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The Jazz Singer (Three-Disc Deluxe Edition)
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| Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
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July 24, 2020 "Please retry" | — | 3 | $12.95 | $17.99 |
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| Genre | Musicals & Performing Arts/Musicals, Drama |
| Format | NTSC |
| Contributor | Alan Crosland, Al Jolson |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 4 hours and 25 minutes |
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Product Description
Product Description
Jazz Singer, The: Deluxe Edition (DVD) When The Jazz Singer was released in theaters, the future of Hollywood changed. For the first time in a feature film, an actor spoke on-screen, stunning audiences and leaving the silent era behind. Al Jolson was the history-making actor, playing the son of a Jewish cantor who must defy his rabbi father in order to pursue his dream of being in show business.
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It's one of the most famous titles in film history, and everybody knows why: in a handful of sequences in The Jazz Singer, sound and image are excitingly synchronized. By 1927, some short subjects had already been "talkies," and a few features had synchronized music, but The Jazz Singer gets the prize as the breakthrough. Because the film is largely without dialogue, you can--even watching the film today--almost palpably sense the shift in movie epochs, as cinema takes an evolutionary leap from one form to the next. The movie itself, based on a successful Broadway show by Samson Raphaelson, is strictly melodrama of an ancient kind. Young Jakie Rabinowitz is expected to follow in the long line of family Cantors, but his heart yearns to sing "Toot Toot, Tootsie" instead of "Kol Nidre." Al Jolson plays Jakie (later Jack Robin of footlights fame), and you get a taste of why he was widely considered the greatest entertainer of his time; watch him with a tearjerker such as "Dirty Hands, Dirty Face" and you'll see the skillful, completely irony-free manipulations of a master storyteller. Equally fun is Jolson's non-singing patter--in fact, this is where you get the thrill of talking pictures, more so than the songs. "You ain't heard nuthin' yet," he burbles, and it's hard not to catch the excitement.
Jolson's numbers include his blackface act, a longstanding tradition of minstrel shows and music halls, and an unavoidable source of awkwardness for later viewers (see The Savages for an amusing account of the embarrassment this can cause). Blackface is a bizarre show business reality, and it's part of the movie, so some historical context is required.
Warner Bros. rightly considers The Jazz Singer a key moment in the studio's history, and this three-disc DVD package gives the deluxe treatment. The film itself is beautifully restored, and reproductions of original supporting materials (souvenir program, stills, ads) are fun. A booklet on early Vitaphone shorts clearly predates The Jazz Singer, for Jolson is mentioned only as a star of Vitaphone shorts, and George Jessel is tabbed as the future star of The Jazz Singer (he'd played Jakie on Broadway). A 90-minute documentary gives a fine account of how the Vitaphone system worked, and how other systems actually became the industry standard.
Supplemental short films are a true treasure trove. A Plantation Act is more Jolson blackface, Hollywood Handicap a studio short comedy directed by Buster Keaton, and I Love to Singa a hilarious 1936 Tex Avery cartoon--a spoof of The Jazz Singer starring a bird named Owl Jolson. A flabbergasting collection of Vitagraph shorts--over four hours' worth--makes up disc 3 of this set: utterly weird and wonderful performances by some of the strangest acts ever to kill vaudeville. There are a few names here: George Burns and Gracie Allen in a short called Lambchops, the Foy Family doing wacky stage business. But the cornball timed jokes of Shaw & Lee, the saucy songs of Trixie Friganza, not to mention "The Wizard of the Mandolin," Bernardo De Pace--these are gems, folks. Anyone with a taste for showbiz past will love them. --Robert Horton
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- MPAA rating : NR (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 7.75 x 5.75 x 0.53 inches; 1 Pounds
- Item model number : WHV79889DVD
- Director : Alan Crosland
- Media Format : NTSC
- Run time : 4 hours and 25 minutes
- Release date : October 16, 2007
- Actors : Al Jolson
- Subtitles: : English, French, Spanish
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 1.0)
- Studio : WarnerBrothers
- ASIN : B00005JKSC
- Number of discs : 3
- Best Sellers Rank: #127,048 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #20,872 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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All of the errors in the DVD have been corrected. The scratches during "Dirty Hands, Dirty Face" and much of the rest of the Coffee Dan's scene have been eliminated without a trace. The mis-matched synchronization of the entire reel before "Blue Skies" has been fixed. The artificial shaking of the inter-titles to disguise them being free-frames has been steadied. In the extras, they have put in the correct two scenes from "Gold Diggers Of Broadway" -- we actually see Nick Lucas sing in 2-strip Technicolor "Tip-Toe Through the Tulips" this time. As an additional bonus they have added two shorts which have cameo appearances by Al Jolson and Ruby Keeler at Santa Anita Raceway. Most of the printed extras from the DVD set are in the book except for most of the postcards, but they have added some great portraits, bios, and an illustrated essay on the earlier film sound systems.
Only disc one is Blu-ray. Discs two and three are still DVD, and actually have the same labels and catalog number as the originals -- so don't mix them up with your originals or else you'll lose Nick Lucas. They are still standard definition, but the first disc is High Defination and the image sparkles! The DVD was good, but the Blu-ray image will blow you away. It probably looks better than original nitrate prints looked in 1927. I'll go so far as to say that it proves that you DO need to buy that Blu-ray player if you haven't yet.
