The Next Spy Remake: Ice Station Zebra
According to The Playlist (via Dark Horizons), there's another Patrick McGoohan Sixties spy classic up for the remake treatment. Let's hope this one turns out better than AMC's 2009 take on The Prisoner (review here). David Gordon Green will pen a new version of John Sturges' 1968 Alistair MacLean adaptation Ice Station Zebra. Green, the one-time indie auteur (All the Real Girls) turned big budget comedy director (Pineapple Express), made spy headlines just a few weeks ago with his plans to direct Black Jack, a spy parody pilot for Comedy Central. Presumably his take on Ice Station Zebra, which concerns a spy aboard a submarine searching for a crashed satellite in the arctic circle, will be more serious. "I just finished [the] script for Warner Bros." he told the website. “And I got to go camp out on the arctic circle with the Navy and explore those kind of... you know just the lingo and the politics of what’s going on in the arctic right now, so it truly is a passport. Like literally Warner Brothers says, ‘Do you want to get on a jet with the Navy and get on a submarine?’ and you’re like, ‘absof---kinglutely!’" Green's next project is rumored to be a remake of Dario Argento's horror masterpiece Suspiria.
Showing posts with label Patrick McGoohan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrick McGoohan. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
New Spy DVDs Out This Week
Wow, there is a deluge of new spy titles available this week! An embarrassment of riches sure to make spy fans poor... but satisfied. And a lot of it is really essential stuff, too.
MI-5: Volume 8
It feels like it's been forever since we had the last volume of MI-5 (known as Spooks in its native Britain), but I guess it's really only been a year. It always seems so long between these releases, but the next volume always arrives just in time to quench my thirst for this compelling, addictive and consistently solid UK spy series. (We actually won't have to wait so long for Volume 9, however; BBC has already announced that they'll release it this summer putting America somewhat more on track with the UK release schedule.) MI-5: Volume 8 sees the usual threats to British security and (I hear) the usual high fatality rate amongst the regulars. But it also sees the rare return of someone who left the show: Ruth Evershed. The 3-disc set is happily somewhat cheaper than previous volumes, with an SRP of $39.98, though it can currently be found on Amazon for just $27.99.
Man in a Suitcase: Set 1
Man, any single one of these titles would make this a good week for spy releases! Acorn treats American spy fans to this ITC classic for the first time. The titular Man in a Suitcase, McGill (Richard Bradford) is a spy disavowed by American Intelligence after being set up, forced to take jobs as a freelancer operating out of London. (When you're burned, you're burned!) Man in a Suitcase has a reputation as being darker and grittier than other popular ITC series like The Saint and Danger Man, and it is... but it's still not as dark and certainly not as bleak as something like Callan. In fact, it strikes a happy medium likely to appeal in equal measure to fans of Callan and The Saint. Acorn's Set 1 (in a very attractive four-disc flipper case) contains the show's first fifteen episodes, amounting to half of its entire first season. It doesn't include any of the extras found on the Region 4 or Region 2 releases, but it does look amazing–better than I've ever seen it look before. The weird thing is the order that the episodes are presented in. I guess it must be the original broadcast order, though it's not production order. The upshot is that the first episode produced, "Man From the Dead," which serves wonderfully as a pilot and sets up the show's premise, doesn't come until Disc 2. Acorn's set instead begins with "Brainwash," which is certainly a flashier episode less bogged down by exposition, but not really a great one to start with. I'd recommend watching "Man From the Dead" first. Also among the fifteen episodes in this set are "Variation on a Million Bucks, Part 1" and "Variation on a Million Bucks, Part 2," notable because they were edited together into the feature film To Chase a Million for theatrical release in Europe, making this the first official Region 1 release of that Eurospy movie, albeit in two parts. Retail is $59.99, but Amazon's got it for $44.99.
Wish Me Luck: Series 2
Acorn alone is spoiling spy fans today. In addition to Man in a Suitcase, the company also releases Wish Me Luck: Series 2. While Series 1 of this fact-based, wartime espionage drama about the women who worked for Britain's Special Operations Executive and parachuted into occupied France to risk their lives for their country had seen a Region 1 release prior to Acorn's reissue, Series 2 has never before been available on DVD in the U.S. Spy favorite Julian Glover co-stars with Kate Buffery, Lynn Farleigh, Jane Snowden and Jane Asher. Retail is $39.99, but it's currently ten bucks cheaper on Amazon.
