Tag: Norman Jewison

  • Film Review: Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen

    Film Review: Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen

    STUDIO: Zeitgeist | DIRECTOR: Daniel Raim
    THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: April 29, 2022
    SPECS: NR | 88 min. | Documentary

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes):
    Movie

    Nearly 60 years after its theatrical premiere and 50 years following the release of its 1971 film adaptation, the musical Fiddler on the Roof remains as beloved, fresh and vital as it did when it first opened at Broadway’s Imperial Theater in New York City in 1964.

    Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen, directed by Daniel Raim (Harold and Lillian: A Hollywood Love Story), focuses on the film version of the landmark show, which won a Tony Award for Best Musical and eight other Tonys back in ’65.

    Fiddler on the Roof is based on the story Tevye and his Daughters and other tales by Sholom Aleichem, the central figure of early 20th century Yiddish literature. It tells of the lives of the poor dairyman Tevye and his family in the village of Anatevka in the Western region of the Imperial Russian Empire circa 1905.

    Norman Jewison, director of the 1971 film version of Fiddler on the Roof (which he deems a “spiritual and creative quest”), leads the charge of interviewees and vintage footage and stills in this  insightful and very entertaining doc, which is narrated by Jeff Goldblum. The non-Jewish Canadian-born filmmaker Jewison got his start helming live television in the Fifties and Doris Day movies in the early Sixties, before moving on to such substantial films as the Oscar-winning In the Heat of the Night (1967) and The Thomas Crown Affair (1968). Regarding Fiddler, he only has positive memories of the production, which was largely shot outside the city of Zagreb in the former Yugoslavia production and at London’s Pinewood Studios.

    Director Norman Jewison (r.) and actor Topol on the set of 1971’s Fiddler on the Roof as seen in Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen

    Jewison’s pleasant remembrances are seconded by other recent interviews with Israeli-born actor Topol, who portrayed Tevye, and actresses Rosalind Harris, Michele Marsh and Neva Small, who played his daughters. Harris has the most vivid recollections of the group, particularly as she recounts Jewison’s reaction to the time she and her celluloid sisters decided to “go Method” and groom themselves like early 20th century Russian women. (“Go shave those pits right now!” was Jewison’s bellowing on-set reaction.)

    Other insightful commentary on the show’s origin and film’s production is offered by lyricist by Sheldon Harnick, who was one-third of Fiddler‘s creative triumvirate along with the composer Jerry Bock and book writer Joseph Stein. (Of the three, Harnick is still alive and kicking at 97.)

    Fiddler on the Roof was a box office hit and nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director for Jewison, Best Actor for Topol, and Best Music and Scoring Adaptation for John Williams, who won the award and is also on board to comment on his work on the film.

    Jewison would be awarded an Oscar years later (an Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award in 1999) but based on what he says here, Fiddler‘s production appears to have been an even more rewarding experience for him. 

    His best story: As Jewison has recounted many times over the years, in 1970, he was summoned to a meeting with United Artists studio chief Arthur Krim, who asked him if he would direct the film version of Fiddler on the Roof.

    Jewison took a breath and responded, “What would you say if I told you I was a goy?”

    After a moment’s hesitation, Krim told him that the offer was still good.

    The punchline to that infamous exchange is that the not-quite-Jewish Jewison went on to further prove his diversity with his very next film project: 1973’s Jesus Christ Superstar.

    Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen opens at New York City’s Angelika Theater on Friday, April 29 while also rolling out to theaters and Jewish film festivals across the country.

  • Blu-ray, DVD Release: The Art of Love

    Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Sept. 22, 2020
    Price: DVD $13.99, Blu-ray $17.99
    Studio: Kino Lorber


    From director Norman Jewison (The Thomas Crown Affair, Rollerball) comes the oh-so-Sixties comedy The Art of Love (1965) starring James Garner (Support Your Local Sheriff), Dick Van Dyke (Mary Poppins), Elke Sommer (Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number), Angie Dickinson (Dressed to Kill), Ethel Merman (It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World) and Carl Reiner (Ocean’s Eleven).

