International Blu-ray discs
- eerik
- Joined: Sun Mar 22, 2009 4:53 pm
- Location: Estonia
Re: International Blu-ray discs
Tarkovsky's Stalker and The Sacrifice scheduled for June release in Japan.
- jsteffe
- Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2007 9:00 am
- Location: Atlanta, GA
Re: International Blu-ray discs
I'm so glad to hear that there's an HD master of Stalker floating around!
Apparently there is also a new Japanese Blu-ray of Nostalgia. I wonder how that looks...
Apparently there is also a new Japanese Blu-ray of Nostalgia. I wonder how that looks...
- Ashirg
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 9:10 am
- Location: Atlanta
Re: International Blu-ray discs
20th Century Fox in Japan is releasing a number of titles on blu-ray -
Emperor of the North
Harry & Tonto
Modesty Blaise
Emperor of the North
Harry & Tonto
Modesty Blaise
-
- Joined: Sun Sep 29, 2013 9:01 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
JP release of Nostalgia looks much better than the US blu, with the newest HD master having more clarity. Did the side by side comparison, playing the JP release on one player and the US one on another, and there is no contest here. The JP release is much brighter and more detailed, with US release being overly dark & too grainy.jsteffe wrote:Apparently there is also a new Japanese Blu-ray of Nostalgia. I wonder how that looks...
The disc has no English subtitles, so one has to know both Italian & Russian to understand the dialog, though.
I'm inclined to think that the upcoming AE release will utilize the same master. Let's wait and see.
- Drucker
- Your Future our Drucker
- Joined: Wed May 18, 2011 9:37 am
Re: International Blu-ray discs
A Matter of Life and Death gets a subpar blu-ray release from Ascot Elite. I assume the David mentioned in the review, who wrote in, is our own David Hare.
I thought this film had been restored by Film Foundation. Am I mistaken?
I thought this film had been restored by Film Foundation. Am I mistaken?
- tenia
- Ask Me About My Bassoon
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 11:13 am
Re: International Blu-ray discs
It has not, which is why the PQ on this BD (and the French one) is what it is, especially regarding the 3-strips alignment.
-
- Joined: Sat May 10, 2008 1:10 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
I guess they had almost no budget to work with, given that strip alignment errors can be corrected in software now.
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
Two blurays of Shaw Bros classics arrived from Germany today: Blood Brothers and Killer Clans.
These are part of a group of Shaw titles released right now. I have a few more of these on the way, including Mad Monkey Kung Fu, Chang Cheh's Shaolin Temple and Invincible Shaolin. Amazon lists the company releasing these films as MVL, but the only company title on the boxes aside from Celestial's branding is in English and reads "Great Movies"––typeset in the most lackluster way possible.
All over the boxes the company proclaims that the content inside is "FULL HD 1080," but very tiny on the specs on the back they read "1080i," and that's just what they are. So the interlacing we saw on the IVL, Image and Dragon Dynasty DVDs and on the WellGo blurays is back. In still shots, especially in closeups, the films look drastically more detailed and better than they've ever looked on home video before now. In motion and in long shots, it's clear that much more detail could have been there. Grain is tight and generally visible. In the still shots, when the interlaced image is better visually resolved, the picture looks quite sharp, with lots of depth, and suggestive of lots of detail. These are not upscaled transfers. If they were progressively transferred they would look really definitive. As they are, they have far more depth, detail and clarity than the extant DVDs of these movies. It is a real shame they ended up interlacing the discs. There are a few shots in each film that still look smeared and jacked-up, but these appear to be the shots restored from heavily–damaged source material.
The discs aren't English-friendly––hell, they're hardly German–friendly, either. They have NO subtitle tracks. There is a 5.1 German dub, a 2.0 German dub, and a 2.0 Mandarin track on each. The films are listed as being in 2.40:1 AR, and that looks to me to be the way they appear. Germans can watch this dubbed in German, or be fluent in Mandarin, I guess. Crazy guys like me can just watch in the original language and try to remember what was being said the first time I saw the pictures. A lot of higher-quality Shaw Brothers blurays have come out of Germany and Japan in the last couple of years, and almost none of it so far has been English-friendly. There are some nice German discs from TVP of Crippled Avengers, the Savage Five, and a couple of Alexander Fu Sheng/Chang Cheh Shaolin movies, which have English subtitles, and I have on order a German bluray of Super Inframan which claims it has English subtitles. These discs, though, aren't spilling over with language options. They are, however, much cheaper than the TVP blurays. The ones I bought were mostly around 8 Euros apiece.