RED
One of last year's most entertaining spy movies, RED, is out today from Summit Entertainment as a Special Edition DVD, a Special Edition Blu-ray and a movie-only Blu-ray. Some of the intriguing extras on the DVD include deleted and extended scenes and an audio commentary with Retired (but presumably not Extremely Dangerous) CIA field officer Robert Baer (the model for George Clooney's character in Syriana, who also recently contributed to a featurette on the From Paris With Love DVD). The Blu-ray contains all that as well as an "Access: RED" feature boasting "a variety of scene-specific features including interviews with cast members, animated documentary shorts on controversial CIA operations, and more." Sounds cool! RED stars Bruce Willis, John Malkovich, Karl Urban, Helen Mirren, Morgan Freeman, Mary Louise Parker, Richard Dreyfuss and Brian Cox. Read my full review here.
The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest
Music Box Films releases the final Swedish adaptation of Stieg Larsson's international phenomenon The Millennium Trilogy today on both DVD and Blu-ray. (Daniel Craig stars in an American take on the material filming now.) The series started as a very, very dark sort of Agatha Christie-type mystery with The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, then ventured into Robert Ludlum territory in its second installment, The Girl Who Played With Fire and finally blossoms into a full-fledged spy thriller in The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest. I've only seen the first movie so far (which was quite good), but I loved the books and I'm eager to see the others. If you haven't gotten any of them yet, though, and think you'll want them all, you might want to hold off for The Stieg Larsson Trilogy, which will collect all three films, along with an exclusive bonus disc, available on both DVD and Blu-ray next month.
Operation C.I.A.
Wow, there is a deluge of new spy titles available this week! An embarrassment of riches sure to make spy fans poor... but satisfied. And a lot of it is really essential stuff, too.
MI-5: Volume 8
It feels like it's been forever since we had the last volume of MI-5 (known as Spooks in its native Britain), but I guess it's really only been a year. It always seems so long between these releases, but the next volume always arrives just in time to quench my thirst for this compelling, addictive and consistently solid UK spy series. (We actually won't have to wait so long for Volume 9, however; BBC has already announced that they'll release it this summer putting America somewhat more on track with the UK release schedule.) MI-5: Volume 8 sees the usual threats to British security and (I hear) the usual high fatality rate amongst the regulars. But it also sees the rare return of someone who left the show: Ruth Evershed. The 3-disc set is happily somewhat cheaper than previous volumes, with an SRP of $39.98, though it can currently be found on Amazon for just $27.99.
Man in a Suitcase: Set 1
Man, any single one of these titles would make this a good week for spy releases! Acorn treats American spy fans to this ITC classic for the first time. The titular Man in a Suitcase, McGill (Richard Bradford) is a spy disavowed by American Intelligence after being set up, forced to take jobs as a freelancer operating out of London. (When you're burned, you're burned!) Man in a Suitcase has a reputation as being darker and grittier than other popular ITC series like The Saint and Danger Man, and it is... but it's still not as dark and certainly not as bleak as something like Callan. In fact, it strikes a happy medium likely to appeal in equal measure to fans of Callan and The Saint. Acorn's Set 1 (in a very attractive four-disc flipper case) contains the show's first fifteen episodes, amounting to half of its entire first season. It doesn't include any of the extras found on the Region 4 or Region 2 releases, but it does look amazing–better than I've ever seen it look before. The weird thing is the order that the episodes are presented in. I guess it must be the original broadcast order, though it's not production order. The upshot is that the first episode produced, "Man From the Dead," which serves wonderfully as a pilot and sets up the show's premise, doesn't come until Disc 2. Acorn's set instead begins with "Brainwash," which is certainly a flashier episode less bogged down by exposition, but not really a great one to start with. I'd recommend watching "Man From the Dead" first. Also among the fifteen episodes in this set are "Variation on a Million Bucks, Part 1" and "Variation on a Million Bucks, Part 2," notable because they were edited together into the feature film To Chase a Million for theatrical release in Europe, making this the first official Region 1 release of that Eurospy movie, albeit in two parts. Retail is $59.99, but Amazon's got it for $44.99.
