Product Description
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This boxed set includes the following titles: Shadows
(1959) 81 min. B&W. 1.33:1 aspect ratio Faces (1968) 130 min.
B&W. 1.66:1 aspect ratio A Woman Under the Influence (1974) 147
min. Color. 1.85:1 aspect ratio The Killing of a Chinese Bookie
(1976) 135 min. Color. 1.85:1 aspect ratio Opening Night (1977)
144 min. Color. 1.66:1 aspect ratio A Constant Forge (2000) 200
min. Color. 1.33:1 aspect ratio John Cassavetes has been called a
genius, a visionary, and the her of independent film. But all
this rhetoric threatens to obscure the humanism and generosity of
his art. The five films included here represent his self-financed
works made outside the studio system of Hollywood, on which he
was afforded complete control. While about beatniks, hippies,
businessmen, actors, housewives, strippers, club owners,
gangsters, and children, all of them are beautiful, emotional
testaments to compassion. Cassavetes has often been called an
actor's director, but this body of workastoundingly, even
greater than the sum of its extraordinarily significant
partsreveals him to be an audience's director. The Criterion
Collection is proud to present Shadows, Faces, A Woman Under the
Influence, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, and Opening Night in
stunning new transfers. Includes Charles Kiselyak's A Constant
Forge, a candid biographical documentary on the life and work of
Cassavetes .
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Improvised by the cast, in black and white, John
Cassavetes's first independent feature, Shadows, looked like no
other film of its time. Cassavetes, seeking to both deal with
social issues and create a new kind of cinema, told a story about
a family of black siblings in Manhattan trying to make ends meet.
Though it meanders at times, it features the kind of spontaneous
emotion Cassavetes most wanted to elicit in his films.
A sensation in 1968, Faces earned O nominations for actors
Seymour Cassel and Lynn Carlin. Improvised and in an edgy,
hand-held fashion, the film examines the disintegration of the
marriage of a couple in mid-life doldrums. Each seeks solace
elsewhere: husband John Marley with prostitute Gena Rowlands,
wife Carlin with a free spirit played by Cassel. But neither
finds anything approaching the fulfillment they feel is missing
from the marriage. Indeed, in Cassavetes's probe of raw emotions,
these people discover that, just maybe, the problem lies not with
their spouse but with themselves.
The long, free-form drama A Woman Under the Influence is best
appreciated as a good showcase for Rowlands, playing a woman
whose sanity literally appears to be shattering as different
aspects of her personality eclipse others at various times. Peter
Falk plays her struggling, blue-collar husband, trying to
understand the phenomenon and sometimes losing his patience. As
with most of Cassavetes's works as a director, one can't help but
find one's attention drifting in and out, but Rowland's
performance is a key reason the film has been declared a
"national treasure" by the Library of Congress.
The title of The Killing of a Chinese Bookie is the only
commercial element in this fascinating character study by
writer-director Cassavetes, who once again finds his cinematic
soulmate in actor Ben Gazzara. The film uses verité technique to
tell the story of Cosmo Vitelli (Gazzara), a Hollywood strip-club
owner whose growing debt to a local gangster can only be erased
if he agrees to kill a rival Chinese gangster. As usual,
Cassavetes employs his favorite actors (including Seymour Cassel
and the fearsome Timothy Carey) and vivid improvisation to give
Chinese Bookie a tense atmosphere of emotional urgency.
Gena Rowlands stars in Opening Night, Cassavetes's drama of an
aging, alcoholic stage actress in the days leading up to her
latest Broadway opening. Like all of her collaborations with her
writer-director husband, Rowlands is a woman on the verge of
collapse, this time a lonely alcoholic whose very life is a
performance. Overlong at 144 minutes, the film's long, loose
scenes build through uncomfortable small talk and slow, tentative
confrontations. Some of the scenes are edgy and thrilling, though
many find this facet of Cassavetes pretentious and
self-indulgent. Ultimately it's a matter of taste: if you like
his style, you'll love this discomforting drama.
The eight-disc Criterion Collection set is filled out with the
2000 documentary A Constant Forge: The Life and Art of John
Cassavetes, plus numerous interviews, a second version of The
Killing of a Chinese Bookie, a commentary track for A Woman Under
the Influence, a 68-page book, and various other features.