Blood Brothers looks pretty great, but the film I was most looking forward to is Killer Clans, and that film loses a lot to the interlacing––largely because of the way it was shot. The imagery in Killer Clans has so many layers of depth that the softening, vaseline-y look of the interlacing really does it an injustice. Wonderfully, however, the depth is rendered pretty well, and the copious night scenes in the film read more clearly than ever before. The immediate thing that struck me was that the hero's first opponent in the initial scene gives the goofiest grimace as he scoffs at the hero's bravado––a detail not apparent even in the progressive Dragon Dynasty DVD of the film. The fabrics of the clothing in Blood Brothers also read exceptionally beautifully. Chang Cheh's thinner layers of atmosphere––darker background sets, lighter use of smoke, etc., actually register just fine in this bluray––another thing I don't think really registered in DVD versions of Blood Brothers.
Really, I wonder why these companies can't more often include English subtitles on their Shaw Bros releases? It is pretty clear right now that international interest in these movies is on the wane. The U.S. companies don't want to do anything with their rights to these films right now, and you'd think these German companies would able to sell then to the larger world's somewhat depreciated viewing base with some expanded language options? Maybe MVL's rights to the films don't include that option, as TVP's obviously did. Still. It sucks.
On the plus side, while the blurays have super-photoshopped covers, they have flippable interior covers that include original poster art. It's a nice addition. Hilariously, the Photoshopped art for Killer Clans actually comes from the promotional art for Invincible Shaolin. But they have the right original poster inside.
These are part of a group of Shaw titles released right now. I have a few more of these on the way, including Mad Monkey Kung Fu, Chang Cheh's Shaolin Temple and Invincible Shaolin. Amazon lists the company releasing these films as MVL, but the only company title on the boxes aside from Celestial's branding is in English and reads "Great Movies"––typeset in the most lackluster way possible.
All over the boxes the company proclaims that the content inside is "FULL HD 1080," but very tiny on the specs on the back they read "1080i," and that's just what they are. So the interlacing we saw on the IVL, Image and Dragon Dynasty DVDs and on the WellGo blurays is back. In still shots, especially in closeups, the films look drastically more detailed and better than they've ever looked on home video before now. In motion and in long shots, it's clear that much more detail could have been there. Grain is tight and generally visible. In the still shots, when the interlaced image is better visually resolved, the picture looks quite sharp, with lots of depth, and suggestive of lots of detail. These are not upscaled transfers. If they were progressively transferred they would look really definitive. As they are, they have far more depth, detail and clarity than the extant DVDs of these movies. It is a real shame they ended up interlacing the discs. There are a few shots in each film that still look smeared and jacked-up, but these appear to be the shots restored from heavily–damaged source material.
The discs aren't English-friendly––hell, they're hardly German–friendly, either. They have NO subtitle tracks. There is a 5.1 German dub, a 2.0 German dub, and a 2.0 Mandarin track on each. The films are listed as being in 2.40:1 AR, and that looks to me to be the way they appear. Germans can watch this dubbed in German, or be fluent in Mandarin, I guess. Crazy guys like me can just watch in the original language and try to remember what was being said the first time I saw the pictures. A lot of higher-quality Shaw Brothers blurays have come out of Germany and Japan in the last couple of years, and almost none of it so far has been English-friendly. There are some nice German discs from TVP of Crippled Avengers, the Savage Five, and a couple of Alexander Fu Sheng/Chang Cheh Shaolin movies, which have English subtitles, and I have on order a German bluray of Super Inframan which claims it has English subtitles. These discs, though, aren't spilling over with language options. They are, however, much cheaper than the TVP blurays. The ones I bought were mostly around 8 Euros apiece.