Wish Me Luck: Series 2
Acorn alone is spoiling spy fans today. In addition to Man in a Suitcase, the company also releases Wish Me Luck: Series 2. While Series 1 of this fact-based, wartime espionage drama about the women who worked for Britain's Special Operations Executive and parachuted into occupied France to risk their lives for their country had seen a Region 1 release prior to Acorn's reissue, Series 2 has never before been available on DVD in the U.S. Spy favorite Julian Glover co-stars with Kate Buffery, Lynn Farleigh, Jane Snowden and Jane Asher. Retail is $39.99, but it's currently ten bucks cheaper on Amazon.
RED
One of last year's most entertaining spy movies, RED, is out today from Summit Entertainment as a Special Edition DVD, a Special Edition Blu-ray and a movie-only Blu-ray. Some of the intriguing extras on the DVD include deleted and extended scenes and an audio commentary with Retired (but presumably not Extremely Dangerous) CIA field officer Robert Baer (the model for George Clooney's character in Syriana, who also recently contributed to a featurette on the From Paris With Love DVD). The Blu-ray contains all that as well as an "Access: RED" feature boasting "a variety of scene-specific features including interviews with cast members, animated documentary shorts on controversial CIA operations, and more." Sounds cool! RED stars Bruce Willis, John Malkovich, Karl Urban, Helen Mirren, Morgan Freeman, Mary Louise Parker, Richard Dreyfuss and Brian Cox. Read my full review here.
The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest
Music Box Films releases the final Swedish adaptation of Stieg Larsson's international phenomenon The Millennium Trilogy today on both DVD and Blu-ray. (Daniel Craig stars in an American take on the material filming now.) The series started as a very, very dark sort of Agatha Christie-type mystery with The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, then ventured into Robert Ludlum territory in its second installment, The Girl Who Played With Fire and finally blossoms into a full-fledged spy thriller in The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest. I've only seen the first movie so far (which was quite good), but I loved the books and I'm eager to see the others. If you haven't gotten any of them yet, though, and think you'll want them all, you might want to hold off for The Stieg Larsson Trilogy, which will collect all three films, along with an exclusive bonus disc, available on both DVD and Blu-ray next month.
Operation C.I.A.
From the Warner Archive comes their first foray in quite a while into Sixties spydom... Operation C.I.A. starring a young, mustacheless Burt Reynolds. Their website promises "An exploding motorbike. Air-conditioning ducts spewing cyanide gas. Terrorists, beautiful women, lethal snakes, butt-kicking action and a young Burt Reynolds: Operation C.I.A. has ’em all!" Well, yes, technically I guess it does. (Though the action really isn't that "butt-kicking.") But you can kind of tell from that copy that they're grasping at straws to make this rather dull 1965 entry in the global spy sweepstakes sparked by the success of 007 sound more interesting than it really is. But maybe Operation C.I.A. (which is kind of a bad name for a clandestine spy operation, if you think about it) is one of those movies that takes on a whole new life when you finally see a high-quality version instead of the shoddy transfer that's been circulating for years. I'm probably going to find out. Because while the copy doesn't sell me on it... I have to admit, that cover art does. That's the kind of poster that will have me shelling out hard-earned cash for a movie I know is a bit of a stinker! As I'm sure everyone knows, Warner Archive titles are made to order, burnt on demand on DVD-Rs.
John Huston's all-star spy drama The Kremlin Letter, long conspicuously absent on DVD despite frequent airings on the Fox Movie Channel, finally makes it to disc today as the first title in Fox's new limited edition specialty line, Twilight Time. Adapted from the novel by Noel Behn, The Kremlin Letter follows a young Naval Intelligence officer (Patrick O'Neal) recruited by a network of aging spies to retrieve a letter critical to American Intelligence from Moscow. The impressive cast includes Orson Welles, George Sanders, Dean Jagger, Nigel Green, Max von Sydow, Richard Boone, Raf Vallone and Huston himself. Twilight Time is intended as Fox's answer to the MOD programs at Columbia, Warner Bros. and other companies, with one major difference: these are factory-pressed DVDs, not burnt DVD-Rs. In the interest of keeping things classy and giving consumers their money's worth, Fox also plans to include special features on these discs. They're supposed to be available exclusively through Screen Archives Entertainment, and The Kremlin Letter is supposed to be available today... but I can't find any sign of it so far. Keep your eyes peeled! In the meantime, read more about Twilight Time and The Kremlin Letter here.
