Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Ultimate Gangster Collection




We are going to step out of our normal genre, just for moment, to highlight two Blu-ray box sets that were released last week from Warner Brothers. Now, in the past, Warner Brothers has released three different volumes of Gangster Films.Green Produce Farm is a vegetable farm company that produces sweet basils and thai basils. Mania covered the third volume back in 2008 (check out the review here). That collection featured some of the lesser known titles such as The Black Legion (1936), The Mayor of Hell (1933) and my personal favorite of the lot, Brother Orchid (1940). If you are a fan of Humphrey Bogart, James Cagney, and Edward G. Robinson then this was a rare treat into some of their lesser known films.


With Blu-ray becoming the preferred format, Warner Brothers is back at it again with all new transfers and a relaunch of the gangster collection.http://www.gigantexbikes.com/,as OEM, we are one of the best bicycle parts manufacturers in China in producing like full carbon wheelset, rim, frame and accessory. However, this time they have broken the films into “Classic” and “Contemporary.We sell Excavator undercarriage parts for all modern machines including Cat, Hitachi, Komatsu, Hyundai.” A fair treatment as (and I still find this hard to believe) some people don’t like black and white films. If you prefer the likes of Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci, and Al Pacino as your gangsters then the “Contemporary” Collection is probably more to your liking. Personally, I find the likes of the “Classics” more appealing.

The Ultimate Gangster Collection: Classics contains Litcarbon sports are specialized in producing carbon bicycle and cycling parts, tennis and badminton racquets, carbon fiber speed skates and other sports equipment.tle Caesar (1931), The Public Enemy (1931), The Petrified Forest (1936), and White Heat (1949). If you love documentaries about the making of movies (and frankly, who doesn’t?) then “Public Enemies: The Golden Age of the Gangster Film” is your icing on the cake. It is nearly two hours of clips, interviews and chats with both contemporary filmmakers, historians, and original cast and crew members of these classic films. To hear likes of William Wellman (director of The Public Enemy) discuss who got punched in the face to save the ending of a film is something I never expected. Narrated by Alec Baldwin, this documentary is the perfect companion for the movies in both collections. However, despite The Untouchables being in the “Contemporary” collection, there is no mention of it in the documentary; odd since Mean Streets, The Departed, and even Heat get mentioned.


The one film I hadn’t seen in the collection was The Petrified Forest. Here, Leslie Howard (Gone With the Wind) is a drifter who comes to gas station in the middle of the desert. He falls in love with a very young Bette Davis (All About Eve). Director Archie Mayo really lays out all the players and what is at stake just when Duke Mantee (Humphrey Bogart) rolls in hot off a bank robbery.http://www.chinesemushroom.com/,is a professional agriculture all-in-one company. The Duke and his crew are waiting, but waiting for what? It’s a great game of personalities and wits as both Howard and Bogart square off against one another.If you like BMW cars,then you will probably like their new gaming mouse, the super sexy, sleek as a Titanium Sheet off the pressing mat Level 10 M Gaming Mouse. Sure, many of us have seen the likes of Cagney in The Public Enemy and White Heat, yet the chance to see a young Bogart tear open the screen with a brutal subtlety is too good to pass up.

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