Blood Brothers looks pretty great, but the film I was most looking forward to is Killer Clans, and that film loses a lot to the interlacing––largely because of the way it was shot. The imagery in Killer Clans has so many layers of depth that the softening, vaseline-y look of the interlacing really does it an injustice. Wonderfully, however, the depth is rendered pretty well, and the copious night scenes in the film read more clearly than ever before. The immediate thing that struck me was that the hero's first opponent in the initial scene gives the goofiest grimace as he scoffs at the hero's bravado––a detail not apparent even in the progressive Dragon Dynasty DVD of the film. The fabrics of the clothing in Blood Brothers also read exceptionally beautifully. Chang Cheh's thinner layers of atmosphere––darker background sets, lighter use of smoke, etc., actually register just fine in this bluray––another thing I don't think really registered in DVD versions of Blood Brothers.
Really, I wonder why these companies can't more often include English subtitles on their Shaw Bros releases? It is pretty clear right now that international interest in these movies is on the wane. The U.S. companies don't want to do anything with their rights to these films right now, and you'd think these German companies would able to sell then to the larger world's somewhat depreciated viewing base with some expanded language options? Maybe MVL's rights to the films don't include that option, as TVP's obviously did. Still. It sucks.
On the plus side, while the blurays have super-photoshopped covers, they have flippable interior covers that include original poster art. It's a nice addition. Hilariously, the Photoshopped art for Killer Clans actually comes from the promotional art for Invincible Shaolin. But they have the right original poster inside.
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
More Shaw Bros blu rays from Germany arrived yesterday. This time it's Mad Monkey Kung Fu, Chang Cheh's Shaolin Temple and Invincible Shaolin.
These are more from MVL, with the "Great Movies" banner tiny on the back of the box. Like the others I mentioned in the previous post, they have reversible covers, with original poster art on the flippable inside. These are quite nice, except the German original poster for Mad Monkey Kung Fu looks hideous.
Like the other MVL discs, these are 1080i, though they love to emphasize on the box that they are "FULL 1080 HD." The interlacing is not very obtrusive on these discs, but it does occasionally remind one that the discs could have been better. Mad Monkey Kung Fu and Shaolin Temple are very sharp, especially in moments when the camera is still, and in closeups. The long shots in Shaolin Temple of the monks practicing look pretty great. Invincible Shaolin is a little softer of a transfer, all around. Either the film isn't in as good of shape, or there was some kind of error in the telecine, I think? The image looks a little bit mushy and slightly doubled. Just not as sharp all around.
None of the three have English subtitles, but in a new wrinkle, both Shaolin Temple and Invincible Shaolin have optional German subtitles. None of the other MVL discs I've seen so far have German subtitles, opting instead to rely upon German dub tracks.
Mad Monkey Kung Fu has one German 5.1 audio track, and two 2.0 Chinese tracks––one Mandarin, the other Cantonese. Invincible Shaolin and Shaolin Temple offer 5.1 and 2.0 German dub tracks and 2.0 Mandarin tracks.
I had forgotten what a good movie Shaolin Temple is. It's packed with stars and it really has something for everyone. The blu-ray makes it clear just how many Shaw Bros stars and soon-to-be stars were recruited to fill out the ranks of the temple monks, lay monks, and mongol invaders. This one is a treat to behold. Equally, I think I forgot just how savage and cruel a picture Mad Monkey Kung Fu turns out to be. That is a really surprising movie, and I appreciate seeing it in HD most of all, I think. The DVD of MMKF was one of the dodgy-er IVL discs, if I recall it right.
I forgot to mention last time that all the MVL titles are region B blurays. When the player is loaded with a region code that doesn't match, nothing happens; there's just a black screen.
These are more from MVL, with the "Great Movies" banner tiny on the back of the box. Like the others I mentioned in the previous post, they have reversible covers, with original poster art on the flippable inside. These are quite nice, except the German original poster for Mad Monkey Kung Fu looks hideous.
