Toy Machine Box Set DVD Review

Toy Machine Box Set DVD
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I picked up this box set awhile back and I love it. Its worth grabbing just for "Welcome To Hell" alone, but getting the other three, including "Jump Off A Building"? Come on, this is a no brainer! These are the videos that changed the face and attitude of skateboarding. Besides you get the oh-so-hilarious Elissa Steamer crying like a little girl when she eats pavement and who can forget Jamie Thomas' 50-50 grind into eternity at the end. One last great feature is the ridiculously awesome bails footage at the end (its some seriously painful stuff). Cheers!

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Mike Swain's Judo (1990) Review

Mike Swain's Judo (1990)
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I have purchased this DVD and found it 25% useful. Why 25%? Well the rest of the DVD seem to have no sound (i.e. both the replaced and original order). I have notified Black Belt as well as Amazon of this problem and hopefully they will address this issue ASAP as it is frustrating and disappointing to say the least. However, from what I have previewed so far (with sound) is quite good and very useful for the budding judoka. I am crossing my fingers to preview a working version of this DVD (2nd replacement) and provide some positive feedback.
Loven
Australia

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mtn.lab dvd DC Shoes Review

mtn.lab dvd DC Shoes
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I ordered this for my son's 16th birthday and he was very excited until he tried to play it and found it was defective. The vendor claimed we must have ruined the dvd and would only issue a partial refund. Amazon did not help much either. My son plays many dvds, games etc and is very careful with his stuff. The bottom line was that this was a terrible experience.

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A film about the ultimate R&D CenterThe DC Mountain lab, located outside Park City in Utah's Wasatch Mountains, is the place where the DC team and friends test product, shoot films, and just plain ride. It is strictly off-limits to the public, though, so few have ever gotten a glimpse beyond the MTN. Lab gates... Until now.Filmed primarily at the Mountain Lab during winter 2005, the Mtn. Lab DVD captures a typical day at the lab with the DC team and friends, and features action footage of the entire DC team-Travis Rice, Travis Parker, Todd Richards, Eddie Wall. Devun Leines. There are notable cameo appearances by frequent Mtn. Lab visitors and a few surprise guests.To complement the films unique concept, the DVD comes with a 120 Page book that features photos, portraits, and exclusive behind-the-scenes stories.Regional Code: 0 (Will play worldwide).Languages: English.Picture Format: Full-Screen.

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Formula One Review 2004 Review

Formula One Review 2004
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As others have mentioned, this review of the 2004 Formula One season provides more in-depth coverage than its 2003 predecessor. The 2003 review runs 145 minutes whereas this version is 194 minutes long, allowing time for fairly comprehensive coverage of each race, reviews some of the controversies (Jenson Button's attempt to jump ship from BAR to Williams) and looks at the new venues at Bahrain and Shanghai. The crystal clear footage provided by DVD surpasses even that of the original broadcast footage I saw on cable TV. There is more in-car footage than has been included in past DVD's, including Jenson Button's complete qualifying lap to take pole position at Imola. That footage is terrific-- in fact my major and continuing criticism of these year end reviews is that more of this dramatic in car footage should be included. Nothing conveys the speed, handling, and yes, car to car racing that takes place in F1 better than seeing it from the driver's perspective. My wish is to someday have in-car footage of either the complete pole winning lap or a complete race lap from each circuit included. Still, the coverage is in depth and well done.
A smaller quibble is that, in such a tightly-controlled sphere of influence as Bernie Ecclestone's Formula One fiefdom, any official review will present the sport only in its best light and offer, at best, muted criticism of of its subject. This is most apparent in coverage of the US Grand Prix where there is no mention at all that the controversial decision to repeatedly parade cars through shards of carbon fiber behind the safety car, rather than sufficiently clean the track of post-accident debris, likely led to the accidents of Fernando Alonso and Ralf Schumacher. Likewise, the scandalously slow response of medical crews to Ralf's serious accident is not mentioned at all. Instead, all that we are offered is the rosy commentary "Ralf receives the undivided attention of the medical team!"
This review is comprehensive, with excellent video and sound from each race as well as a good amount (but not enough) of in car footage. I recommend this to any F1 fan.
CORRECTION: It turns out my review is mistaken on a major point! What I thought at first was simply a chapter listing turns out to be an additional feature that does not appear when simply playing this disc all the way through. When you go to the "Event by event" menu listing, not "Play All," the listing "Pole!" shows you the pole winning lap at each course! This is great-- just what I've wanted to see. I'm not sure why they didn't make this great feature more obvious. Or, maybe I'm just extremely slow. BUT, I take back my prior comments. It's great to see the in-car camera view of a complete lap of each course, driven in anger, with DVD clarity. Also, at the innaugural China GP, there is a race lap with Michael Schumacher that starts with him spinning out, then trying to rejoin, with graphics depicting braking, throttle, gear selection, and rpms. More in the future please!