    Having failed to establish himself as a painter in Paris, Paul Sloane (Van Dyke) decides to return home to his wealthy girlfriend, Laurie Gibson (Dickinson). His roommate, Casey Barnett (Garner), argues that Paul should fake his own suicide, which will make his paintings much more popular. With Paul presumably dead, demand for his work soars. When Casey grows wealthy selling it off and begins courting Laurie, an angry Paul frames his deceitful friend for his murder.

    Shot in Technicolor by the great Russell Metty (The Stranger) with a screenplay by co-star Reiner, The Art of Love is based on a story by Richard Alan Simmons (Juggernaut) and William Sackheim (First Blood).

    Here’s the bonus round-up:
    -Brand New 2K Master
    -NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historian and Critic Peter Tonguette
    -Theatrical Trailer
    -Optional English Subtitles

    Buy or Rent The Art of Love
  • Blu-ray, DVD Release: In the Heat of the Night

    Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Jan. 29, 2018
    Price: DVD $17.97, Blu-ray $26.61
    Studio: Criterion


    In the 1967 drama In the Heat of the Night, Philadelphia detective Virgil Tibbs (Sidney Poitier, The Slender Thread) passes through the backwoods town of Sparta, Mississippi and becomes embroiled in a murder case. He forms an uneasy alliance with the bigoted police chief (Rod Steiger, On the Waterfront), who faces mounting pressure from Sparta’s hostile citizens to catch the killer and run the African American interloper out of town.

    Director Norman Jewison (Rollerball) splices incisive social commentary into this thrilling police procedural with the help of Haskell Wexler’s vivid cinematography, Quincy Jones’s eclectic score, and two indelible lead performances-a career-defining display of seething indignation and moral authority from Poitier and an Oscar-winning master class in Method acting from Steiger.

    Winner of five Academy Awards, including one for Best Picture, In the Heat of the Night is one of the most courageous Hollywood films of the civil rights era.

    Criterion’s new Blu-ray and DVD editions contain the following:

    * New 4K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
    * New interview with director Norman Jewison
    * New interview with actor Lee Grant
    * New interview with Aram Goudsouzian, author of Sidney Poitier: Man, Actor, Icon
    * Audio commentary from 2008 featuring Jewison, Grant, actor Rod Steiger, and cinematographer Haskell Wexler
    * Turning Up the Heat: Movie-Making in the ’60s, a 2008 program about the production of the film and its legacy, featuring Jewison, Wexler, producer Walter Mirisch, and filmmakers John Singleton and Reginald Hudlin
    * Quincy Jones: Breaking New Sound, a 2008 program about Jones’s innovative soundtrack, including its title song sung by Ray Charles, featuring interviews with Jones, lyricists Alan and Marilyn Bergman, and musician Herbie Hancock
    * Trailer
    * An essay by critic K. Austin Collins

    Buy or Rent In the Heat of the Night
  • Blu-ray Review: The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)

    Blu-ray Review: The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)

    STUDIO: Kino Lorber | DIRECTOR: Norman Jewison | CAST: Steve McQueen, Faye Dunaway, Paul Burke, Jack Weston, Yaphet Kotto, Biff Maguire
    RELEASE DATE: Feb. 13, 2018 | PRICE: DVD $16.25, Blu-ray $19.99
    BONUSES: commentaries, interviews, vintage materials
    SPECS: R | 102 min. | Crime drama romance | 1.85:1 widescreen | stereo | English subtitles

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes): Movie | Audio | Video | Overall

    On the eve of its 50th Anniversary, Kino Lorber re-issues 1968’s The Thomas Crown Affair with a brand new 4K restoration.

    Not surprisingly, Norman Jewison’s (Rollerball) luscious 1968 romantic crime thriller has never looked better, serving up sparkling images of Steve McQueen’s brilliant, too-cool millionaire bank thief and gorgeous Faye Dunaway’s I’m-gonna-get-him-while-falling-for him insurance investigator.

    The film’s famed multi-screen/splitr-screen sequences (led by a razzle-dazzle robbery set piece), cinematographer Haskell Wexler’s (Medium Cool) top-notch set-ups (whatta chess match!) and Michel Legrand’s (The Umbrellas of Cherbourg) sexy score (featuring the Oscar-winning song “Windmills of your Mind” sung by Noel Harrison) are also outstandingly served in this new edition.

