Volume 2 Issue 21 – New DVD Releases from FOX-Sherlock Holmes Heat Up August

 

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Volume 2 Issue 21          
 

 

 

Ok don’t cringe when I say we have some hot, never before on DVD titles from Fox Cinema Archives! I know it’s hot enough outside thank you…but there truly are a significant array of entertaining new titles on MOD DVD from the Studios to keep us inside our air conditioned homes this month.  

 

The FOX Cinema Archives releases another wave of rare films from their vaults for the Classic fans to gobble up. These titles are doing very well and if you haven’t offered them in your stores, take another look.

 

And with all the TV coverage coming in from London, the AV Geek takes a look at the world’s most reknown detective, Sherlock Holmes. Avenger fans will find film reviewer Lee Pfeiffers take on the 1990 Captain America version of great interest. All are available now from the AV MOD Collection. The DVDs are made on demand, when you sell them, they are…yes…. never out of stock, never back ordered and 100% ready to ship! 

 

Successful retailing to you all. 

Richard Skillman

Vice President, Allied Vaughn  

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Geekster
THE AV MOVIE GEEK
            
The Game is Afoot In London!
Sherlock Holmes hasn’t been a hotter commodity than he and his trusted friend, Dr.Watson are now. Guy Ritchie’s back to back smash films featuring Robert Downey Jr.’s unique portrayal are blockbusters. And from the UK, “Sherlock” is a British television series that presents a contemporary update and stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Holmes and Martin Freeman as the good doctor.
This fall, CBS Television will be launching a New York City based Holmes, starring Johnny Lee Miller and Lucy Liu. 
As all eyes are on London for the Olympics and that noted 221B Baker Street location is being highlighted across all the networks, the geek reminds all that the actors who first defined the film roles, Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce are available from the AV MOD Collection, courtesy of American Pop Classics. Remastered and in attractively designed DVD packaging, the titles are on demand, ready to sell!.
Sherlock Holmes: Dressed to Kill  1946 Two people die after buying musical boxes.
Sherlock Holmes traces the boxes to a criminal in prison who is there for stealing printing plates. Could this provide the solution to his crime? Basil Rathbone; Nigel Bruce; Patricia Morison; Edmond Breon
 
Sherlock Holmes: Secret Weapon  1943 An inventor who creates a bomb sight that the Nazis want comes under the suspicion of Holmes who believes he is not to be trusted.
Sherlock Holmes successfully removes Dr. Franz Tobel and his new invention from Switzerland to safety in England. In England, Tobel secretly visits his girlfriend Charlotte, and is nearly kidnapped. Professor Moriarty’s men are in league with the Nazis.”  Basil Rathbone; Nigel Bruce; Lionel Atwill; Kaaren Verne

Sherlock Holmes: Terror By Night 1946 A precious jewel is stolen on the train and the owner is blamed for it’s disappearance. Sherlock Holmes will find out what really happened. Basil Rathbone; Nigel Bruce; Alan Mowbray; Dennis Holey

Sherlock Holmes: The Woman in Green   Holmes and Watson investigate murders and the trail leads to a society of hypnotists and a beautiful woman.  It also looks as if the notorious Moriarty is involved.  Basil Rathbone; Nigel Bruce; Hillary Brooke; Henry Daniell; Paul Cavanagh

New Releases from Fox Cinema Archives!
                                           
36 Hours to Kill  1936  Public Enemy #1 boards a train to go claim a sweepstakes winning when he encounters an undercover G-man intent on collaring him, and a news reporter in disguise who wants the scoop.  One of 1997′s Titanic blockbuster star Gloria Stuart’s early film roles.Brian Donlevy, Gloria Stuart and Douglas Fowley
Accent on Love  1941 “After the Depression, a real estate executive tires of his life working for his wealthy father-in-law and becomes a ditch digger, eventually aiding the residents of a slum to better their conditions. George Montgomery, Osa Massen and J. Carrol Naish

