CRITERION: Sweet Smell of Success - Standard & Blu in February

WHAT:
WHEN:
STUDIO:
PRICE:
Sweet Smell of Success
February 22nd
Criterion
Retail $39.95, Our: $31.99
Buy Now

WHAT:
WHEN:
STUDIO:
PRICE:
Sweet Smell of Success (Blu-Ray)
February 22nd
Criterion
Retail $39.95, Our: $31.99
Buy Now
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Previously released by MGM in standard definition, Sweet Smell of Success has been announced by Criterion in both standard & Blu-Ray for release on February 22nd.

The SD release will be a 2-disc set, while the Blu-Ray will be a single disc. Bonus features abound (below).

Each release will retail for $39.95, but are available at ClassicFlix.com for only $31.99.



SYNOPSIS:
In Alexander Mackendrick’s swift, cynical Sweet Smell of Success, Burt Lancaster stars as barbaric Broadway gossip columnist J. J. Hunsecker, and Tony Curtis as Sidney Falco, the unprincipled press agent he ropes into smearing the up-and-coming jazz musician romancing his beloved sister.

Featuring deliciously unsavory dialogue in an acid, brilliantly structured script by Clifford Odets and Ernest Lehman and noirish neon cityscapes from Oscar-winning cinematographer James Wong Howe, Sweet Smell of Success is a cracklingly cruel dispatch from the kill-or-be-killed wilds of 1950s Manhattan.

BONUS FEATURES:
  • New audio commentary by film scholar James Naremore
  • Mackendrick: The Man Who Walked Away, a 1986 documentary featuring interviews with director Alexander Mackendrick, actor Burt Lancaster, producer James Hill, and more
  • James Wong Howe: Cinematographer, a 1973 documentary about the Oscar-winning director of photography, featuring lighting tutorials with Howe
  • New video interview with film critic and historian Neil Gabler (Winchell: Gossip, Power and the Culture of Celebrity) about legendary columnist Walter Winchell, inspiration for the character J. J. Hunsecker
  • New video interview with filmmaker James Mangold about Mackendrick, his instructor and mentor
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by critic Gary Giddins, two short stories by Ernest Lehman featuring the characters from the film, notes about the film by Lehman, and an excerpt from Mackendrick’s book On Film-making

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