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Combat Shotgun: Concepts, Skills, And Tactics For Employing Shotguns In Personal Combat Review

Combat Shotgun: Concepts, Skills, And Tactics For Employing Shotguns In Personal Combat
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If you use a shotgun in your line of work then this is your resource to better your skills. If your life depends on it then be at your best.

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Advanced Defensive Linemen Skills for Youth Football By Coach Mark Watson Review

Advanced Defensive Linemen Skills for Youth Football By Coach Mark Watson
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This is the second DVD that I bought from Pigskins Kids. This is the best instructional DVD series on the market. Coach Watson's techniques are easily understood and are easily applied. The drills are excellent ranging from basic to advanced. It's like going to a football camp over and over again. The practice sheet is extremely handy!

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Win...The Winning Edge Wrestling Video Series on DVD Review

Win...The Winning Edge Wrestling Video Series on DVD
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Being a wrestler since 1967 and coach since 1995 this tape gives to the novice wrestler and parent the best understanding of wrestling that I have found. The tapes succintly provides the basic wrestling rules for the wrestling parent so that they can have a grasp of the rules and immediately enjoy the sport. The tapes go on to develop winning wrestling strategies that are universal to all winning students of the sport. I highly recommend these tapes to all wrestling programs who want to start a winning path from the beginning.

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Wrestling training video's pre packaged in a 6 video set. Includes Beginners & Parents, Take Downs, Bottom Positions, Top Positions, Moves & More Moves and Moves and More Moves II featuring the Legendary Danny Hodge.

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Mike Krzyzewski: Duke Basketball: Agility & Conditioning Drills for Defense (DVD) Review

Mike Krzyzewski: Duke Basketball: Agility and Conditioning Drills for Defense (DVD)
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I wasn't really sure what to expect when I got this DVD other than it would probably be pretty good being a Coach K product.
It is good and has lots of good information about developing solid defensive players. Some of the defensive concepts demonstrated include pressuring the ball handler, how to force bad shots, create turnovers, denial of passing lanes and how to play the game both mentally and physically, a topic often neglected in instructional DVDs about defense.
The tape was worth what I paid for it to see the defensive concepts explained and demonstrated. But I was left wondering about how to condition my players to play better defense, which was why I bought the DVD. There are some concepts presented, but it is not the bulk of the information in the DVD. Buy it for the DEFENSE demonstrated!
Kevin Sivils - author of Game Strategy and Tactics for Basketball
Game Strategies and Tactics for Basketball: Bench Coaching for Success

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Nothing But the Truth Skateboard DVD Review

Nothing But the Truth Skateboard DVD
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One of the best skateboarding dvd's I've ever seen. Very nice quality, and a ton of amazing talent. It's also comical and quirky, which really puts it over the edge of being good.
If you like skateboarding at all, I highly suggest you check it out.

