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Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger Collection  

 
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Michael Powell Double Feature (Age of Consent, Stairway to Heaven)(2 disc)

 

 

A Matter of Life and Death

Produced, Written and Directed by Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger

UK 1946 / Fantasy / Romance  / Heaven-Can-Wait Fantasies / 104 min / Color / Black & White / Monaural / 1.33: 1 / NTSC/  In English with Optional English and French Subtitles.

Age of Consent

Produced and Directed by Michael Powell

Australia 1969 / Drama / Romance  / 98 min / Color / Monaural / 1.85: 1 Widescreen Anamorphic / NTSC/  In English with Optional English and French Subtitles.



Two Michael Powell movies from very different parts of the director's 40-year career -- one of them very long-awaited in the United States -- have made their debut with this double DVD set from Columbia Tri-Star. A Matter of Life And Death (aka Stairway To Heaven) (1946) marked the end (and the peak) of a string of extraordinary wartime films made by Powell and his writer/director/producer partner Emeric Pressburger. Starring David Niven and Kim Hunter with Roger Livesey, Marius Goring, and Raymond Massey, and shot in a strange mix of Technicolor and monochrome, which included that participation of cinematographer Jack Cardiff.

The second film in the package, Age Of Consent (1969), came at the end of Powell's directorial career, though it was also the beginning of the screen career of co-star Helen Mirren, who contributes a very generous, moving on-camera reminiscence of the production and the participants. Also present in framing interviews are the director's son, Kevin Powell], who worked on the picture, and the husband-and-wife underwater cinematography team who photographed those sequences; and there is a commentary track by film historian {$Kent Jones. Age Of Consent, which is shown here in its unedited and uncensored director's cut, has gotten a stunning letterboxed transfer (1.85-to-1) that makes it almost of demonstration quality. The sound on both movies is also mastered at a very healthy volume, though the 23-year newer Age Of Consent also has an advantage in this area. And Jones's commentary is a good companion to Christie's, as he is able to focus more on Powell's post-war output in discussing various attributes of the newer movie.

 
       

Bonus Features:

A Matter of Life and Death (Stairway To Heaven)
Director Martin Scorsese on A Matter Of Life and Death
Commentary by Historian Ian Christie


Age of Content - Director Martin Scorsese on Age of Content
Commentary with Historian Kent Jones
Making of Age of Content
Helen Mirren: A Conversation With Cora
Down Under with Ron and Valerie Taylor