Thursday, May 6, 2021

TCM Classic Film Festival: Doctor X (1932)

 


This year's virtual TCM Classic Film Festival kicks off with some special presentations including the late night premiere of Doctor X (1932), recently restored by UCLA Film and Television Archive and The Film Foundation in association with Warner Bros. Entertainment. Doctor X was the first of three horror films, including Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933) and The Walking Dead (1936), that director Michael Curtiz made for Warner Bros.

The film stars Lionel Atwill as Doctor Xavier, one of several scientists who are being probed for their possible involvement in a string of murders. A killer is on the loose, searching for his victims during the full moon, brutally murdering them and mutilating their bodies afterwards. Doctor X theorizes that the murderer is triggered by a past trauma and that this will help them solve the mystery. Newspaper reporter Lee Taylor (Lee Tracy) is desperate to get the scoop and infiltrates the home of Doctor X to get insider information. There he meets the doctor's daughter Joanne (Fay Wray) who is protective of her father yet concerned about his involvement in the matter. Doctor X rounds up all the scientists including Wells (Preston Foster) Haines (John Wray), Duke, (Harry Beresford) and Rowitz (Arthur Edmund Carewe) for an unusual experiment to uncover the identity of the Moon Killer.

Doctor X is a wonderful mad scientist mystery with plenty spooks, a few laughs and some sex thrown in for good measure (it is a pre-code film after all). The film was shot in black-and-white by Richard Tower and in two-strip Technicolor by Ray Rennahan. The color version was considered lost for years until a print was recovered in Warner Bros.' executive Jack L. Warner's belongings after he died in 1978.

The restoration of Doctor X (1932) in its original two-strip Technicolor premieres tonight on TCM as part of their late-night line-up for the TCM Classic Film Festival. Film historian and Michael Curtiz biographer Alan K. Rode will be presenting the film. Rode will explain how Doctor X fits into Curtiz' filmography, the history of Warner Bros., its importance as an early horror film and a side-by-side comparison of the old and new print. The restored Technicolor version of the film looks incredible. This is a real treat and one you won't want to miss.




Monday, May 3, 2021

Warner Archive Mega Haul

 


When it was announced that the WBShop was closing down in its current form and that they would be having their last 4 for $44 sale for Warner Archive titles, I pounced. On March 12th I bought a whopping 32 discs. I used both the sale and a special 15th anniversary coupon code for an extra deal. Then on the last day of March, I bought 4 sets that weren't part of the original sale but I could still use the coupon code for. While we don't know what the future holds for Warner Archive, I did want to buy what I could before it was too late. Warner Archive titles are currently available at a variety of online stores including Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Deep Discount, TCM Shop and more and they have new releases scheduled throughout this year. Shop while you can!

Now on to the haul.



Did you partake in the Warner Archive 4 for $44 sale? If so, what did you get?



Wednesday, March 31, 2021

New & Upcoming Classic Film Books (16)


I'm way overdue for another new book round-up. Better late than never! Get ready for a wave of new classic film books!

Are you new to my list? Here are the details. The books include biographies, memoirs, scholarly texts, coffee table books and more from a variety of publishers. Publication dates range from January to July 2021 and these are subject to change.

Links go to Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Powell's. I receive a small commission if you shop through some (not all) of my buy links. With that said if you're going to buy from any of these links, make sure you click through to Larry Edmunds Bookshop and support that fantastic book store!







 by Cicely Tyson
HarperCollins
432 pages— January 2021




The Killer 1940s
by Kimberly Truhler
GoodKnight Books
288 pages— January 2021




A Career Chronicle and Biography
by Allan R. Ellenberger and Robert Murdoch Paton
McFarland
226 pages— January 2021




A Life from Beginning to End
by Hourly History
46 pages— January 2021




Gangster Noir in Midcentury America
by Robert Miklitsch
University of Illinois Press
304 pages— January 2021




by Terri Simone Francis
Indiana University Press
216 pages— January 2021




by Scott Allen Nollen and Yuyun Yuningsih Nollen
McFarland
484 pages— January 2021




Quick Takes: The Movie Musical
by Desiree J. Garcia
Rutgers University Press
110 pages— January 2021




by Karl K. Kitchen and edited by Paul Duncan
256 pages— January 2021




A Complete Guide to the World of Film (New Edition)
by Ronald Bergan
DK
360 pages— February 2021