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Original Fabulous Adventures of Baron Munchausen, The Review

Original Fabulous Adventures of Baron Munchausen, The
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The strong use of colour in this film - sometimes vivid, sometimes very fine & subtle - predates & goes beyond most western psychedelic film experiments (It was made in 1961) : A large measure of this is due to the inventive & frequent use of monochrome - eg orange sequences, then blue, then red etc - akin to but generally surpassing such techniques in early cinema (Melies was one of Zeman's heroes). "Baron Munchausen" goes beyond the methods of both early film & later experimentation not primarily because of its technical skill - exact & inventive though it is - but because of the combination of this with the poetic depth of the film in general. There are also sequences where the screen is subtly divided into different swathes of colour ( again a technique reminiscent of Melies ).
However the film is not some sort of delerious dream or descent into madness (although it does have lots of fun!). Nor is it in any way "amateurish" ( as has been suggested in a well-meant sort of way, elsewhere ) - Such a term can only be used if one takes the hollow slickness which is present in so many Hollywood films as some sort of yardstick of definition.
Zeman's "Baron Prasil" exists in a totally different sort of Universe : It is essentially - & completely - romantic, graceful & poetic (as well as being full of a warm & gentle humour - & also containing strong antiwar sentiments; a recurring theme in Zeman's work). The flowing & exact pace of the film brings forth a world of love, beauty, imagination & adventure.
Imagination is the key : The character of the Baron is no longer the Baron of other versions : ie he is not (or at least is only occasionally) an endearing but mainly vainglorious braggart; instead his function is to effortlesly display the sheer beauty & magnificence of fantastical dreaming when its motivation comes from a heart of gold.
His chivalry (although gently satirized in places) is genuine. Impeccably played by Milos Kopecky he is in effect a spiritual guide to the protaganist ("Joey" - Tony in the Czech language original) - introducing him to the underlieing spiritual beauty of life & honing his ability to love, dream & create. Even when he (the Baron) is undercut by events, his indomitable, expansive & generally self-composed reactions are an education in courage & spiritual freedom.

Many more things could be said about the film : The complete harmony achieved by Zeman's use of mixed media animation ( the Gustave Dore inspired storybook-type drawings which are used as backdrops for live actors, a puppet whale of incredible charm, popart-style spacesuits, etc), the graceful presence of Jana Brejchova as the Princess Bianca di Castello Negro, the warmth & perfection of Zdenek Liska's opening theme & his other soundtrack music - to mention just some.

Terry Gilliam is known to have been influenced by Zeman; what perhaps isn't realised is that if you view Zeman's "Baron Munchausen" & Zeman's films "A Jester's Tale" (1964) & "The Stolen Balloon" (1966) (all very wonderful films) - together these contain most of the styles of animation to be seen in Monty Python (although the satirical content is not generally the same) - as well as many other additional techniques. "The Stolen Balloon" even contains a Souza-type march very similar (though not identical) to that used in the Python theme! I hope this doesn't sound too unkind as Gilliam is a brilliant bloke & without his version of "Baron Munchausen" perhaps Zeman's version might never have got a video release.
Also : Relatively huge critical attention is given to directors like Godard & Kurosawa ( & in a different sort of way to Ray Harryhausen films ) - If even part of this were given to the work of Karel Zeman, then his genuinely romantic film art - & incredible entertainment - might become more readily available to all who are open to such wonders.
( It would also be nice if Jiri Trnka - & others - were likewise to receive such increased critical attention. )

To conclude : This film is perfection - (& if anyone can re-release this video or any & all of Zeman's films; Please, please do). With reference to it on video : It would be still better if a subtitled version were available - as the fine acting is also evident in the subtle tones & inflections of the original cast; more so than with most foriegn films.
This is particularly true of the title role: Kopecky's voice is an integral part of his characterization ( as described above ). Having said this - the dubbing in the present version is actually quite reasonable.

This is spiritual-romantic art at its best : It is a fairytale fully imbued with the poetic spirit. Its values of love & warmth are similar to - though as art it is in other ways quite different from - the original Winnie-the-pooh books or the animation work of Oliver Postgate & Peter Firmin in the U.K.
As you have probably realised by now - it is my alltime favourite film! And as such I cannot recommend it too highly.