Like the other MVL discs, these are 1080i, though they love to emphasize on the box that they are "FULL 1080 HD." The interlacing is not very obtrusive on these discs, but it does occasionally remind one that the discs could have been better. Mad Monkey Kung Fu and Shaolin Temple are very sharp, especially in moments when the camera is still, and in closeups. The long shots in Shaolin Temple of the monks practicing look pretty great. Invincible Shaolin is a little softer of a transfer, all around. Either the film isn't in as good of shape, or there was some kind of error in the telecine, I think? The image looks a little bit mushy and slightly doubled. Just not as sharp all around.
None of the three have English subtitles, but in a new wrinkle, both Shaolin Temple and Invincible Shaolin have optional German subtitles. None of the other MVL discs I've seen so far have German subtitles, opting instead to rely upon German dub tracks.
Mad Monkey Kung Fu has one German 5.1 audio track, and two 2.0 Chinese tracks––one Mandarin, the other Cantonese. Invincible Shaolin and Shaolin Temple offer 5.1 and 2.0 German dub tracks and 2.0 Mandarin tracks.
I had forgotten what a good movie Shaolin Temple is. It's packed with stars and it really has something for everyone. The blu-ray makes it clear just how many Shaw Bros stars and soon-to-be stars were recruited to fill out the ranks of the temple monks, lay monks, and mongol invaders. This one is a treat to behold. Equally, I think I forgot just how savage and cruel a picture Mad Monkey Kung Fu turns out to be. That is a really surprising movie, and I appreciate seeing it in HD most of all, I think. The DVD of MMKF was one of the dodgy-er IVL discs, if I recall it right.
I forgot to mention last time that all the MVL titles are region B blurays. When the player is loaded with a region code that doesn't match, nothing happens; there's just a black screen.
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
Amazon Japan shows a Luis Bunuel "late Mexico period" blu ray box set coming out August 31st.
http://www.amazon.co.jp/%E3%83%AB%E3%82 ... KF787ZGSWN" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The set looks like it includes Viridiana, The Exterminating Angel, and Simon of the Desert. No English subtitles, but exciting nonetheless!
http://www.amazon.co.jp/%E3%83%AB%E3%82 ... KF787ZGSWN" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The set looks like it includes Viridiana, The Exterminating Angel, and Simon of the Desert. No English subtitles, but exciting nonetheless!
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
I'd like that, too. I'd be happy to have a blu ray of The Exterminating Angel, though. That seems exciting.
Received a group of Japanese blurays and DVDs today. The first two are blu rays from a company called Content Japan. Both are Kadokawa "classics" from the 80s: Shinji Somai's Sailor Suit Schoolgirl with a Machine Gun and Nobuhiko Obayashi's live–action The Girl Who Leapt Through Time. These are advertised as 4k scans. There are removable Japanese subtitles on each disc. Both have 2 audio tracks: a 2.0 PCM and a 5.1 DTS track.
These look incredibly gorgeous. Sailor Suit Schoolgirl gets the top prize, with huge depth of field, beautifully rendered grain, and rich, rapturous color. I didn't really imagine that the film could look this good. The Girl Who Leapt Through Time looks good as well, but there are a few scenes that look to be in better or worse states of repair. Once in a while a scene appears that's a tad heavy-looking. The majority of the scenes have the same level of clarity, depth and color as Sailor Suit Schoolgirl has. The scene in the chemistry lab with the mist comes across with a little ghosting, making me wonder if it isn't from an inferior source? But these are generally great treatments for these films. I wish Typhoon Club would get the same treatment.
Speaking of films getting the same treatment, there is a booklet in both disc boxes that advertises the Shochiku Best collection blurays. There's a list of films most overseas Japanese film fans could care less about, but some of the films getting blu ray treatment include: The Discarnates, Goke Bodysnatcher from Hell, 226: Four Days of Snow and Blood, and Village of Doom, which is Noboru Tanaka's last film, I believe. Also listed is Castle of Sand.
I also picked up DVDs of The Cherry Orchard and Exchange Students. The Cherry Orchard is a pretty good DVD. Exchange students is awful––not even anamorphic widescreen. Neither disc has english subs.
