Lana Turner and Kirk Douglas in THE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFUL Available on Blu-ray From Warner Archives

“Don’t worry. Some of the best movies are made by people working together who hate each other’s guts.”

Lana Turner and Kirk Douglas in THE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFUL (1952) is available on Blu-ray from Warner Archives. It can be ordered HERE

Appearances are everything in Hollywood. So when conniving moviemaker Jonathan Shields realizes few mourners will show up for the funeral of his equally conniving father, he knows what to do: hire extras. Kirk Douglas gives a magnetic, Oscar®-nominated performance as Shields, who turns talent, charisma and ruthlessness into film success, stomping on careers and creating enemies along the way. Vincente Minnelli directs this winner of five Academy Awards® that’s more than a compelling insider’s look at Tinseltown: It’s an opportunity for buffs to guess which real-life stars and moguls inspired the roles played by Douglas, Lana Turner, Walter Pidgeon, Dick Powell, Best Supporting Actress Gloria Grahame and more.

An all-star assembly of talents, both in front of (Kirk Douglas, Lana Turner, Walter Pidgeon, Barry Sullivan, Gloria Grahame, Leo G. Carroll) and behind (John Houseman, Charles Schnee, Cedric Gibbons, Helen Rose, Robert Surtees) the camera for maestro Vincente Minnelli’s cynical and charming backstage look at business and shenanigans of commercial cinema. Deploying guile and glamor in equal measure, the tale of a true Hollywood hustler unspools with panache and pathos. Douglas stars as Jonathan Shields, a striving studio mogul, desperate for a hit, who arranges a meeting with a top star (Lana Turner), screenwriter (Dick Powell) and director (Barry Sullivan). But before he can give the greenlight, it’s time for all his sins to be revisited. This five-time Academy Award winner (Best Actress in a Supporting Role – Gloria Grahame, Best Writing, Screenplay – Charles Schnee, Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black & White – Cedric Gibbons, Edward Carfagno, Edwin B. Willis, Keogh Gleason, Best Cinematography, Black-and-White – Robert Surtees, Best Costume Design, Black-and-White – Helen Rose) gets the A-list treatment it so richly deserves on this sumptuous new HD master created from scan of the original negatives and painstaking restored, all in glorious, silver screen sheen Black and White. Special Features: Feature Length Documentary “Lana Turner…A Daughter’s Memoir”; Scoring Session Music Cues; Theatrical Trailer (HD)

Cult TV Classic, Reality-Based DEADLINE (Not Seen Since 1961) Debuts on DVD Nov. 19

“A free, independent and professionally-trained press is irrefutably both the backbone of a democracy and the foundation upon which a free civil society is built; without which a democratic nation simply cannot exist.” – Sir Howard Ding

The cult TV classic, reality-based TV show DEADLINE (Not Seen Since 1961) Debuts on DVD Nov. 19 from Film Chest Media

Lost and forgotten in a garage in New Jersey for over 50 years, the Deadline TV series (1959-61), which dramatized stories drawn from actual newspaper headlines of the 1950’s, has been rediscovered to remind us of a time when newspaper reporters were revered as heroes and the guardians of truth and justice. Reporters are the first line of defense of the principles rooted in our Constitution and protected under the first amendment. They uphold everything that our civil society stands for. At a time when print news media is rapidly disappearing and news reporters are being vilified as “enemies of th people,” Deadline has emerged from hibernation and i making its home video debut. Starring Peter Falk, Diane Ladd, George Maharis, Robert Lansing, and many more, this 39-episode anthology series is available for the first time since it aired on prime-time TV nearly 60 years ago. Episodes feature Paul Stewart (narrator), Peter Falk, Diane Ladd, George Maharis, and Robert Lansing. The DVD set can be ordered HERE

BONUS FEATURES

  • Photo Gallery
  • Trailer
  • Trivia
  • Extended Synopsis: Journalism Past and Present Overview
  • Interview with Broadcast Journalism Professor Joe Alicastro
  • Episode Synopses