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Chevy Chase Collection - Caddyshack/Funny Farm/Spies Like Us (1980) Review

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Canadian Experience Expo 67 - Back To The Future Review

Canadian Experience Expo 67 - Back To The Future
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This was a trip down memory lane for me having attended this fair. The video was VERY well done, I usually don't care for memory type interviews but this film made them interesting. This DVD is expensive but if you were there or are really into Worlds Fairs, It's well worth your time and money. It left me wanting to borrow Marty McFly's time traveling Delorean and go back and see it all again.

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Ufc 57: Couture Vs Lindell 3 (2006) Review

Ufc 57: Couture Vs Lindell 3 (2006)
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Great job blowing the ending results for the people who havent seen it yet, Im sure its appreciated.

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Re:Session Ski DVD 2010 Re:session (2009) Review

Re:Session Ski DVD 2010 Re:session (2009)
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This video is tremendous. I bought it on iTunes but after watching it I totally had to have it on dvd as well. The soundtrack is stellar & the footage was great. Best thing is that it mostly shows skiing action, whereas the last few years of Warren Miller films follow the same formula every time (here's guys making lines off a peak... next here's snowboarders riding rails in a parking lot at night & slamming their face on concrete). Besides the predictability, Miller films of late go easy on the action & instead just talk you to death.
Warning: this video is ALL skiing & no snowboarding.

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The Capstick Hunting Collection Review

The Capstick Hunting Collection
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After reading all of his books at least 3 times, it was good to see the man in action. This is an essential addition to any collection of Africana. I did feel, however, that the extras section of the DVD's was a last minute add-on, and that the content should have been included in the main feature, but this is a minor quibble and does not in any way detract from hunting with Peter!
And after Amazon saying that delivery could be up to 2 months, the DVD's arrived in 7 days!! Amazing service to New Zealand; thank you!

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Hitman Hart: Wrestling with Shadows (1998) Review

Hitman Hart: Wrestling with Shadows  (1998)
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Bret "Hitman" Hart has been my favorite wrestler ever since I first watched this documentary on A&E a few years ago. He had always been a great wrestler, but after having watched this riveting tale of Hart's association with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in 1996-97, he became my hero.
Bret Hart's tale in this video is both happy and sad. In the beginning moments of the film, we see a light-hearted and very accomodating Hitman talking about his family and how he started in wrestling. He talks about growing up a Hart, and how life at the house was not always so wonderful. For the first 20-30 minutes, this film shows us the happier side of Bret Hart. And that's when things get interesting.
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) made Hart an incredible offer that he almost couldn't refuse. But, as a man of integrity and moral values, he inititally declined the WCW's offer out of loyalty to Vince McMahon, the owner of the WWF. Instead of taking a three-year contract worth $9 million from the WCW, he signed a 20-year contract for significantly less with the WWF.
Bret Hart's topsy-turvy road in 1997 is a captivating one to travel on for the audience. Anyone who knows wrestling knows the name Bret Hart and what has happened with him throughout his career. This documentary, so beautifully done by director Paul Jay, gives you the dirt on what Hart's life was like back when wrestling was just starting to come into its more adult nature.
This film gives you the entire scoop on why Bret Hart was turned heel (turned into a bad guy). This film shows you exactly what happened at the now infamous 1997 Survivor Series, which forever changed the direction of WWF programming. You will see it all as the happy and appreciative Bret Hart from the first 20-30 minutes is slowly chipped away until a depressed and demoralized Bret Hart is left in the wake of what the WWF and Vince McMahon did to him.
After the film, there is a special interview with Bret Hart and director Paul Jay that takes place 18 months later following the double-cross at the 1997 Survivor Series. Bret Hart goes on to tell what life has been like since his departure from the WWF and how things in his life have drastically changed. One shock, for example, is his admittance of his divorce. This comes as such a surprise since we see him and his wife sticking so closely together in the film.
In short, this is one of the best wrestling documentaries out there. They don't get any more real than this, and any wrestling fan will find Bret Hart's real-life battle with Vince McMahon intriguing.
On a personal note, Bret Hart, in my mind, will always be the Excellence of Execution. He will always be "The Best There Is, The Best There Was, and The Best There Ever Will Be." He deserved to have a grand exit from professional wrestling. It's just too bad that neither the WWF nor the WCW had the decency to give him one.

