No Static at All! FM Available on Blu-ray July 2nd from Arrow Video

FM (1978) will be available on Blu-ray July 2nd from Arrow Video

The airwaves crackle with the delectable sound of smooth rock in FM, a riotous comedy about the heady world of late-70s US radio.

Michael Brandon (Four Flies on Grey Velvet) stars as Jeff Dugan, the ultra-cool program director at Q-SKY Radio, LA’s number one rock station. Dugan encourages a free-wheeling culture at work, employing an array of eccentric DJ personalities: Mother (Eileen Brennan, Private Benjamin), a husky, world-weary ex-hippie; Eric Swan (Martin Mull, Clue), a mad-cap romantic looking for love, and The Prince of Darkness (Cleavon Little, Blazing Saddles), a cool cat who keeps the night-time airwaves alive. But when the station’s future is thrown in to jeopardy by corporate bosses looking to cash-in, the Q-SKY troupe are forced to batten down the hatches and turn up the volume – will a fully-fledged rock ‘n’ roll rebellion save the day?

Legendary cinematographer John A. Alonzo (Chinatown, Scarface) directs this slickly-produced rock film, which combines hilarious studio hijinks with epic footage of Linda Ronstadt and Jimmy Buffett in concert. FM also boasts an incredible platinum-selling soundtrack featuring a pantheon of AOR greats including Steely Dan, The Doobie Brothers, Eagles and Tom Petty (who also cameos). Now, High Fidelity meets High Definition as FM debuts on blu-ray with a selection of exciting new extras.

Special Features and Technical Specs:

  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation transferred from original film elements
  • Uncompressed stereo 2.0 PCM audio soundtrack
  • Mono 1.0 music and effects track
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
  • No Static at All, a newly filmed interview with Michael Brandon, the star of FM
  • Radio Chaos, a newly filmed interview with Ezra Sacks, the writer of FM
  • The Spirit of Radio, a newly filmed video appreciation of the era of FM radio and the FM soundtrack by the film and music critic Glenn Kenny
  • Extensive gallery of original stills, promotional images and soundtrack sleeves
  • Original trailers
  • Reversible sleeve featuring two original artwork options
  • First pressing only: Illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by writer and critic Paul Corupe

Mel Brooks’ BLAZING SADDLES Screens Midnights at The Tivoli This Weekend

BLAZING SADDLES560

“They said you was hung!”
“They was right!”

Mel Brooks’ BLAZING SADDLES screens this Friday and Saturday nights (July 7th and 8th) at midnight at the Tivoli Theater as part of their ‘Reel Late at the Tivoli’  Midnight series.

blazing1

I showed the condensed Super-8 version of BLAZING SADDLES, appropriately enough, at my Super-8 POLITICALLY INCORRECT Movie Madness show a few years ago at The Way Out Club and there are enough N-words in the 18-minute edit alone to make Paula Dean blush, but damn, this movie just keeps getting funnier as it ages!

blazing4

BLAZING SADDLES is my favorite Mel Brooks comedy. Yes, even more than YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN – it’s hard to believe Brooks produced both yuk-fests the same year. I just watched his 1977 follow-up HIGH ANXIETY on 16mm last weekend for the first time since it was new and Yikes! – I see why it was a critical disaster – didn’t laugh once!

blazing6

Many of the sight gags in BLAZING SADDLES are straight out of Looney Tunes, and most of the dialogue is unspeakable in polite society. On the Looney Tunes point: Sheriff Bart (a very funny Cleavon Little) shows up in a period-inappropriate bellhop uniform, marches up to a rampaging lunkhead named Mongo, and says in a high-pitched Bugs Bunny-esque voice, “Telegram!” Mongo accepts the delivery, Sheriff Bart crisply walks away with his fingers in his ears, and the package explodes in Mongo’s face, leaving him sullied and smoking. The Merry Melodies theme plays and the scene fades to black. You might not expect that kind of thing to work in live action, but it does. As to the dialogue, Mel Brooks doesn’t exaggerate when he says in a recent interview that BLAZING SADDLES could not be made now. Strangely, it might skate by with a PG-13 rating, going strictly by the MPAA’s infamously “de facto censorship” system: there are no F-bombs and no nudity. Yet the overall impression is that far more sensitive taboos than these are being lampooned (if you know what I mean), and many are the jokes that might prompt boycotts, demonstrations, and general condemnation today. The pilot for the TV spin-off (called Black Bart) is included on the BLAZING SADDLES special edition DVD and I’m amazed how many times the N-word is used in that TV show! It was a different time indeed.

blazing3

In 1974 BLAZING SADDLES was the highest-grossing film of the year, and Warner Brothers not only released it but was a character in it; the studio’s iconic lot–tour groups, cafeteria, and all–is the setting of one of the most memorable scenes. The movie’s repeated acknowledgment that it is a movie is another Mel Brooks hallmark. His films parody Hollywood, but they exhibit real affection for it too, and this one is full of references to the likes of Cecil B. DeMille, the Academy Awards, Douglas Fairbanks, HIGH NOON, and so on. In other words, this film contains the kind of smart, flattering stuff that Hollywood loves to reward, the fart jokes that audiences want, and the fresh, risky content that gives critics something to write about. It is a classic.

blazing2

A side note: One time I was at a trivia night once and the category was “guess the movie from the quote”. One question was “Badges? We don’t need no stinkin’ badges!” Of course I wrote TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE, but the host claimed I was wrong and argued that the line was from BLAZING SADDLES! WTF!