Basil Dearden's London Underground
Finally, The Criterion Collection issues another one of its feature-free but still high-quality Eclipses Series sets, Eclipse Series 25: Basil Dearden's London Underground. There is no spy movie in this collection, but there are a lot of elements that will appeal to spy fans among these Sixties classics. Foremost among them is the Region 1 DVD debut of a rare Patrick McGoohan movie, All Night Long. All Night Long is basically a jazz Othello, casting McGoohan in the Iago role. Real-life jazz legends like Charles Mingus, Dave Brubeck, and Avengers composer Johnny Dankworth also appear. Besides this McGoohan rarity, spy fans might want to look out for genre stalwart Dirk Bogarde (Modesty Blaise, Hot Enough For June) giving a stellar performance in Victim, and Richard Attenborough and Bryan Forbes in The League of Gentlemen, the movie that set the template for dozens of heist movies to follow. (And in many ways Mission: Impossible.) Retail for the 4-disc set is $59.95, but after seven other titles, surely you know the drill: cheaper online!
So... enough spy DVDs for you this week? Cripes, that was nearly as much work as the Holiday Shopping Guide! Hopefully we won't all have to wait until next Christmas to get all these titles...
So... enough spy DVDs for you this week? Cripes, that was nearly as much work as the Holiday Shopping Guide! Hopefully we won't all have to wait until next Christmas to get all these titles...
Friday, January 7, 2011
New Play About Patrick McGoohan
UK theatrical outfit Tip Top Productions presents a new play about the life of Patrick McGoohan, Everyman. Everyman plays one night only in Chester at the Forum Studio Theatre next Thursday, January 13 at 8PM. Tickets are just £6.00 and can be booked through the theater's website. Here's the official synopsis:
UK theatrical outfit Tip Top Productions presents a new play about the life of Patrick McGoohan, Everyman. Everyman plays one night only in Chester at the Forum Studio Theatre next Thursday, January 13 at 8PM. Tickets are just £6.00 and can be booked through the theater's website. Here's the official synopsis:
"EVERYMAN: The Story Of Patrick McGoohan - The Prisoner" is a new play detailing the life of the theatre, television, and film star (who sadly died last year). Writer Brian Gorman believes that a theatrical tribute to the star of such cult tv favourites as DANGER MAN and THE PRISONER is long overdue.Thanks to sambullus on the Eurospy Forum for the tip on this.
Friday, September 24, 2010
Upcoming Spy DVDs: The Prisoner: The Ultimate Set
Network has announced yet another UK DVD release of The Prisoner, this time as The Ultimate Set. In addition to all of the truly wonderful features included on the company's 40h Anniversary Edition, Blu-ray set and current DVD set, The Ultimate Set also includes Network's 3-CD Prisoner soundtrack set and the 2009 remake of the series starring Ian McKellen and Jim Caviezel. (The latter is also available on its own on DVD and Blu-ray from ITV Studios, and includes all the special features from the American DVD. It's not available on Blu-ray in the United States.) I suppose the remake is the main selling point, but it doesn't really deserve that honor. However, I kind of like that it's included, because it's basically found its proper place: as a DVD extra on the real series. From that standpoint, it's easier to appreciate the remake. It's a curio that one can watch after watching the Patrick McGoohan series. It's for completists, and this Ultimate Set is a completist's dream. While I'm sure most Prisoner fans who want them already own both series and the soundtrack, this is a good way for future fans to pick up everything at once. The inclusion of the soundtrack music is much more attractive than that of the remake; again, its meticulous archival nature makes it a perfect DVD feature. The set, packaged in an eyecatching if unweildy box, also includes the booklets originally available with Network's DVD and CD sets (by Andrew Pixley and Eric Mival, respectively). I'm not sure if it includes the special features associated with the new version of the show, but I would assume so. Overall, there's no reason to get this if you've already got the stuff it includes, but it's a pretty good archival collection for future generations. Or Christmas present for this generation, which I'm sure Network's banking on!
The Prisoner: The Ultimate Set, a Region 2 PAL DVD release, will be available on October 25, 2010. It will retail for £99.99, but is available to pre-order from Amazon.co.uk for £74.99 and will be available from Network's website for just £62.99.
Read my original TV review of The Prisoner 2009 remake here.
Read my review of the 2009 Prisoner remake DVD here.