Received a group of Japanese blurays and DVDs today. The first two are blu rays from a company called Content Japan. Both are Kadokawa "classics" from the 80s: Shinji Somai's Sailor Suit Schoolgirl with a Machine Gun and Nobuhiko Obayashi's live–action The Girl Who Leapt Through Time. These are advertised as 4k scans. There are removable Japanese subtitles on each disc. Both have 2 audio tracks: a 2.0 PCM and a 5.1 DTS track.
These look incredibly gorgeous. Sailor Suit Schoolgirl gets the top prize, with huge depth of field, beautifully rendered grain, and rich, rapturous color. I didn't really imagine that the film could look this good. The Girl Who Leapt Through Time looks good as well, but there are a few scenes that look to be in better or worse states of repair. Once in a while a scene appears that's a tad heavy-looking. The majority of the scenes have the same level of clarity, depth and color as Sailor Suit Schoolgirl has. The scene in the chemistry lab with the mist comes across with a little ghosting, making me wonder if it isn't from an inferior source? But these are generally great treatments for these films. I wish Typhoon Club would get the same treatment.
Speaking of films getting the same treatment, there is a booklet in both disc boxes that advertises the Shochiku Best collection blurays. There's a list of films most overseas Japanese film fans could care less about, but some of the films getting blu ray treatment include: The Discarnates, Goke Bodysnatcher from Hell, 226: Four Days of Snow and Blood, and Village of Doom, which is Noboru Tanaka's last film, I believe. Also listed is Castle of Sand.
I also picked up DVDs of The Cherry Orchard and Exchange Students. The Cherry Orchard is a pretty good DVD. Exchange students is awful––not even anamorphic widescreen. Neither disc has english subs.
- Altair
- Joined: Wed Aug 14, 2013 12:56 pm
- Location: England
Re: International Blu-ray discs
Does anyone know if Studio Canal's BD boxset of the Angélique films have English subtitles?
- tenia
- Ask Me About My Bassoon
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 11:13 am
Re: International Blu-ray discs
I had a look around and it seems they don't.Altair wrote:Does anyone know if Studio Canal's BD boxset of the Angélique films have English subtitles?
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 1:20 pm
- Location: New England
- Contact:
Re: International Blu-ray discs
> I also picked up DVDs of The Cherry Orchard and Exchange Students
The original 1990 film or the more recent remake?
The original 1990 film or the more recent remake?
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
It was the original, the 1990 film. The disc is a pretty good anamorphic transfer, looking especially good for being a single-layered disc. I keep hoping it will be released on blu ray in Japan, but I haven't seen anything like that so far.
The Exchange Students disc is of the 1982 film, also, not Obayashi's remake from 2007. I'm starting to re-synch subtitles I found for each film, so I can really watch them again.
The Exchange Students disc is of the 1982 film, also, not Obayashi's remake from 2007. I'm starting to re-synch subtitles I found for each film, so I can really watch them again.
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 1:20 pm
- Location: New England
- Contact:
Re: International Blu-ray discs
I need to see this -- as I am a big fan of the Chekhov play (which we did get to see performed a year ago -- by adults).
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
It's a wonderful movie.
I saw the play with Annette Bening in the lead years ago. She tackled the role in a way that seemed very superficial to me, but the play was completely stolen by Alfred Molina, who was playing Lopakhin. I finally understood the remarkable skill of Molina as an actor––someone whose film roles are rarely allowed to measure up to the quality of his craft. He dominated the play from beginning to end with an immense energy to match the character's grand dreams and great expectations. The other actors were quite fine in their roles.
The Nakahara film riffs on the Chekhov––the eve of the production of the play is when all the action takes place, and the roles of the girls vis a vis their classmates delicately mirror some of the relationships in the play. It's also made very clear in the drama that the teen girls are by and large unaware of the ways in which their own lives and the roles in the play intersect. The film is quite subtle and understated.