    The discs’ supplements recycle Jewison’s commentary track from a previously released edition, an interview with titles designer Pablo Ferro (Dr. Strangelove) and a 1967 on-set featurette. The only new supplement is a fresh 20-minute interview with the 91-year-old Jewison, who enthusiastically reminds us that the film is purely “style over content,” and then, referring to meddling studio execs, that “the director is the sole creator of the film.”

     

    Buy or Rent The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)
  • Blu-ray Re-release: Rollerball

    Blu-ray Release Date: June 14, 2016
    Price: Blu-ray $29.95
    Studio: Twilight Time


    The 1975 sci-fi-tinged action-sports film Rollerball, one of the Seventies great dystopian future-shock flicks, receives a re-issue on Blu-ray from Twilight Time following a sell-out of its initial 2014 pressing.

    In the future, there will be no war. But there will be Rollerball.
    In the future, there will be no war. But there will be Rollerball.

    Rollerball posits a future—in this case a not-so-far-away 2018—in which war has been replaced by the titular game, a gladiatorial spectacle of violence that helps keep the global populace entertained and anesthetized. Emerging from this hard-hitting “sport” is a champion, Jonathan E (James Caan, Thief), whose individual expertise defeats the worldwide corporate leadership’s design: to emphasize the futility of individual effort. Corporate big-wigs (icily incarnated by The Fog‘s John Houseman) need Jonathan to retire, but Jonathan begins to have his own dangerous ideas.

    Directed by Norman Jewison (Fiddler on the Roof) and written by William Harrison, the film also stars Moses Gunn (WUSA), John Beck (Sleeper) and Maud Adams (Octopussy).

    Bonus features on the Twilight Time Blu-ray include the following:

    -Isolated Score Track
    -Audio Commentary with Director Norman Jewison
    -Audio Commentary with Writer William Harrison
    -From Rome to Rollerball: The Full Circle
    -Return to the Arena: The Making of Rollerball
    -TV Spots
    -Trailers
    -MGM 90th Anniversary Trailer

    As supplier Twilight Time prints up only 3,000 copies of each title, be sure to keep an eye on the Twilight Time site or that of their distributor Screen Archives’s for the announcement of the prebook date (usually 2-3 weeks before the title’s street date) and get ready to reserve!

  • Blu-ray Review: Rollerball

    STUDIO:Twilight Time | DIRECTOR: Norman Jewison | CAST: James Caan, John Houseman, John Beck, Maud Adams, Pamela Hensley, Moses Gunn
    BLU-RAY RELEASE DATE: 5/13/2014 | PRICE: Blu-ray $29.95
    BONUSES: two commentary tracks, vintage featurettes, isolated score
    SPECS: R | 125 min. | Action sports science fiction | 1.85:1 widescreen | DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1/DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 | English subtitles

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes): Movie | Audio | Video | Overall

     

    Twilight Time’s handsome new Blu-ray edition of 1975’s Rollerball arrives in time to remind us that it’s nearly 2018—the year that this sci-fi-tinged action-sports Dystopian film takes place—and that this 40-year-old movie about a future world run by corporations who placate the planet’s war-free masses with a hard-hitting death sport that thwarts individual effort in favor of the collective power of the team has a helluva lot of prescience. “No man can be greater than the game itself,” proclaims corporate bigwig John Houseman (The Fog) to Rollerball champion James Caan (Thief), the Michael Jordan of the game and the protagonist player who sets into motion the film’s plot of an individual fighting back against the very system that created him.

    Rollerball movie scene
    In the future, there will be no war. But there will be Rollerball.

    But all I’ve said makes for a better thesis paper than a Blu-ray review. So let me just focus on the Rollerball Blu-ray, which offers a rich, textured and colorful transfer of the film that at its best during the three extended Rollerball sequences. A bone-crunching combination of moto-cross, roller derby and rugby, the hard-hitting Rollerball scenes are filled with spike-gloved skaters and motorcyclists wreaking havoc on each other as they zoom about an angled circular track and attempt to stuff a metal ball into an elevated hole. It all looks exciting and colorful on the Blu-ray, as do Caan and his Houston team’s bright orange uniforms, which pop with delicious futuristic intensity.

