Monday, October 13, 2014

Olive Film's Restores Director Robert Altman's Come Back to the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean For Blu-ray And DVD On Nov. 18


DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
At last!  At last!   The late auteur filmmaker Robert Altman’s long sought-after 1982 film adaptation of Ed Graczyk’s stage play, Come Back to the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean will be released as both DVD and Blu-ray product offerings by Olive Films on Nov. 18!

Not only will this news please fans of filmmaker Robert Altman, but there are literally legions of adoring fans of the various cast members that Altman assembled for this film (geeze, this guy had a gift for that, didn’t he!).   

Are you ready?   Cher (future Oscar-winner for Best Actress in Moonstruck), the late Karen Black (Oscar-nominee for Best Actress, Five Easy Pieces), Sandy Dennis (Oscar-winner for Best Supporting Actress in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) and Kathy Bates (future Oscar-winner for Best Actress in Misery) are the marquee names, but Sudie Bond (perhaps best remembered as “Mama” Velma Castleberry for the Flo TV sitcom, plus such films as They Might be Giants, Cold Turkey and Love Story) more than holds her own as the store owner where the “reunion” takes place.

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
September 30, 1955 is the day that James Dean died in an auto accident just outside of Paso Robles, California … it is now 20 years later and fans — they call themselves the “Disciples of James Dean” — of the actor are gathering for a reunion to honor his memory.   They are, however, not gathering anywhere near Paso Robles, but at an aging Woolworth’s (a “five and dime”) in a remote corner of Texas.   

Why there?  It’s the closest place they could find to Marta, which just so happened to be the shooting location for Dean’s 1956 film release of Giant (released theatrically a full year after his death) … which is a whole other story onto itself.

Through flashbacks and character dialog (this is, after all, an adaptation of a stage play) we learn secrets — especially about Karen Black’s character, Joanne, and her relationship to Mona (Sandy Dennis) — about the various members of the group.   

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph TribbeyThese connections and “reveals” are marked by both visuals (an interesting use of mirrors) and music.   And therein was the hold up in getting this Altman gem to DVD and Blu-ray … music clearances!   The soundtrack from the film includes a number of songs made famous by the McGuire Sisters, including their number one hit from (yes, you guessed it) 1955, “Sincerely.”

This restored version of the film was completed in 2011 by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and should look absolutely gorgeous on both DVD and Blu-ray.   

Bonus goodies include a newly-prepared video conversation with writer Ed Graczyk, who both wrote the original state play and then adapted that play for the screen.

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