The aforementioned scratches on the DVD were always a puzzle to me. They were continuous vertical scratches that often hit right on Jolson's face. You could tell they had worked on them because they were faint remnants of what must have originally been very deep. But they were still there in the most famous scene in the film. When Mary Dale enters down the stairs the scratch is right down the middle of her face in the first close-up and very heavy at the end of the second close-up. (There! I've done it!! If you never noticed them before, now you will never be able to watch the DVD again without them bothering you!!! Mission Accomplished!) But they are GONE in the Blu-ray!!
The sync problem in the DVD starts at the beginning of the train station scene where they mis-start the disc too late over the letter writing close-up. It is as much as 20 seconds off, and the music cues are in all the wrong places. It is much like the scene in "Singing In the Rain" where voices come out of the wrong person's mouths. The bassoon that was supposed to be mocking the prima donna always came when other people were on the screen. The music made no sense. It continues on to the neighborhood walk and the entry into his family's apartment. The mother's theme music was never there at the correct time. And the end of the disc was clipped off when the "Blue Skies" reel begins. This had never been wrong in previous issues and prints so someone really goofed when the DVD was being assembled. But all of this has been fixed in the Blu-ray, and the scenes and the music really make sense once again.
Almost all of the inter-titles are freeze-frames. They are noticeable because all moving grain of the image stops cold. To disguise this they wandered the image slightly in the DVD version. This fake motion was supposed to emulate how titles look when the film continues to run, but in 35mm theatrical prints this does not happen unless the film is worn. The four sprockets per frame should keep the picture steady, unlike 16mm where there is only one sprocket per frame and the image usually always shakes. Saner heads prevailed this time, and the titles are kept steady in the Blu-ray. (Again, if you had never noticed this in the DVD, now it will bother you. Good! Mission accomplished!)
The book is easier to maneuver than all those separate booklets and slip-cases of the DVD set. It is much easier to find the list of contents of the discs because they are the last two pages of the book, rather than being in one of four booklets that you never can find right away. They still do not give you any info about the shorts other than their title. None of the extras have their track number printed so you can easily find which track they are on without having to go back to the headers on the discs. You have to print this out for yourself from the internet. Do be careful when removing disc three fromthe plastic holder because there is an added lip that requires it being slid out further than you might realize. But these are small nitpicks.
All in all, the original DVD was a bargain for all you got -- but this Blu-ray set is even more of a bargain. It IS necessary to get even if you already have the DVD set.
This three-disc Warner Brothers release, available in both DVD and Blu-ray, does a fine job of telling the story of the rise of sound films, with a beautifully restored Jazz Singer as its centerpiece. Disc one is devoted to The Jazz Singer, with extras pertaining specifically to the film; disc two has a feature-length documentary about the development of motion picture sound as well as other shorts and excerpts illustrating the first years of sound; and disc three is a 3½ hour collection of short sound films produced by Warner Brothers' subsidiary Vitaphone. The second and third discs are artistically rendered to look like miniature versions of the original Vitaphone discs.
Although sound films are generally regarded as an overnight success dating from 1927, in fact sound pictures had been in development since 1894, when Thomas Edison made his first sound film. By the 1920s several individuals or companies were releasing short sound movies, including Lee Deforest, Vitaphone, and Western Electric. Wealthy young inventor Theodore Case was making home movies of his dogs and his kids with better sound than the commercial firms could produce. The Jazz Singer employed Vitaphone's recording system which used 16-inch records and a turntable spinning at 33 1/3 rpm, mechanically linked to the projector motor to ensure perfect synchronization of the sound with the pictures. The discs were only good for 20 performances, after which they were discarded and replaced with a new record.
Four films in consecutive years trace the ultimate triumph of sound, and all are discussed briefly in the extras that accompany The Jazz Singer. In 1926 John Barrymore starred in "Don Juan", a silent picture with added synchronized music and sound effects. It was a big hit, so in 1927 Warner Brothers upped the stakes with The Jazz Singer, with synchronized music, songs and just a bit of dialogue. Encouraged by the smash success of Jazz Singer, Warner followed in 1928 with the first all-talking feature length film, "The Lights of New York". It was a mediocre film, but a great success due to its novelty. Late in 1928 Warner released another Jolson film, the silent/talking hybrid "The Singing Fool", which became the biggest box office film up to that time, a record it held for ten years until it was eclipsed by Gone With The Wind in 1939.
The Jazz Singer is a valuable addition to any film collection, and Warner makes it especially worthwhile by providing hours of extras. This compilation offers a fascinating account of the advent of the sound era, with its triumphs and failures, winners and losers. The Deluxe Edition DVD and the Blu-ray release are delights for fans of Hollywood history.
Top reviews from other countries
Al Jolson war die Rolle wie auf den Leib geschnitten, denn zufälligerweise gab es in dem Film starke Parallelen zu seiner eigenen Biografie. Angereichert ist die BD mit feinem Bonusmaterial. Neben einer akustischen Radioübertragung und einem Audiokommentar gibt es fünf Kurzfilme, von denen einer sogar von Buster Keaton gedreht ist und auf einer Rennstrecke spielt, auf der sich auch etliche Hollywoodgrößen der damaligen Zeit rumtreiben, u.a. Mickey Rooney und Oliver Hardy. Ein weiterer Film aus den Vierzigern ist sogar in Farbe und ein richtiger Krimi mit über 18 Minuten Laufzeit.
Für Filmfans ein Highlight, "Als die Bilder kaufen lernten, Teil 2" sozusagen.
Super Doku auf der 2. DVD. Anschauen und staunen. Warum sich die weißen Amis damals aber schwarz anmalten, ist mir immer noch ein Rätsel.
Und danach: "The Jazz Singer" mit Neil Diamond. Klasse!


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