A True Story
by Mike Sager
The Sager Group LLC
 172 pages— February 2021





Vernacular Jazz Dance in American Film, 1929-1945
by Susie Trenka
John Libbey Publishing
256  pages— February 2021




Florence Deshon, Max Eastman, and Charlie Chaplin
edited by Cooper C. Graham and Christoph Irmscher
Indiana University Press
474 pages— February 2021




Mike Nichols
A Life
by Mark Harris
Penguin Press
688 pages— February 2021




Second Edition
DK
360 pages— February 2021




Shane
Paramount's Classic Western
by Aubrey Malone
BearManor Media
184 pages— February 2021




Harold Pinter's Screenplays and the Artistic Process
by Steven H. Gale
University Press of Kentucky
538 pages— February 2021




A Cultural Timeline from the Magic Lantern to Netflix 
 by Ian Haydn Smith
Thames and Hudson
272 pages— March 2021




by George Chakiris with Lindsay Harrison
Lyons Press
232 pages — March 2021





An Unquiet Life
New Edition
by Stephen Michael Shearer
520 pages— March 2021




Ride the Pink Horse

Reprint
by Dorothy B. Hughes
American Mystery Classics
288 pages— March 2021




Melodrama and Visibility in Latin American Silent Film
by Juan Sebastian Ospina Leon
University of California Press
252 pages— March 2021




Six Iconic Photographers, One Legendary Star
by various
Acc Art Books
288 pages— April 2021




Dispatches from Weimar Berlin and Interwar Vienna
edited by Noah Isenberg
Princeton University Press
224 pages— April 2021




Consider Your Ass Kissed
by Ruta Lee
Briton Publishing
274 pages —April 2021




Filmmaker and Philosopher
by Robert B. Pippin
Bloomsbury Academic
168 pages— April 2021




The Mysteries of Cinema
Movies and Imagination

by Peter Conrad
Thames and Hudson
320 pages— April 2021




An Anatomy of the Master of Suspense 
by Edward White
W.W. Norton and Company
 336 pages —April 2021




A Celebration of Cars at the Movies
by Giles Chapman
The History Press
128 pages —April 2021




A Daughter's Love Story in Black and White
by Kitt Shapiro with Patricia Levy
Pegasus Books
288 pages —May 2021




The Untold Story of Their Intimate Friendship
by Charles Casillo
Kensington
352 pages —May 2021




A World History of Horror Film
by Brad Weismann
University Press of Mississippi
256 pages —May 2021




A Director's Life
by Ira Wells
The Sutherland House Inc.
400 pages —May 2021




Yellowface and Chinglish by Anglo-American Culture
by Sheng-mei Ma
Bloomsbury Academic
264 pages —May 2021




by Patricia White
BFI Film Classics
120 pages —May 2021




30 Sun-Drenched Classics
by John Malahy
TCM and Running Press
208 pages —May 2021




by Sean French
New Edition
BFI  Film Classics
80 pages —May 2021




The 50 Greatest Movies Never Made
by Josh Hull
Abrams
256 pages —May 2021




by Peter William Evans
New Edition
BFI Film Classics
80 pages —May 2021




A Filmography, 1928-1962
by David A. Redfern
McFarland
249 pages —June 2021




Film Noir, the Western and Other Genres
from the 1920s to the 1950s
McFarland
275 pages —June 2021




by Jim Cullen
Rutgers University Press
180 pages —June 2021




Jane Russell and the Marketing of a Hollywood Legend
by Christina Rice
University Press of Kentucky
392 pages —June 2021




The Women Who Made British Cinema
by Melanie Bell
University of Illinois Press
288 pages —June 2021




Postwar Anxieties and Hollywood Films, 1947-1960
by N. Megan Kelley
University Press of Mississippi
288 pages —June 2021




by Dahlia Schweitzer
Rutgers University Press
188 pages —June 2021




In the Wee Small Hours
by Tony Oppedisano and Mary Jane Ross
Scribner
320 pages —June 2021




The Lost World of Film Noir
Revised and Expanded Edition
by Eddie Muller
Turner Classic Movies/Running Press





A Complete Illustrated Biography of America's Comedy Queen
Centennial Books
192 pages —July 2021




Photographed by Terry O'Neill
by James Clarke
Acc Art Books
224 pages —July 2021



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