    Equally intense is the DTS-HD Master Audio 5.0 audio design, which is particularly effective during the game sequences, where the whoosh of the skaters, the rumble of the motorcyclists, the roar of the crowds, and the crunch of layers’ helmets against the hard track are particularly resonant. The soundtrack also benefits from the 5.1 mix, with the futuristic score and a selection of classical pieces such as Bach’s familiar “Toccata and Fugue in D minor” receiving outstanding renderings. (An isolated track of the score is presented in 2.0.)

    Though there are no newly produced bonus features on the Blu-ray, there is still an extensive selection culled from previous DVD releases of the film. Along with a pair of vintage featurettes and director Norman Jewison’s low-key but informative commentary, there’s also a commentary track by screenwriter William Harrison, upon whose short story the film is based. The Harrison track has been previously heard on European DVD editions of the film and its inclusion here marks its U.S. debut. Also notable are Julie Kirgo’s liner notes, which do a fine job of examining the production and putting its themes into modern context. (I’d love to read her thesis paper on the social and societal implications of Rollerball….)

    Not included here is the ‘Interactive Rollergame” that was a part of MGM’s 1998 DVD release. It’s a really dumb game reminiscent of Husker Du and it certainly didn’t need to be included, but, yikes, it was so silly that I can’t forget it….

    As Twilight Time prints up only 3,000 copies of each title, the time to pre-order your Blu-ray discs directly from distributor Screen Archives is NOW!

  • Blu-ray Release: Rollerball (1975)

    Blu-ray Release Date: May 13, 2014
    Price: Blu-ray $29.95
    Studio: Twilight Time


    The 1975 sci-fi-tinged action-sports film Rollerball, one of the Seventies great dystopian future-shock flicks, finally makes its Blu-ray debut courtesy of Twilight Time.

    Rollerball movie scene
    In the future, there will be no war. But there will be Rollerball.

    Rollerball posits a future—in this case a not-so-far-away 2018—in which war has been replaced by the titular game, a gladiatorial spectacle of violence that helps keep the global populace entertained and anesthetized. Emerging from this hard-hitting “sport” is a  champion, Jonathan E (James Caan, Thief), whose individual expertise defeats the worldwide corporate leadership’s design: to emphasize the futility of individual effort. Corporate big-wigs (icily incarnated by The Fog‘s John Houseman) need Jonathan to retire, but Jonathan begins to have his own dangerous ideas.

    Directed by Norman Jewison (Fiddler on the Roof) and written by William Harrison, the film also stars Moses Gunn (WUSA), John Beck (Sleeper) and Maud Adams (Octopussy).

    Bonus features on the Twilight Time Blu-ray include the following:

    -Isolated Score Track
    -Audio Commentary with Director Norman Jewison
    -Audio Commentary with Writer William Harrison
    -From Rome to Rollerball: The Full Circle
    -Return to the Arena: The Making of Rollerball
    -TV Spots
    -Trailers
    -MGM 90th Anniversary Trailer

    As Twilight Time prints up only 3,000 copies of each title, the time to pre-order your Blu-ray discs directly from distributor Screen Archives is NOW!

  • Review: Fiddler On the Roof Blu-ray

    STUDIO: MGM/Fox | DIRECTOR: Norman Jewison | CAST: Topol, Norma Crane, Paul Michael Glaser, Molly Picon, Leonard Frye, Rosalind Harris
    RELEASE DATE: 4/5/11 | PRICE: Blu-ray/DVD combo $29.99
    BONUSES: commentary, featurettes, deleted song, interviews, much more
    SPECS: G | 181 min. | Musical | 2.34:1 widescreen | DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 | English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Swedish, German, Norwegian, Italian, Hebrew, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, Finnish and Greek subtitles

    RATINGS (out of 5): Movie | Audio | Video | Overall

    Fiddler on the Roof movie scene
    Topol is on the lookout for tradition in Fiddler on the Roof.

    It’s always a pleasure to see and hear 1971’s Academy Award-winning Fiddler On the Roof, Norman Jewison’s (The Cincinatti Kid) adaptation of the hit Broadway musical — and even more so with MGM’s just-released Blu-ray edition of the film.

    First off, the visual presentation of this classic movie is outstanding! But, as Fiddler is a legendary musical, let’s talk about the disc’s audio presentation, a DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 mix that puts the wonderful music and lyrics by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick on such a towering and elegant pedestal that I found myself proclaiming “L’Chaim.”