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Unseen Cinema - Early American Avant Garde Film 1894-1941 (1910) Review

Unseen Cinema - Early American Avant Garde Film 1894-1941 (1910)
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The contents below are from unseen-cinema; they include the contents of a 160-page softcover Series Catalog, which is sold separately, but I think you would want. This is clearly a labor of love; though I can't imagine trying to watch all this in a month of Sundays, I could see dipping into it from time to time.
=====================================
Disk 1: THE MECHANIZED EYE
Experiments in Technique and Form
The dynamic qualities of motion pictures are explored by cameramen and filmmakers through novel experiments in technique and form. Early cinematographers James White, "Billy" Bitzer, and Frederick Armitage display experimental shooting styles that wowed audiences. Other independent companies further image manipulation through creative staging, editing, and printing, such as a stunning three-screen film that predates Gance's Napoleon. Experiments by photographer Walker Evans, painter Emlen Etting, musician Jerome Hill, and the film collectives Nykino and Artkino record the world in a continual process of flux. A most extreme approach is realized by Henwar Rodakiewicz with Portrait of a Young Man (1925-31), a monumental study of natural and abstract motions.
18 FILMS:
5 Paris Exposition Films (1900)-James White
Eiffel Tower from Trocadero Palace (1900)
Palace of Electricity (1900)
Champs de Mars (1900)
Panorama of Eiffel Tower (1900)
Scene from Elevator Ascending Eiffel Tower (1900)
Captain Nissen Going through Whirpool Rapids, Niagra Falls (1901)-creators unknown
Down the Hudson (1903)-Frederick Armitage & A.E. Weed
The Ghost Train (1903)-creators unknown
Westinghouse Works, Panorama View Street Car Motor Room (1904)-G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
In Youth, Beside the Lonely Sea (c. 1924-25)-creators unknown
Melody on Parade (c. 1936)-creators unknown
La Cartomancienne (The Fortune Teller) (1932)-Jerome Hill
Pie in the Sky (1934-35)-Nykino: Elia Kazan, Ralph Steiner & Irving Lerner
Travel Notes (1932)-Walker Evans
Oil: A Symphony in Motion (1930-33)-Artkino: M.G. MacPherson & Jean Michelson
Poem 8 (1932-33)-Emlen Etting
Storm (1941-43)-Paul Burnford
Portrait of a Young Man (1925-31)-Henwar RodakiewiczDisk 2: THE DEVIL'S PLAYTHING
American Surrealism
Edwin S. Porter and other early filmmakers used bizarre sets, fantastic costumes, and magic lantern tricks to illuminate their fantasy films. American parody supplied Douglas Fairbanks with enough unusual material to produce the truly surreal When the Clouds Roll By (1919). The expressionistic Cabinet of Dr. Calagari (1919) influenced American sensibilities throughout the 1920s as seen in Beggar of Horseback (1925), The Life and Death of 9413-A Hollywood Extra (1927) and The Telltale Heart (1928). The emphasis shifted when amateurs J.S. Watson, Jr., Joseph Cornell, and Orson Welles crafted a unique variety of American surrealism on film unfettered by European concerns.
17 FILMS:
Jack and the Beanstalk (1902)-Edwin S. Porter
Dream of a Rarebit Fiend (1906)-Edwin S. Porter
The Thieving Hand (1907)-creator unknown, Vitagraph
Impossible Convicts (1905)-G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
When the Clouds Roll By (1919)-Douglas Fairbanks & Victor Fleming (excerpt)
Beggar on Horseback (1925)-James Cruze (excerpt)
