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Here are some highlights of the recent releases to the Warner Archive Collection. DVD’s and Blu-rays are manufactured on demand. They also have a streaming service. Before you visit Warner Archive to check out their selection, check out the selections below an a few of my thoughts.

Oscar Nominees & Winners

Our primary reason for highlighting each week’s selections is to showcase new and reprints of Oscar nominees and winners. Below are the Archives most recent releases in this class.
Running on Empty (1988)
River Phoenix takes centerstage in this coming-of-age cum political suspenser from Sidney Lumet along with an all-star ensemble. Phoenix plays Danny Pope, who has grown to teen-hood under an ever shifting number of identities while on the run with his radical fugitive parents (Judd Hirsch and Christine Lahti). When Danny finds something worth staying put for (Martha Plimpton), Danny’s parents are faced with letting go or losing. The chemistry on display between Phoenix and Plimpton has lead the film to become a teen romance cult favorite for subsequent generations.

Other Films

Here are other notable film releases coming to Warner Archive Collection
The Black Scorpion (1957)
A lean budget goes a long way when the master of movie miracles, Willis O’Brien (King Kong), is on hand to deliver up the SFX. After unexpected seismic activity unleashes a swarm of stupendous scorpions from the bowels of the earth, a pair of geologists lead the vanguard tasked with dispatching them back. Co-starring Richard Denning (Creature from the Black Lagoon) and pin-up queen Mara Corday (Tarantula).

Divine Madness (1980)
Accomplished directing vet Michael Ritchie took a camera crew on tour with the divine Ms. Middler as her career was going stratospheric, capturing her magic across four concerts and the carefully crafting them into one. Backed up by her trio The Harlettes, Bette serves up song and risquรฉ comedy in equal portions. Favorite songs include “Big Noise From Winnetka,” “Paradise,” “Fire Down Below,” “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy,” “Do You Want to Dance,” “You Canยนt Always Get What You Want,” “I Shall Be Released”, and “The Rose”, as delivered as on Bette Midler can.

The Man with Two Brains (1983)
Steve Martin’s Sci-Fi Horror satire classic, now roomy enough for both brains! Directed by comedy titan Carl Reiner (and co-written by Martin, Reiner and George Gipe), The Man with Two Brains features Martin as the brilliant neurosurgeon Michael Hfuhruhurr who finds himself in a fatal love triangle with Dolores Benedict, a body-ful femme fatale (Kathleen Turner) and Anne Uumellmahaye, a bodiless brain beautiful (an uncredited Sissy Spacek). And whoยนs that waiting in the wings? The sinister elevator killer!

My Blue Heaven (1990)
Stave Martin and Rick Moranis co-star in this witness protection buddy comedy inspired by the life of Henry Hill (also the inspiration for GoodFellas). Vinne Antonelli (Martin) trades in the mob for the ล’burbs when he agrees to testify against the mob, and its up to milquetoast Federal Agent Barney Coopersmith (Moranis) to keep him out of trouble until the trial. And alive. Co-starring Joan Cusack, with a script by Nora Ephron. Directed by Herbert Ross.

Joe’s Apartment (1996)
This flick’s outrรฉ gross-out comedy antics were too much for the critics of its day, but now they are merely the entree to a dinner of mirth and sentiment (time changes tastes, kids!). Jerry O’Connell stars as Joe, the ultimate innocent, fresh from the midwest and ripe for the plucking by the Big Bad Apple. Luckily, Joe lands an apartment in the East Village infested with some very frisky – and melodious – cockroaches who help Joe find romance (Megan Ward) and defeat an evil real estate developer (Robert Vaughn). The skillful blend of CG and stop motion from now-legendary animation studio Blue Sky launched them into features, aided and abetted by some notable voices (Billy West, Reginald Hudlin, Dave Chapelle and Tim Blake Nelson among others).

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