    The orchestrations (adapted and conducted by John Williams) are wonderfully presented, as are all the surrounding sounds of Anatevka, the turn-of-the-century Russian village where the story is set. So, you clearly but unobtrusively hear thechickens clucking, tailors tailoring and butcher’s butchering. What threw me off a little was a slight variation in audio quality/volume whenever a song came on, probably due to the fact that they were all dubbed into the film during post-production. It’s an unfortunate side effect to the wonders of high-definition remastering and “lossless” audio quality, but it’s a small price to pay for audio superiority.

    All the special features that were available on MGM‘s previous DVD editions from the past decade are on the Blu-ray, including an anecdote-filled commentary by Jewison and star Topol (they were recorded separately), a bunch of featurettes, an audio take of the excised Russian-flavorded song “Any Day Now,” a full-color version of “Tevye’s Dream” and much more.

    My favorite bit?  Jewison relating how he responded to United Artist chief Arthur Krim when he was offered the chance to direct the film: “What would you say if I told you I was a goy?,” he queried.

    For what it’s worthy, the not-quite-Jewish Jewison further proved his diversity with his very next film project: 1973’s Jesus Christ Superstar.

     

    Buy or Rent Fiddler on the Roof
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  • New Release: Fiddler On the Roof Blu-ray

    Fiddler on the Roof movie scene
    Topol is on the lookout for tradition in Fiddler on the Roof.

    20th Century Fox Home Entertainment released MGM Home Entertainment‘s celebrated musical Fiddler on the Roof on Blu-ray for the first time as part of a Blu-ray/DVD combo pack on April 5, 2011. It carries a list price of $29.99.

    Based on the book and play by Sholem Aleichem, Fiddler on the Roof is set in a Jewish village in pre-revolutionary Russia. The film, directed by Norman Jewison (…And Justice for All) and starring Israeli-born actor Topol (Flash Gordon), tells the story of Tevye the milkman and his family as they try to embrace life and love in their changing world.

    Balancing their acceptance of fresh ideas, technological progress and the ever-present danger of religious intolerance, Tevye, his wife and their five daughters make a go of it, just like a fiddler on the roof who “tries to scratch a pleasant simple tune without breaking his neck.”

    The 1971 film was nominated for a eight Academy Awards and brought home three of them: Best Cinematography (Oswald Morris); Best Music, Scoring Adaptation and Original Song Score (John Williams); and Best Sound (Gordon K. McCallum, David Hildyard).

    The new Blu-ray edition offers all the bonus features that were part of previously released DVDs of the film, including the 2007 Two-Disc Collector’s Edition. Here’s the full list of special features:

    • commentary by director Norman Jewison and actor Topol
    • “Norman Jewison, Filmmaker” featurette
    • “Norman Jewison Looks Back” featurette
    • “John Williams: Creating a Musical Tradition” featurette
    • “Songs of Fiddler on the Roof” featurette
    • “Tevye’s Daughters” featurette
    • “Set in Reality Production Design” featurette
    • deleted Song “Any Day Now”
    • storyboard to film comparison
    • Tevye’s Dream Sequence side-by-side comparison
    • trailers and TV spots

     

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  • New Release: The Cincinnati Kid Blu-ray

    The Cincinnati Kid movie sceneSteve McQueen never goes out of style. And Warner Home Video brought out McQueen’s 1965 poker movie The Cincinnati Kid on high-definition Blu-ray on June 14, 2011.

    Nomindated for a Golden Globe Award for supporting actress Joan Blondell (Grease), The Cincinnati Kid stars McQueen as Eric Stoner, a.k.a. The Cincinnati Kid, an up-and-coming poker player in 1930s New Orleans. After traveling from one big game to the next — and one lady to the next — he’s pitted against legendary champion Lancey Howard (Edward G. Robinson, Soylent Green) in a high-stakes poker game.

    The drama film, which is based on the novel by Richard Jessup and directed by Norman Jewison (…And Justice for All), also stars Ann-Magret (Old Dogs), Karl Malden (Patton) and Rip Torn (TV’s 30 Rock).

    The Cincinnati Kid has been on DVD for a while individually and in boxed set collections.

     

    Buy or Rent The Cincinnati Kid
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