Flipside 029: That Sinking Feeling
Posted: Fri Jan 31, 2014 10:46 am
Bill Forsyth's first feature confirmed as the next Flipside release.
More news on specs when I get it.
More news on specs when I get it.
http://cwww.criterionforum.org/forum/
http://cwww.criterionforum.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=29&t=13018
Newly remastered in High Definition, this inventive low-budget masterpiece can be experienced with its original Glaswegian dialogue track and in its correct aspect ratio. Among the disc’s extensive extra features are a full-length audiocommentary with Bill Forsyth and Mark Kermode, a number of rarely seen short films and documentaries and a dryly funny BAFTA Lifetime Achievement Award acceptance film made by Forsyth in 2009.
What with this and what looks set to be a similarly stacked Blu-ray of Gregory's Girl, courtesy of Second Sight, we're getting a major and wholly unexpected (and wholly welcome) Bill Forsyth revival this year.• New Audio Commentary with Bill Forsyth and Mark Kermode;
• Interview with actor Robert Buchanan (Douglas Weir, 2014, 20 mins)
• Kermode Uncut (2012, 9 mins): film critic Mark Kermode discusses the budget for That Sinking Feeling with Bill Forsyth;
• KH-4 (John Schorstein, 1969, 13 mins): a young artist (Forsyth) struggles to seek inspiration from a slowly crumbing cityscape;
• Mirror (John Schorstein, 1970, 30 mins): a young would-be writer (Forsyth) searches the street of Glasgow for his missing girlfriend;
• Glasgow 1980 (Oscar Marzaroli, 1971, 30 mins): documentary, edited by Bill Forsyth, promoting the proposed development of Glasgow in the 1970s;
• Islands of the West (Bill Forsyth, 1972, 30 mins): promoting the scenic beauty of the Scottish Hebrides;
• Bill Forsyth's Lifetime Achievement Film (Bill Forsyth, 2009, 7 mins): short acceptance film made for BAFTA;
• Optional alternative dubbed dialogue track;
• Fully illustrated booklet.
BFI Flipside presents
That Sinking Feeling
The debut feature by Bill Forsyth
The 29th title on the BFI’s collectible Flipside label is celebrated Scottish director Bill Forsyth’s (Gregory's Girl, Local Hero) zero-budget debut. Hilarious and inventive, That Sinking Feeling (1979) is presented in a new High Definition transfer, complete with the original Glaswegian dialogue track.
Released on 21 April 2014, this definitive Dual Format Edition (DVD and Blu-ray) is loaded with special features including previously unreleased short films, a newly recorded audio commentary and much more.
Unemployed teenager Ronnie (Robert Buchanan, Gregory’s Girl) and his hapless pals spend their time hanging around the rainy parks and dingy cafes of Glasgow, but their world is about to change when Ronnie hatches a plan to make them all rich by stealing a job-lot of stainless steel sinks.
Filmed entirely on location around Glasgow, the cast was largely drawn from members of the Glasgow Youth Theatre and included a small part for John Gordon Sinclair, who went on to star in Gregory’s Girl.
To raise the money to get the film off the ground, Bill Forsyth wrote to local businesses for help and That Sinking Feeling became the first fiction feature film to be both financed and made in Scotland – for the record-breaking amount of £5,000.
The BFI has worked closely with Bill Forsyth to bring the film back into circulation, finally reinstating the original Glaswegian dialogue track and presenting it in its correct aspect ratio.
Amongst the extensive extras are a full-length audio commentary with Bill Forsyth and Mark Kermode, one of the film’s most ardent high profile fans, a number of rarely-seen short films, and a dryly funny BAFTA Lifetime Achievement Award acceptance film made by Forsyth in 2009.
Special features
• Presented in both High Definition and Standard Definition;
• New audio commentary with Bill Forsyth and Mark Kermode;
• New interview with actor Robert Buchanan (2014, 14 mins);
• KH-4 (John Schorstein, 1969, 13 mins): a young artist (Forsyth) struggles to seek inspiration from a slowly crumbling cityscape;
• Mirror (John Schorstein, 1970, 33 mins): a young writer (Forsyth) searches the streets of Glasgow for his missing girlfriend;
• Glasgow 1980 (Oscar Marzaroli, 1971, 30 mins): documentary, edited by Bill Forsyth, promoting the proposed development of Glasgow in the 1970s;
• Islands of the West (Bill Forsyth, 1972, 30 mins): promoting the scenic beauty of the Scottish Hebrides;
• Bill Forsyth BAFTA Film (Bill Forsyth, 2009, 7 mins): short acceptance film made for BAFTA;
• Kermode Uncut (2012, 9 mins): film critic Mark Kermode discusses the budget for That Sinking Feeling with Bill Forsyth;
• Optional alternative dubbed dialogue track;
• Illustrated booklet with new essays and credits.
Product details
RRP: £19.99 / cat. no. BFIB1189 / Cert 12 / Flipside cat no: 029
UK / 1979 / colour / English with optional hard-of-hearing subtitles / 93 mins / Original aspect ratio 1.33:1
Disc 1: BD50 / 1080p / 24fps / PCM mono audio (48k/24-bit)
Disc 2: DVD9 / PAL / Dolby Digital mono audio (320 kbps)
I've been to Al's! Are they still around post-pandemic? I had friends who loved going there for their sandwiches (IIRC I highly enjoyed the roast beef sandwich with blue cheese that I had when I was first there) and yes, the butter cookies are amazing. I think they even keep them in the fridge to keep their integrity since they're so rich?pistolwink wrote: ↑Sun Jul 04, 2021 1:00 am...I'll put a word in for Al's Deli, an astonishingly good and long-lived sandwich shop in Evanston, Illinois that carries Irn-Bru among other Scottish and French delicacies.
"Made from Girders," hah!colinr0380 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 11, 2021 5:47 amI was never the biggest fan of Irn-Bru but it does have a classic 90s advert associated with it that completely captures the way that the drink is the equivalent of a Glaswegian Kiss in liquid form!