Banjo on My Knee 1936 “Ernie Holley runs away to New Orleans on his wedding night because he thinks he has killed a wedding guest.  The Beverly Hillbillies’ patriarch, Buddy Ebson, makes a memorible appearance. Barbara Stanwyck, Joel McCrea, Buddy Ebsen and Walter Brennan

China Girl  1942 “At the beginning of World War II, a newsreel cameraman and a Chinese woman with important military information are chased by the Japanese in Burma. Gene Tierney, George Montgomery and Lynn Bari

Claudia and David 1946  “After a psychic predicts an accident, a naive woman tries to persuade her husband to stay home from a convention.Dorothy McGuire, Robert Young and Mary Astor

Destination Gobi 1953  Navy weatherman are forced to accept the help of Mongol nomads in the Gobi desert during World War II, when their craft comes under fire from Japanese attack.Richard Widmark, Don Taylor and Max Showalter

Josette 1938  The table turns on two brothers, Don Ameche and Robert Young, when they attempt to save their father from a woman they believe is a gold digger. Don Ameche, Simone Simon, Robert Young and Lon Chaney Jr.

Nancy Steele is Missing  1937  When an anti-war activist is released from jail after 17 years, he immediately visits the girl that he kidnapped as a baby and returns her to her real father, but he must face a cell mate who tries to blackmail him in the meantime. Victor McLaglen, Walter Connolly, John Carradine and Peter Lorre

One Foot in Hell  1960  An ulterior motive lurks beneath the Sheriff’s badge in the unsuspecting small town still recovering from the Civil War. Alan Ladd, Don Murray and Dan O’Herlihy

The Caribbean Mystery  1945 Easy going detective Mr. Smith travels from his home in Brooklyn to the jungles of the Caribbean and uncovers a diamond smuggling operation. James Dunn, Sheila Ryan and Edward Ryan

The Country Doctor 1936 A physician has a bumpy time acquiring the money for delivering his services in a lumber town until he delivers the Dionne quintuplets. The Dionne Quintuplets, Yvonne Dionne and Cecile Dionne

The Day the Fish Came Out  1967 When a NATO plane accidently drops its nuclear cargo over Greece, the two pilots must retrieve the radioactive payload before government officials do.  Actress Candice Bergin also appears during her early modeling years. Tom Courtenay, Colin Blakely and Sam Wanamaker

The Return of the Cisco Kid  1939 Cisco escapes from a firing squad only to end up in more danger when he helps a young woman and her father escape from the crooked sheriff who cheated them out of their land. Warner Baxter, Lynn Bari and Cesar Romero

The Rookie 1959 In WWII, two American soldiers and a beautiful actress (played by Julie Newmar) are stranded on an island with a pair of Japanese soldiers. Tommy Noonan, Peter Marshall and Julie Newmar

 
 
 

Guest Reviews

By Lee Pfeiffer, Cinemaretro 

 

It may seem hard to believe in this day of comic-book inspired blockbusters, but a mere twenty years ago, there was so little interest in adapting comic heroes to the big screen that some of the most legendary pop culture characters were relegated to cheap movies funded by second rung studios. Such was the case with Captain America, shot in 1990 and plagued by problems since the first day of shooting.

 

The film was a production of 21st Century Films, the company owned by legendary schlockmeister Menahem Golan. The movie, which was championed by Marvel’s Stan Lee at the time as a wonderful achievement, was originally beset by financial problems. The money dried up, forcing director Albert Pyun to make compromises in terms of special effects and sets. The film was shelved and did not receive a theatrical release in America, although it was seen in the international market. 

 

The movie opens in fascist Italy with a chilling sequence in which a boy genius is forcibly removed from his family, who are then slaughtered in front of his eyes. He is subjected to a cruel and brutal experiment that sees him emerge with extraordinary powers and intelligence, though he is

Available from the MGM Limited Edition

horrendously disfigured.

 

The plan is to produce a master army of such young men to fight for the Axis powers. The person who emerges from the experiment has a twisted mind and is so badly scarred that he is called The Red Skull (Scott Paulin).

