just a stunning disc visually.
The audio is monophonic as it should be from that time, but it comes from magnetic sources, so it's really, really clear.
And the storytelling, the performances, everything about it is riveting.
You really don't know how things are going to wind up.
I don't want to give any spoilers, but there is a big event in the storytelling at the beginning
of the film that starts the trajectory of the storytelling and what is going to happen
at this corporation after there's been this significant event.
and I can't recommend this film more highly.
It is a true classic, and it holds up so well, despite all the changes in the world 71 years later,
and especially in corporate America or the world corporately, it holds up very, very well.
And I think it's a testament to Wise and layman.
And, you know, the fact that they went on to such success together in future films,
it just lets you know the talent that was behind the creation of this,
what turned out to be a very successful motion picture.
Yeah, the talent from the camera you've mentioned.
I do want to kind of focus in on Frederick March, who plays the antagonist so well in this,
you know, to William Holden's character.
very, very good to see that.
And then, of course, the talent behind the camera, you put that all together.
And, you know, I was just thinking, all of the great films you just mentioned that, you know, Ernest Lehman has worked on and the two of them worked on together.
And Robert Wise, I mean, just what filmographies they have.
This one, I don't know if it's as well known as some of the others that, you know, that they're known for.
but people should become aware of this one.
Very entertaining.
Looks terrific, as you mentioned, your new HD Master there.
And some interesting extras you have on here.
Well, we have a feature commentary from Oliver Stone.
Mr. Stone didn't direct the movie,
but he was such a fan of the movie that he wanted to speak about it.
And we're fortunate to have that on the disc.
And we have a Tom and Jerry cartoon and a Pete Smith short
and the trailer, and it's a terrific disc and a terrific movie,
and it really belongs in any serious film lover's library.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Well, next we have a noir,
and that is the 1951 RKO film, His Kind of Woman,
starring Robert Mitchum and Jane Russell,
and also Vincent Price.
Now, it's always fun to watch Mitcham and Russell
because of their on-screen chemistry,
but this film has a little lighter tone
because of Vincent Price's character
and what he brings to this film
playing a Hollywood star obsessed with guns
at this resort.
But overall, it just is a lot of fun
this film, and I'm sure it's very popular with fans,
but it's great to see this new HD Blu-ray.
And another 4K scan off the camera negative.
When we release this film on DVD,
20-someod years ago,
we recorded a commentary
with film historian
Vivian Sobchak.
It's a great commentary.
Unfortunately,
the film element that the
old master was from was missing
frames here and there.
So it was very
difficult to maintain sync.
So in order to keep
the commentary, we had
to present the commentary
synchronized to the old SD
master.
So that just lets you know how important we felt that commentary was because her research
into the torturous film production phase of this movie, she gets into great detail about.
This was made when Howard Hughes was the owner of and running RKO and E.O.
And every once in a while, he would get very involved with the making of a movie and the changing of a movie.
And especially because Jane Russell, he basically was the overlord of her career.
And he'd made all the decisions on Jane Russell movies, especially.
and so there was
there were many changes made to the film
to the screenplay, there were reshoots
and it almost feels like two different movies
and the commentary kind of explains the background
of how it ended up that way
but I say it's a film noir
that ends up turning into a comedy
especially when Vincent Price shows up
and
Price's character Lampoon's Hollywood stardom in quite a unique way.
And I think that's part of the attraction of this film.
But when Russell and Mitchum were together on screen, it was electric.
And they made other films together, and we hope to be revisiting those in the future.
But we've got to start at the beginning.
and his kind of woman was their first together,
and it's irresistible fun.
It's a cult favorite because it's so wacky at times,
and it really can't decide what it wants to be as a film,
but it's entertaining all the way through,
and that's what's important.
Yeah, I mean, it starts off being very more,
very traditional noir in terms of the setup
and everything, we won't spoil anything,
but the setup of the gangsters and the money,
and you know and everything but then it like you say it just expands out from that more traditional
serious noir to have all of this broader fun that the vincent prize character brings into it so
yeah i mean it's one that you want to own i mean and it looks now so terrific it's one that
people are going to want to have and i'm sure that people who have gotten it already are
really enjoying it but highly recommended to everybody else to get his kind of woman well the last
film we're going to talk about today, not purposefully saved to last, but this is a very
important film.
Oh, yeah.