Network has announced yet another UK DVD release of The Prisoner, this time as The Ultimate Set. In addition to all of the truly wonderful features included on the company's 40h Anniversary Edition, Blu-ray set and current DVD set, The Ultimate Set also includes Network's 3-CD Prisoner soundtrack set and the 2009 remake of the series starring Ian McKellen and Jim Caviezel. (The latter is also available on its own on DVD and Blu-ray from ITV Studios, and includes all the special features from the American DVD. It's not available on Blu-ray in the United States.) I suppose the remake is the main selling point, but it doesn't really deserve that honor. However, I kind of like that it's included, because it's basically found its proper place: as a DVD extra on the real series. From that standpoint, it's easier to appreciate the remake. It's a curio that one can watch after watching the Patrick McGoohan series. It's for completists, and this Ultimate Set is a completist's dream. While I'm sure most Prisoner fans who want them already own both series and the soundtrack, this is a good way for future fans to pick up everything at once. The inclusion of the soundtrack music is much more attractive than that of the remake; again, its meticulous archival nature makes it a perfect DVD feature. The set, packaged in an eyecatching if unweildy box, also includes the booklets originally available with Network's DVD and CD sets (by Andrew Pixley and Eric Mival, respectively). I'm not sure if it includes the special features associated with the new version of the show, but I would assume so. Overall, there's no reason to get this if you've already got the stuff it includes, but it's a pretty good archival collection for future generations. Or Christmas present for this generation, which I'm sure Network's banking on!
The Prisoner: The Ultimate Set, a Region 2 PAL DVD release, will be available on October 25, 2010. It will retail for £99.99, but is available to pre-order from Amazon.co.uk for £74.99 and will be available from Network's website for just £62.99.
Read my original TV review of The Prisoner 2009 remake here.
Read my review of the 2009 Prisoner remake DVD here.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
New Prisoner Books And Pamphlets
Wes Britton of The Spy Report has sent the alert that several new Prisoner-related publications by Six of One (Prisoner fan club) president Roger Langley have turned up on the official website of Portmeirion, the distinctive Welsh village in which the series was filmed. They seem designed primarily for tourists visiting Portmeiron, but should definitely interest collectors and fans as well. Among them are the 24-page Prisoner Series Guide, a pamphlet that serves as an overview to the series and contains "over 100 unseen photos," the awkwardly-titled but undoubtedly fascinating Portmeirion in "The Prisoner" and its History (whose 48 pages feature "all of the Portmeirion buildings and places ... along with the studio sets and backdrops which created a replica for indoor filming" and "views of old Portmeirion, maps and charts plus the 'Village Map' seen in The Prisoner"), and - most enticingly - The Pris6ner from The Inside: Plots, Scripts, Background. The latter is a 216-page book in which "the whole series is laid out for investigation: origins, action, plots, publicity, trivia, the Village, music, humour, extracts and conclusions." It can be had for £7.99; the other two are just £2.99 apiece. Of course if you're shopping in Portmeirion (or on the Portmeirion website), then you might want to save your pounds and dollars for the awesome big ticket items like the Prisoner ball chair (£395) or - best of all - the official Prisoner replica jacket (£125).
Wes Britton of The Spy Report has sent the alert that several new Prisoner-related publications by Six of One (Prisoner fan club) president Roger Langley have turned up on the official website of Portmeirion, the distinctive Welsh village in which the series was filmed. They seem designed primarily for tourists visiting Portmeiron, but should definitely interest collectors and fans as well. Among them are the 24-page Prisoner Series Guide, a pamphlet that serves as an overview to the series and contains "over 100 unseen photos," the awkwardly-titled but undoubtedly fascinating Portmeirion in "The Prisoner" and its History (whose 48 pages feature "all of the Portmeirion buildings and places ... along with the studio sets and backdrops which created a replica for indoor filming" and "views of old Portmeirion, maps and charts plus the 'Village Map' seen in The Prisoner"), and - most enticingly - The Pris6ner from The Inside: Plots, Scripts, Background. The latter is a 216-page book in which "the whole series is laid out for investigation: origins, action, plots, publicity, trivia, the Village, music, humour, extracts and conclusions." It can be had for £7.99; the other two are just £2.99 apiece. Of course if you're shopping in Portmeirion (or on the Portmeirion website), then you might want to save your pounds and dollars for the awesome big ticket items like the Prisoner ball chair (£395) or - best of all - the official Prisoner replica jacket (£125).
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