The Fall of the House of Usher (1926-27)-J.S. Watson, Jr. & Melville Webber
The Life and Death of 9413: A Hollywood Extra (1927)- Robert Florey & Slavko Vorkapich
The Love of Zero (1928)-Robert Florey & William Cameron Menzies
The Telltale Heart (1928)-Charles Klein
Tomatos Another Day (1930/1933)-J.S. Watson, Jr. & Alec Wilder
The Hearts of Age (1934)- William Vance & Orson Welles
Unreal News Reels (c. 1926)-Weiss Artclass Comedies (excerpt)
The Children's Jury (c. 1938)-attributed Joseph Cornell
Thimble Theater (c. 1938)-Joseph Cornell
Carousel: Animal Opera (c. 1938)-Joseph Cornell
Jack's Dream (c. 1938)-Joseph CornellDisk 3: LIGHT RHYTHMS
Music and Abstraction
The rhythmic elements of cinema are explored by artists and filmmakers fascinated by the abstract qualities of light. The American authors of avant-garde classics Le Retour á la raison (1923), Ballet mécanique (1923-24), Anémic cinéma (1926), and Une Nuit sur le Mont Chauve (1934), are finally acknowledged for their seminal artistic achievements made in Europe. Pioneer abstract films by Ralph Steiner, Mary Ellen Bute, Douglass Crockwell, Dwinnell Grant, and George Morris are compared and contrasted with Hollywood montages created by Ernst Lubitsch, Slavko Vorkapich, and Busby Berkeley. For the first time on video, composer George Antheil's original 1924 score accompanies Fernand Léger and Dudley Murphy's film Ballet mécanique, a truly avant-garde cacophony of image and sound.
29 FILMS:
Le Retour à la raison (1923)-Man Ray
Ballet mécanique (1923-24)-Fernand Léger & Dudley Murphy
Anémic cinéma (1924-26)-Rrose Sélavy (Marcel Duchamp)
Looney Lens: Anamorphic People (1927)-Al Brick
Out of the Melting Pot (1927)-W.J. Ganz Studio
H20 (1929)-Ralph Steiner
Surf and Seaweed (1929-30)-Ralph Steiner
7 Vorkapich Montage Sequences (1928-37)-Slavko Vorkapich
The Furies (1934)
Skyline Dance (1928)
Money Machine (1929)
Prohibition (1929)
The Firefly- Vorkapich edit (1937)
The Firefly-MGM release version (1937)
Maytime (1937)
So This Is Paris (1926)-Ernst Lubitsch (excerpt)
Light Rhythms (1930)-Francis Bruguière & Oswell Blakeston
Une Nuit sur le Mont Chauve (Night on Bald Mountain) (1934)-Alexandre Alexeieff & Claire Parker
Rhythm in Light (1934)-Mary Ellen Bute, Ted Nemeth & Melville Webber
Synchromy No. 2 (1936)-Mary Ellen Bute & Ted Nemeth
Parabola (1937)-Mary Ellen Bute & Ted Nemeth
Footlight Parade - "By a Waterfall" (1933)-Busby Berkeley
Glen Falls Sequence (1937-46)-Douglass Crockwell
Simple Destiny Abstractions (1937-40)-Douglass Crockwell
Abstract Movies (1937-47)-George L.K. Morris
Scherzo (1939)-Norman McLaren
Themis (1940)-Dwinell Grant
Contrathemis (1941)-Dwinell Grant
1941 (1941)-Francis Lee
Moods of the Sea (1940-42)-Slavko Vorkapich & John HoffmanDisk 4: INVERTED NARRATIVES
New Directions in Story-Telling
Early directors D.W. Griffith and Lois Weber develop the radical language of cinema narrative through audience-friendly melodramas made for nickelodeon theaters. Experimental fantasies are depicted in such independent productions as Moonland (c. 1926), Lullaby (1929), and The Bridge (1929-30). Depression era films by socially-conscious filmmakers reshape drama as demonstrated in Josef Berne's brooding Black Dawn (1933) and Strand and Hurwitz's biting Native Land (1937-41): each pictures a raw reality. Parody and satire find their mark in Theodore Huff's Little Geezer (1932) and Barlow, Hay and Le Roy's Even as You and I (1937). David Bradley's Sredni Vashtar by Saki (1940-43) boasts an inadvertent post-modern attitude.