A wonderful film, and that's Splendor in the Grass from 1961, and that stars, I mean,
Natalie Wood, I mean, this performance, we'll talk more about that, but she's fantastic.
It introduces Warren Beatty, who is, you could just tell the star written all over him when he's
on screen and of course the director lia kazan who is one of our most important directors
especially there at warner brothers without question and this is a film that you know i've been
begging uh those you know in order for me to get a project greenlit i have to you know make
my pitch and uh get people on board because it's a big investment every time we
undertake one of these kinds of projects, we did have an HD master of splendor in the
grass that was done somewhere between 15 and 20 years ago that was completely out of whack.
The nighttime scenes at the beginning was day for night, and it looks like that's the middle
of the afternoon.
It just was wrong in so many ways, and that's the way the film looked.
but what we need to do is go back to the negative,
scan it 4K, and the results are just stunning in terms of the visuals.
And, of course, the acting in this movie,
when you've got Kazan and you have an original screenplay
written by the great William Inge,
it is as honest and laid bare the pain of,
youthful romance and especially what Natalie Wood's character goes through. This was one of her
greatest performances and it wasn't her first performance in a quote unquote adult role and she's
playing a high school student in the movie. But the subject matter is very adult and the
conflict of it's obvious that Warren Beatty wants to
to take their relationship to a new level,
and now the Wood's character is fearful,
and there's the whole dynamic of parental dysfunction,
and it's written so well by Inge,
and directed as really very few people could direct like Kazan,
and you have all the ingredients to make a classic.
This was an instant classic.
It's also very successful,
at the box office, and it established Natalie Wood as a great adult actress, and the following
year, you know, she starred along Rosal and Russell and Ripsy, and she also the same year
as Splendor the Grass came out, West Side Story came out, and she was terrific in all those
films. And Warren Beatty, his screen career, introducing Warren.
Beatty with this film made a huge impression and it was like instant screen charisma uh on on screen
and uh a really substantial box office success critical success audience favorite and it holds up
extremely well i can't believe the movie is nearly 65 years old um
Right now, as we record this, it's 64.
But it has a very contemporary sensibility in terms of the respect for the written word and how it's performed and how it's acted.
You still had the restrictions of the production code hanging loosely.
It was being frayed and people like.
Zan were chipping away at it, trying to make more realistic adult films.
But here, I don't think they really compromised in the storytelling.
And that's why the film remains so powerful and it looks so terrific.
Yeah, yeah.
And Pat Hingle, as the father, Ace Stamper, he does a terrific job just, you know,
The force, anybody who has had a father like that, very successful, very strong.
It's so true.
The performance, very good there by the parents.
And that really, I mean, you have to have that as well as the young people.
Pat Hingle is not as well known today.
He passed away quite some time ago.
But he was a member of the actor's studio.
he was a New York stage actor.
Kazan brought together, you know, many people for this movie.
The real name attraction was Natalie Wood.
Warren Beatty was introducing Warren Beatty.
But many of the other roles, including Audrey Christie,
as Natalie Wood's mother, Pat Hingle, as you mentioned,
a very young Sandy Dennis in a little.
a small role.
They're all the actors in this movie.
They're really superb.
And because I feel Kazan's fingerprints all over its excellence,
that's why we decided to add the documentary,
L.A. Kazan, a director's journey.
And I think it's such a wonderful thing to have that.
on this disc
just to give more people
I don't want people to forget
Kazan you know
and the impact he had on the
stage and the screen
as a director
it just can't be overstated
how important it was
so
I've been wanting to put this movie out
for a very long time but we needed
to go back
to scratch, basically, to create a beautiful new master.
And I think our talented colorists at Warner Bros. Motion Picture Imaging did a beautiful job.
We're very proud of the release, and it's selling like hotcakes, which I'm glad to say.
Yeah, and going back to that documentary, I watched the whole thing.
It's well worth watching because it gives you that big picture.
on Kazan's life, and you hear from him directly, and how he developed and what he, his philosophy was
about directing and how he approached it. Terrific. Really gives you great insight. And let's hope that
there continues to be releases like this that can make people aware of Kazan and keep his
legacy going because
such an important
director, his films of the
50s and 60s, that era
changed filmmaking, along with others,
changed filmmaking to
the more modern style
filmmaking that we know.
