They live by night

DVD - 2017

"Legendary director Nicholas Ray began his career with this lyrical, dark love story, the first in a series of existential genre films overflowing with sympathy for America's outcasts and underdogs. When the wide-eyed fugitive Bowie (Farley Granger), having broken out of prison with some bank robbers, meets the innocent Keechie (Cathy O'Donnell), each recognizes something in the other that no one else ever has. The young lovers envision a new, decent life together, but as they flee the cops and contend with Bowie's fellow outlaws, who aren't about to let him go straight, they realize there's nowhere left to run. Ray brought an outsider's sensibility honed in the theater to this debut, using revolutionary c...amera techniques and naturalistic performances to craft a profoundly romantic crime drama that paved the way for decades of lovers-on-the-run thrillers to come"--Container.

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Subjects
Genres
Film noir
Thrillers (Motion pictures)
Film adaptations
Crime films
Romance films
Feature films
Video recordings for the hearing impaired
Published
[Irvington, N.Y.] : The Criterion Collection [2017]
Language
English
Other Authors
Nicholas Ray, 1911-1979 (screenwriter), Charles Schnee, 1916-1962 (-), Edward Anderson, 1905-1969
Edition
DVD special edition ; DVD edition ; full screen
Item Description
From the novel "Thieves like us" by Edward Anderson.
Originally released as a motion picture in 1948.
Full screen (1.37:1).
Special features: Audio commentary from 2007 featuring film historian Eddie Muller and actor Farley Granger; New interview with critic Imogen Sara Smith; Short piece from 2007 with critic Molly Haskell, filmmakers Christopher Coppola and Oliver Stone, and film noir specialists Alain Silver and James Ursini; Illustrated audio excerpts from a 1956 interview with producer John Houseman. Container insert includes an essay "Dream Journey" by film scholar Bernard Eisenschitz.
Physical Description
1 videodisc (95 min.) : sound, black and white ; 4 3/4 in
Format
DVD, NTSC, region 1; full screen (1.37:1) presentation; Dolby Digital monaural.
Production Credits
Director of photography, George E. Diskant ; film editor, Sherman Todd ; music, Leigh Harline.
ISBN
9781681433165
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

Two Warner Bros. film noirs-one a remake, one later remade-share a common genre trope: how money troubles fuel desperation. Based on Ernest Hemingway's To Have and Have Not, Curtiz's (Casablanca) more faithful 1950 adaptation Breaking Point did not enjoy the box office of Howard Hawks's 1944 version, with Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart. John Garfield reaches his breaking point when he can no longer support his wife and kids from hiring out his boat to fishermen. Turning to smuggling human cargo proves his un-doing, though he does manage to resist the charms of a blonde femme fatale (Patricia Neal). Remade by Robert Altman under its source novel's title, Thieves Like Us (LJ 3/1/15), Night (1948) marks the directorial debut of Ray (Rebel Without a Cause). A trio of Depression-era robbers include two hardened criminals (Howard Da Silva, Jay C. Flippen) and a younger, more tragic prison escapee (Farley Granger) who falls for a poor, lonely, rural gal (Cathy O'Donnell) with whom he goes on the lam before meeting his inevitable fate. VERDICT Both very solid, if not great, entries in a classic genre get the Criterion treatment: superb restorations and insightful extras marking their place in American cinema. For Turner Classic Movie fans.-Jeff T. Dick, Davenport, IA © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.