12 FILMS:
The House with Closed Shutters (1910)-D.W. Griffith & G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
Suspense (1913)-Lois Weber & Philips Smalley
Moonland (c. 1926)-Neil McQuire & William A. O'Connor
Lullaby (1929)-Boris Deutsch
The Bridge (1929-30)-Charles Vidor
Little Geezer (1932)-Theodore Huff
Black Dawn (1933)-Josef Berne & Seymour Stern
Native Land (1937-41)-Frontier Films: Leo Hurwitz & Paul Strand (excerpt)
Black Legion (1936-7)-Nykino: Ralph Steiner & Willard Van Dyke
Even As You and I (1937)-Roger Barlow, Harry Hay & Le Roy Robbins
Object Lesson (1941)-Christoher Young
"Sredni Vashtar" by Saki (1940-43)-David BradleyDisk 5: PICTURING A METROPOLIS
New York City Unveiled
Only Unseen Cinema DVD released as a SINGLE
The DVD depicts dynamic images of New York City and scenes of New Yorkers among the skyscrapers, streets, and night life of America's greatest city during a half century of progress, while at the same time showing changes in film style and the history of cinema experiments. Avant-garde moments pop up in the most unlikely of places including turn-of-the-twentieth-century actualities, commercial and radical newsreels, and Busby Berkeley's "Lullaby of Broadway" from Gold Diggers of 1935. Included are spectacular prints of Charles Sheeler and Paul Strand's Manhatta (1921), Robert Flaherty's Twenty-four-Dollar Island (c. 1926), Robert Florey's Skyscraper Symphony (1929), Jay Leyda's A Bronx Morning (1931), and Rudy Burckhardt's Pursuit of Happiness (1940).
26 FILMS:
The Blizzard (1899)-creators unknown
Lower Broadway (1902)-Robert K. Bonine
Beginning of a Skyscraper (1902)-Robert K. Bonine
Panorama from Times Building, New York (1905)-Wallace McCutcheon
Skyscrapers of NYC from North River (1903)-J.B. Smith
Panorama from Tower of the Brooklyn Bridge (1903)-G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
Building Up and Demolishing the Star Theatre (1902)-Frederick Armitage
Coney Island at Night (1905)-Edwin S. Porter
Interior New York Subway 14th Street to 42nd Street (1905)-G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
Seeing New York by Yacht (1902)-Frederick Armitage & A.E. Weed
2 Looney Lens: Split Skyscrapers (1924) and Tenth Avenue, NYC (1924)-Al Brick
4 Scenes from Ford Educational Weekly (1916-24)-creators unknown
Manhatta (1921)-Charles Sheeler & Paul Strand
Twentyfour-Dollar Island (c. 1926)-Robert...Read more›

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7 DVDs – 20 Hours - 155 Classics of Avant Garde Cinema! "Unseen Cinema: Early American Avant-Garde Film 1894-1941" reveals hitherto unknown accomplishments of American filmmakers working in the United States and abroad from the invention of cinema until World War II, and offers an innovative and often controversial view of experimental film as a product of avant-garde artists, of professional directors, and of amateur movie-makers working collectively and as individuals at all levels of film production. Many of the films have not been available since their creation, some have never been screened in public, and almost all have been unavailable in copies as good as these until now. Sixty of the world's leading film archive collections cooperated with Anthology Film Archives to bring this long-neglected period of film history back to life for modern audiences.

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