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1 CHANGE - January 2012
REPLACED: Fanny and Alexander (Criterion Blu-ray)
4 CHANGES - October 11'
ADDED: Ben Hur (Warner Blu-ray), West Side Story (20th Century Fox Blu-ray), Kieslowski's Blue (Criterion Blu-ray) and replaced Metropolis OOP Steelbook with Standard (Masters of Cinema Blu-ray)
5 CHANGES - September 11'
Citizen Kane (Warner Blu-ray), The Sacrifice (Kino Blu-ray), M (Universum Blu-ray), Sunrise (Masters of Cinema - Dual Format Blu-ray) and City Girl (Masters of Cinema - Dual Format Blu-ray) - all replacing older SD, inferior BD or new Dual-Format editions.
4 NEW ADDITIONS - May 11'
Bicycle Thieves (Arrow Blu-ray), The Double Life of Veronique (Criterion Blu-ray), Taxi Driver (Sony Blu-ray) and The Scent of Green Papaya (Lorber Blu-ray).
13 NEW ADDITIONS - NOVEMBER 2010!
Firstly - Thank you to all the respondents who gave us their opinion to complete our list of 100 DISCs to take to a 'Desert Island'.
The current 100 selections were culled from over 700 contributors choices of 10 or less each. An edition must have had at least 6 votes for consideration. Disc attributes such as image/audio transfer and supplements (especially commentaries) rank very highly - in some circumstances almost comparable to film value. We allowed only individual feature film selections or shorter compilations (ex. By Brakhage and The Decalogue) - not boxsets - although you could choose one film from a boxset even if it was not available individually at this time. Two, three or more disc special editions of one film are still viable.
For the curious: We also received multiple (at least 3 votes each)
for the following DVDs:
When completed this list should represent the most valuable 100 DISCs ever produced. We organized in alphabetical order (usual English title translation). With constant new releases and Blu-ray format upgrades this list will be in a state of flux - additions and deletion expected over time. NOTE: As usual DVDBeaver does not discriminate against region code, standard or format. |
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Animator Wanee and screenwriter Junah are in love and live together to give each other comfort. However, one day, the return of Wanee's stepbrother and her first love (Youngminn) recalls the fading memories of her puppy love. The queer coexistence of present and past love leads to an unexpected confusion in their minds... |
Filmed on the virtually deserted Setonaikai archipelago in south-east Japan, The Naked Island was made — in the words of its director — "as a 'cinematic poem' to try and capture the life of human beings struggling like ants against the forces of nature". Using one-tenth of the average budget, Shindo took one last impassioned risk to make this film. |
Zhang Yimou’s To Live (aka Lifetimes) is an exploratory masterpiece that transcends its political inferences and rests heavily on it’s real meaning; the importance of family. Yimou includes previous themes of survival, perseverance and the resilience of the human spirit also found in many of his other films. |
Sound of the Mountain draws on the concerns of Naruse’s earlier marriage films, including Repast (even the pairing of stars Hara and Uehara is reprised), to offer a profoundly moving account of the complex relationship that develops between an older man and a younger woman. |
Nicholas Ray's epic 1959 film about Eskimo life was unfairly victimized on release, censored at the UK cinema, and neglected by both TV and home video for decades. The Savage Innocents continued Ray's fascination with alternative lifestyles — examining the life of Eskimos and their remoteness from "civilized" values. It represents Ray's first and most ambitious attempt to break free from Hollywood and forge his own route. |
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Vittorio De Sica’s neorealist masterpiece follows Umberto D., an elderly pensioner, as he struggles to make ends meet during Italy’s postwar economic boom. Umberto’s simple quest to fulfill the most fundamental human needs — food, shelter, companionship — is one of the most heartbreaking stories ever filmed and an essential classic of world cinema. |
Louis Feuillade's 1915 silent French masterpiece "Les Vampires" represents part of the 'primordial soup' from which all modern cinema evolved. Don't let the name fool you... there are no 'vampires' as in the 'blood-sucking undead' in this film. Les Vampires are a sinister gang plaguing Paris with their underworld activity including burglaries, decapitation of law enforcement officers, bombings, forgery and other unsavory dealings. |
Sensationally
modern, the film follows the downward spiral
of the fiery, brash, yet innocent showgirl
Lulu, whose sexual vivacity has a
devastating effect on everyone she comes in
contact with. Daring and stylish,
Pandora's Box is one of silent cinema's
great masterworks and a testament to Brooks'
dazzling individuality. |
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Gary Tooze
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Thank You!