I saw the play with Annette Bening in the lead years ago. She tackled the role in a way that seemed very superficial to me, but the play was completely stolen by Alfred Molina, who was playing Lopakhin. I finally understood the remarkable skill of Molina as an actor––someone whose film roles are rarely allowed to measure up to the quality of his craft. He dominated the play from beginning to end with an immense energy to match the character's grand dreams and great expectations. The other actors were quite fine in their roles.
The Nakahara film riffs on the Chekhov––the eve of the production of the play is when all the action takes place, and the roles of the girls vis a vis their classmates delicately mirror some of the relationships in the play. It's also made very clear in the drama that the teen girls are by and large unaware of the ways in which their own lives and the roles in the play intersect. The film is quite subtle and understated.
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 1:20 pm
- Location: New England
- Contact:
Re: International Blu-ray discs
From the reviews I've read, it sounds like Nakahara's first version was best.
- andyli
- Joined: Thu Sep 24, 2009 4:46 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
A French Blu-ray release of early cinema by the Lumiere brothers is up for pre-order.
- whaleallright
- Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2005 12:56 am
Re: International Blu-ray discs
Neat! It says the set contains over 110 films. I hope this includes some of the "views" taken around the world by Lumière cameramen.
The following is listed among the bonus features:
The following is listed among the bonus features:
You'd think they would have asked a Chinese filmmaker to remake that film, considering how many of the iconic technologies of the modern world are manufactured in that part of the world. Sortie des usines Foxconn?Les nouvelles sorties d'usine de Quentin Tarantino, Jerry Schatzberg, Michael Cimino, Pedro Almodovar, Paolo Sorrentino, Xavier Dolan
- swo17
- Bloodthirsty Butcher
- Joined: Tue Apr 15, 2008 10:25 am
- Location: SLC, UT
Re: International Blu-ray discs
I wonder how similar this will be to Tavernier's presentation of 85 films released long ago as The Lumière Brothers' First Films.
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
There are German blu rays of Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry, Raise the Red Lantern, Gilda, The Big Clock and The Dark Mirror. I haven't seen those films available on blu ray anywhere else in the world as of yet.
There's also a German blu ray of A Bullet for the General. Has anyone seen this disc? I wonder if it has the same ultra-waxy level of noise reduction as the US blu ray.
There's also a German blu ray of A Bullet for the General. Has anyone seen this disc? I wonder if it has the same ultra-waxy level of noise reduction as the US blu ray.
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
Discovered some Spanish blu rays as well of some surprising films. Reviews on Amazon suggest they are well-done discs, not bootlegs.
The laughably horrible Antonio Margheriti Spaghetti Western/kung fu hybrid, The Stranger and the Gunfighter, starring Lee Van Cleef and Lo Lieh is one disc, and the other film I found was the Edward Dmytryk Western Warlock, with Henry Fonda and Richard Widmark.
The same company doing The Stranger and the Gunfighter is also releasing a bunch of Spaghetti Westerns not available elsewhere, as far as I can tell. Mostly this is a lot of Trinity films.
The laughably horrible Antonio Margheriti Spaghetti Western/kung fu hybrid, The Stranger and the Gunfighter, starring Lee Van Cleef and Lo Lieh is one disc, and the other film I found was the Edward Dmytryk Western Warlock, with Henry Fonda and Richard Widmark.
The same company doing The Stranger and the Gunfighter is also releasing a bunch of Spaghetti Westerns not available elsewhere, as far as I can tell. Mostly this is a lot of Trinity films.
- tenia
- Ask Me About My Bassoon
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 11:13 am
Re: International Blu-ray discs
The Dark Mirror is out by Olive in the US. Gilda is available by Sony in Europe (Italy, Spain, Germany) since 2-3 years now.feihong wrote:There are German blu rays of Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry, Raise the Red Lantern, Gilda, The Big Clock and The Dark Mirror. I haven't seen those films available on blu ray anywhere else in the world as of yet.
- feihong
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:20 pm
Re: International Blu-ray discs
Ah! I hadn't heard of those releases.
The version of The Big Clock I found was in a 3-pack with The Dark Mirror and Ministry of Fear.
The version of The Big Clock I found was in a 3-pack with The Dark Mirror and Ministry of Fear.