Posted

in

by

Tags:


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.

None this week.

Other Films

Here are other notable film releases coming to Warner Archive Collection
Gold Is Where You Find It (1938)
Olivia de Havilland begins her run as the “Queen of Technicolor” in this sweeping Western epic depicting the other range war – the one fought between post-Gold Rush miners and the farmers in California’s Sacramento Valley. With the easy seams all played out, the miners deploy new technology to hydraulically clear entire mountainsides to get at the gold. The fate of the farmers downstream, subject to the mine’s toxic effluvia and flooding matters not. That is until one miner (George Brent) falls for one farmer’s daughter (Olivia de Havilland). The daughter’s father’s (Claude Rains) objections merely start with the mining process… Tim Holt, Barton MacLane and Sidney Toler fill out the cast. Michael Curtiz directs.

Wings of the Navy (1939)
This patented Warner Bros. flag-waver casts George Brent and John Payne in the roles originally defined by Pat O’Brien and James Cagney, with de Havilland as the good girl that drives both brothers to do bad things. Naval siblings Cass (Brent) and Jerry (Payne) are separated as far apart in their mutual service as can be – one high-flier in the Navy Air Corps, the other a deep-diver in the submarine service but their mutual love for the same lady puts the pair on a collision course in the air at a time when the nation’s best and bravest were girding for war. Directed by Lloyd Bacon.

Government Girl (1944)
Olivia jumps ship for RKO and breaks class for some broad physical comedy in this “housing shortage” war-time comedy mixing romance, message movies, and pratfalls. Rugged industrialist Ed Browne is suborned from the dynamic factories of Detroit’s auto industry to the red-tape clogged halls of Washington DC to help give the military’s aviation build-up a needed kick in the derriere. And Browne doesn’t care who he offends, starting with stealing ‘Smokey’ Allard’s (De Havilland) BFF’s honeymoon suite. When Smokey discovers she’s Ed’s new secretary, courtship, chicanery and congressional hearing ensue. Director Dudley Nichols holds the reins loosely, letting De Havilland clearly have a blast leaving dignity behind, running riotously free.

Verified by MonsterInsights