 

However, the scientist who designed the formula for the experiment disdains that her achievement will be used for evil purposes. She escapes to America where she offers her talents to the Allies.

 

A polio-stricken young man, Steve Rogers (Matt Salinger) volunteers to be the subject of the first experiment to produce an American super soldier. (The process having been refined to eliminate the disfigurement of the patient.)  The plan works and Rogers emerges, not only having been cured of polio, but possessing uncanny strength.

 

However, a Nazi sympathizer kills his mentor, leaving him to be the only living example of the Allies’ super soldier. He is given a virtually indestructible costume and a shield with boomerang capabilities. He’s also named Captain America (the US never misses a beat when it comes to marketing.)

 

On his one and only war time mission, Captain America succeeds in preventing a German rocket from hitting the White House, but he ends up crash landing in the Alaskan wilderness where he is frozen in ice for decades. A team of scientists accidentally discovers him in 1990 and he is immediately sought by the U.S. government to resume his battle with the Red Skull, whose physical appearance has now been altered to allow him to pass as an influential tycoon. The Red Skull has corrupt corporate bigwigs on his side, along with a high ranking American general. 

 

Although this pre-blockbuster version of Captain America is routinely knocked by Marvel fans, there is much to recommend in this modestly-budgeted adventure film. For one, the casting of Matt Salinger as Steve Rogers is good choice. Salinger, who never gained major stardom, gives a fine performance as the titular hero, maintaining a sense of wonderment at his new powers.

 

Some of the film’s best scenes find him trying to adjust to life in 1990, having been under ice since the 1940s. He knows nothing about the great historic figures and events of those missing years and is understandably dazed and confused by modern life (and he doesn’t even have to cope with such future inventions as PCs and cell phones). Unsure of who is friend or foe, he avoids everyone as he tries to make his way back to his long-lost fiancee.

 

In a poignant sequence, he reunites with her, but the obvious age differences (and the fact she is happily married) dooms their chances of resuming their love affair. Fortunately, his ex has a hip, sexy daughter (Kim Gillingham, who plays both mother and daughter) who willingly joins him on his eventual quest to find and defeat the Red Skull, who is lodged in an ancient Italian castle surrounded by his own sexy (but murderous) daughter and an army of henchmen. 

 

The film is uneven throughout and the finale is rather lamely staged, with Captain America joined by his new girlfriend and the President of the United States, who is being held captive in the castle. Most improbably, both of these new allies are almost equally adept at street fighting as the super hero himself. There are far too many blandly staged chase sequences and the villains, aside from a fine performance by Scott Paulin as the Red Skull, are just cardboard characters with no interesting personality traits.

 

Still, director Albert Pyun does a lot with very little and the final sequences in Croatia lend a bit of much-needed exoticism to the proceedings. The film features real life old buddies and Deliverance co-stars Ronny Cox (very funny as the hip U.S. President) and Ned Beatty, but sadly no one thought to write a scene for them to appear in together. 

 

The master print for this DVD is disappointing and is rumored to be the same transfer used ages ago for a laser disc release. MGM does state at the beginning of every DVD that the transfers are made from the best source materials available. Given the current craze for Marvel heroes, they should consider investing in a major overhaul of this title.  Director Pyun has stated over the years that his original director’s cut of the movie is far superior than the butchered version seen by the public. A Blu-ray, extended version is supposedly in the works. 

Captain America is available through most major on-line DVD retailers.  

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Allied Vaughn’s MOD Collection brings you the best in DVD programming from the catalogs of The Warner Archive Collection, The MGM Limited Edition, Sony Choice Collection, Fox Cinema Archives, HBO, Disney Educational, NOW, MTV Networks, CBS Home Entertainment, Questar Entertainment, Monarch Home Video,The VCI Vault Collection, Life Size Entertainment, Desert Island Films, American Pop Classics and more are coming soon..contact us today for up to the date title lists,new catalogs, metadata and product images.

Richard Skillman
Allied Vaughn
theavdept@alliedvaughn.com
www.alliedvaughn.com