Flicker Alley creates and distributes new digital editions of cinema classics & rare works that may otherwise be lost to time.
Working with archives, preservationists and film historians Flicker Alley brings you the rare classics so our collective film history and culture will be preserved and enjoyed.
What's the point of the 2-minute clip of kids singing? Seems boring, and off-point. No way would I buy a DVD of pointless singing (even though so nicely restored).
They were giving me ciggarette burns of this the last time I went to court and stood infront of the judge(Programmed with it in childhood in MK ultra/Monarch🦋 degrading rituals)while gangstalking in the court room and ofcourse using the color turquoise.Lot's of other subtle little threats too the commoner wouldn't notice if they weren't familiar with these methods of satanic ritual abuse/witchcraft.
Oh, not at all! Rest assured there are quite a few explosions (with 1952 CGI), almost as much bodycount as in the last "John Wick" movie, and some very exciting car chases, all of it with fast as heck, short-attention-span-friendly editing, so brain engagement can be kept to a minimum and one can even watch it in the mobile phone during commutes, between Tiktoks, without losing much. Or so I've been told!
Film Noir is all about tense scenes and dark shadows and this scene is exactly that. It's not a action movie lol. It's the subtle suspense that makes it so great. 👌🏽
@@Avelinovski So clever. But I’ve gotten burned on Flicker Alley releases of “Noir” releases before and they weren’t even Noir films, despite what blowhard Muller says. Plus Flicker Alley discs are not cheap so if this clip is representative of a highlight from the movie I’d say it’s pretty dull and doesn’t deserve my money. If you wish to use that as a way to further stereotype me, so be it, but I’m betting I’m much older than you are and have been studying film for longer than you’ve even known what it is. Hardly the attention challenged phone watchers that you incorrectly assume I am.
@@oliviatheresa You don’t need to teach me about film noir, I’ve been writing and teaching classes about it since the 1970’s. The clip in question here didn’t exhibit any of the subtle suspense you so cavalierly seem to be giving it credit as having. Flicker Alley uses the term Noir too lightly for my tastes and I don’t consider some of the releases they have slapped the label on to be in the Noir style at all. My negatively implying a clip the label themselves have intentionally chosen to promote their product doesn’t mean I am expecting an action film as you infer, but neither does it make your implication that the clip automatically translates as emblematic of Noir accurate. I stand by my contention that the clip is dull and was a poor choice for marketing the title.
Just imagine what Cinerama can become again with today's digital technology. I just seen a video on LinkedIn that shows a drone carrying a 3-camera setup similar to a Cinerama 3-film camera setup, It was much smaller and more nimble than a Cinerama camera setup would be. Now combine that with today's digital projection technology.