The psychological complexity
of his storytelling,
the truthfulness,
it's terrific,
it's wonderful.
This is one people should own
and I'm so glad it's out on.
on Blu-ray.
I agree with you, Tim.
You addressed its excellence eloquently.
Thank you.
Well, this is a terrific month.
All these films, I enjoyed watching all of them, George.
This is a terrific month.
I'm glad to hear that others feel the same way
and that many of them are selling very well.
And I hope our discussion can help those who don't know these films
to think about looking into them and picking these up
because this is a terrific group of films in June.
I think you make a very good point because my takeaway of what you're saying,
you know, every year there are dozens and dozens of new movies that come into our world.
And a film like this is now over 60 years old.
It was hugely important when it came out.
It's our responsibility to make sure that these great.
films continue to be not only seen, but available in the best quality. And we're working as
quickly as we can, but we can't rush anything. But we have so many in production right now.
And every time I can check one off the list, we finally got that done. What we have yet to do
is overwhelming and enormous, but it's also tremendously exciting.
And I'm looking so forward to hearing how people react when they see what we've got coming in the future.
There may be some valleys where we're not in any particular month where we don't have like a stellar lineup like this in June or that we had in July and that we're having in August.
but if a month seems less in some ways,
that only means the next month is going to have more.
And I think we've proven that this year.
We're more than halfway through the year.
And we're halfway through in our discussions here on the extras.
But I think 2025 is going to continue to be interesting and exciting to many different audiences.
and we've got some great stuff in store for the rest of the year as well as next year.
So much to look forward to in our discussions here on your show.
And I'm so grateful for the opportunity to hear what you think.
Because I'm always excited to hear your reactions after we've spent so many months
working on a particular film or project and to see what you think about it
and to share those thoughts here on your podcast.
It's always something I look forward to.
While we're talking, I do want to address kind of what is now an elephant that's left the room.
But in the last few weeks, particularly with our July releases, we were having problems, not internally, but some retailers were not making our releases.
available when they were supposed to be available, which was very frustrating.
And we believe that problem has now been rectified.
But I want all of our Faithful Warner Archive Collection consumers to know that we're doing our very best.
This was not a replication issue.
This was a communication issue that had no fault with us nor our distribution
partners, it was on the retail side, and happily, I think those problems are now behind us.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's good to hear.
You know, these little bumps happen, but the fact is the delay, I think we're talking about,
we're only talking about a little delay.
Yeah.
We're not talking a week, two weeks, maybe three weeks, delay, because most of that delay was
just in the pre-order process, not in the actual shipping.
that the shipping part is just a small delay.
I will say that we did everything we could to try to get this resolved.
So did our partners at Allied Von Entertainment who bring our product to market as our distributor.
And the partnership has been an excellent one for 16 years.
and I'm so grateful to their efforts on our behalf to get this remedied so that the consumers out there get the discs they've been looking for and hoping for.
And when we hit these little bumps in the road, we do our best to iron them out as quickly as possible.
Yeah.
Well, George, another terrific discussion.
Thank you so much for coming on and talking to me and letting the fans hear your thoughts.
And it's always a lot of fun.
well thank you tim as always it's a pleasure and we're going to have a lot more to talk about
in the coming weeks well as i mentioned in the podcast i was on vacation and that is the reason
for the slight delay since our last podcast airing but i'm back from vacation now and i have a pile
of blu-rays from the warner archive to review which i'm looking forward to and that's for july
as for the june releases i do have links if you have not ordered your copy to purchase you
purchase each of these great films. And as George mentioned, there was a slight hiccup for the
July pre-orders. So if that deterred you or in any way caused you to have to wait,
please get your orders in now so that the Warner Archive doesn't have a big drop-off in July
of their sales because each month does fund the continuing and ongoing work of restoration
and remastering for Luray. So we need to be sure and continue that support for the
Honor Archive so there isn't any drop off in sales so that George and the team over there
can continue to do the great work that they do to bring these classic animation and classic
films to all of us so that we can enjoy them. Until next time, you've been listening to Tim Millard.
Stay slightly obsessed.
Hi, this is Tim Millard, host of the extras podcast, and I wanted to let you know that we have a new
private Facebook group for fans of the Warner Archie.
and Warner Brothers catalog physical media releases.
So if that interests you, you can find the link on our Facebook page
or look for the link in the podcast show notes.