Now you’ll have the chance to laugh your ass off and feel just terrible about it when BLAZING SADDLES plays on the big screen this weekend (July 7th and 8th) at The Tivoli at midnight as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli midnight series.

The Tivoli’s located at 6350 Delmar Blvd., University City, MO. Admission is a mere $8!

The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

Here’s the Reel Late at the Tivoli Line-up for the next couple of months:  

July 14-15            TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES (1990)

July 21-22            SHAFT (1971)

July 28-29            THE PRINCESS BRIDE 

Aug. 4-5               THE EXORCIST: EXTENDED DIRECTOR’S CUT

Aug. 11-12           SPIRITED AWAY 
Friday and Saturday at midnight, Subtitled
Saturday matinee at noon in English

Aug. 18-19           THE SHINING 

Aug. 25-26           THE ROOM  with Tommy Wiseau in person! –
Preceded by a trailer for Tommy’s upcoming film BEST F(R)IENDS
All tickets $15; no passes

Mel Brooks’ BLAZING SADDLES Midnights at The Tivoli This Weekend

BLAZING SADDLES560

“They said you was hung!”

“They was right!”

BLAZING SADDLES  plays this weekend (August 29th and 30th) at The Tivoli at midnight as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli midnight series.

blazing1

And the perfect movie to show in a city that’s in the middle of a race riot is of course….. BLAZING SADDLES!

I showed the condensed Super-8 version of BLAZING SADDLES, appropriately enough, at my Super-8 POLITICALLY INCORRECT Movie Madness show last year at The Way Out Club and there are enough N-words in the 18-minute edit alone to make Paula Dean blush, but damn, this movie just keeps getting funnier as it ages!

blazing4

BLAZING SADDLES is my favorite Mel Brooks comedy. Yes, even more than YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN – it’s hard to believe Brooks produced both yuk-fests the same year. I just watched his 1977 follow-up HIGH ANXIETY on 16mm last weekend for the first time since it was new and Yikes! – I see why it was a critical disaster – didn’t laugh once!

blazing6

Many of the sight gags in BLAZING SADDLES are straight out of Looney Tunes, and most of the dialogue is unspeakable in polite society. On the Looney Tunes point: Sheriff Bart (a very funny Cleavon Little) shows up in a period-inappropriate bellhop uniform, marches up to a rampaging lunkhead named Mongo, and says in a high-pitched Bugs Bunny-esque voice, “Telegram!” Mongo accepts the delivery, Sheriff Bart crisply walks away with his fingers in his ears, and the package explodes in Mongo’s face, leaving him sullied and smoking. The Merry Melodies theme plays and the scene fades to black. You might not expect that kind of thing to work in live action, but it does. As to the dialogue, Mel Brooks doesn’t exaggerate when he says in a recent interview that BLAZING SADDLES could not be made now. Strangely, it might skate by with a PG-13 rating, going strictly by the MPAA’s infamously “de facto censorship” system: there are no F-bombs and no nudity. Yet the overall impression is that far more sensitive taboos than these are being lampooned (if you know what I mean), and many are the jokes that might prompt boycotts, demonstrations, and general condemnation today. The pilot for the TV spin-off (called Black Bart) is included on the BLAZING SADDLES special edition DVD and I’m amazed how many times the N-word is used in that TV show! It was a different time indeed.

blazing3

In 1974 BLAZING SADDLES was the highest-grossing film of the year, and Warner Brothers not only released it but was a character in it; the studio’s iconic lot–tour groups, cafeteria, and all–is the setting of one of the most memorable scenes. The movie’s repeated acknowledgment that it is a movie is another Mel Brooks hallmark. His films parody Hollywood, but they exhibit real affection for it too, and this one is full of references to the likes of Cecil B. DeMille, the Academy Awards, Douglas Fairbanks, HIGH NOON, and so on. In other words, this film contains the kind of smart, flattering stuff that Hollywood loves to reward, the fart jokes that audiences want, and the fresh, risky content that gives critics something to write about. It is a classic.

blazing2

A side note: One time I was at a trivia night once and the category was “guess the movie from the quote”. One question was “Badges? We don’t need no stinkin’ badges!” Of course I wrote TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE, but the host claimed I was wrong and argued that the line was from BLAZING SADDLES! WTF!

Now you’ll have the chance to laugh your ass off and feel just terrible about it when BLAZING SADDLES plays on the big screen this weekend (August 29th and 30th) at The Tivoli at midnight as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli midnight series.

The Tivoli’s located at 6350 Delmar Blvd., University City, MO. Admission is a mere $8!

The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

Here’s the Reel Late at the Tivoli Line-up for the next two weeks:

Sept. 5-6              PURPLE RAIN – 30th anniversary

Sept. 12-13         GHOST IN THE SHELL

Stay tuned here at We Are Movie Geeks – we’ll be announcing the next line-up of Tivoli midnight flicks this week!