MovieChat Forums > Viva Zapata! (1952) Discussion > DVD in 'The Elia Kazan Collection' 11/9/...

DVD in 'The Elia Kazan Collection' 11/9/10; but...


Viva Zapata! is finally making its DVD debut as one of 15 films in The Elia Kazan Collection, available Nov. 9, 2010; SPR $199.95. But...

Only five of the films are new to DVD, and will not be available individually, while 10 are retreads of films already released, and still available as singles. EDIT: Viva Zapata was released as a single DVD and Blu-ray in 2013. Wild River is also out as a single in both formats.

Still, the chance to own this superb film, along with the four other new releases -- A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Man on a Tightrope, Wild River and America, America -- plus Martin Scorsese's documentary, A Letter to Elia, may make this set worth while...especially if you don't already own all the titles previously released. This collection is an unprecedented collaboration between Fox, Warner and Columbia, who each contributed films to make the set possible.

The ten recycled titles are: Boomerang!, Gentleman's Agreement, Pinky, Panic in the Streets, A Streetcar Named Desire, On the Waterfront, East of Eden, Baby Doll, A Face in the Crowd and Splendor in the Grass.

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I checked this set out from the library. Great collection.

Life is for lovers, and lovers are for life.

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It is a great collection. Martin Scorsese had to work on Fox, Columbia and Warner Bros. for months to get them to agree to help put together this set.

I've just edited my five-year-old OP to reflect the fact that Viva Zapata was released as a single in 2013, on DVD and Blu-ray.

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The Kazan collection includes some movies I had never seen or heard of. I watched the movie about the life of Kazan's uncle who left Turkey for America in the early 1990s. America America. I have a theory that Kazan was using this movie to explain why he testified against coworkers to the House Unamerican Activities Committee. His uncle sacrificed some of his morality to get to America, and I think Kazan sacrificed some of his morality to save his Hollywood career. I don't agree with what he did but I can understand it.


Life is for lovers, and lovers are for life.

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I think On the Waterfront was the film that truly reflected Kazan's conflicted nature about testifying before HUAC. America America was his paean to all this country meant to him, how it proved the salvation of his family.

He also made an explicitly anti-Communist film in 1953 that's in the set, Man on a Tightrope, that was typically offbeat, and based on a true incident. That was probably another way of proving his anti-Communist bona fides for the witch-hunting idiots on the Committee.

You're right about it being important to at least understand Kazan's actions during the HUAC tyranny. I'm not judgmental about people like Kazan who "named names". It's easy for others, decades after the fact, facing no danger themselves, to get on their high horses and loftily condemn someone else for such an action. I'm speaking in part about what happened when Kazan received an honorary Academy Award for his career in 1999. Self-righteous types like Nick Nolte ostentatiously refused to stand or applaud and beforehand issued loud denunciations of what Kazan had done almost half a century before. Well, how would they have acted in his place? Would they have so willingly thrown their livelihoods away? Not one of them could possibly know the dilemma people like Kazan, Sterling Hayden and others were placed in. Sure, in one sense they acted selfishly. But then look what happened with the "Hollywood Ten", the first targets of HUAC's headline-hunting fanatics, in 1947. All of the ten (and almost everyone called before HUAC had in fact been a member of the Communist Party, though usually for misguided social reasons rather than a commitment to totalitarianism) followed the instructions of John Howard Lawson, a hard-line Stalinist, to obstruct the Committee and refuse to answer anything, leaving it to non-Communist liberals to defend them until they themselves were imperiled and realized they were being used. Years later director Edward Dmytryk was the only one of the ten to offer so-called "cleansing" testimony so he could go back to work. Dmytryk was denounced by the same people who denounced Kazan but as he pointed out, they should have had the honesty and guts to have stood up for themselves in the first place and not throw that responsibility on others. And he, Kazan and the others had come to realize how they had been used by the Party and what fools they had been to believe in its line. Maybe they felt that by exposing it they were forcing others to make a choice and stand up for themselves.

That's the moral of On the Waterfront: Is it better to keep one's mouth shut and allow evil to go unpunished, or to expose those who are doing that evil? I don't know whether what Kazan did was moral or not -- perhaps there was no truly "moral" choice available -- but I think he can be credited for doing what he thought was right, and not just for the sake of salvaging his own career. Things were far more complicated than that. And the people who so easily condemned him had no qualms about exercising a judgmental tyranny of their own.

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I think we are looking at this issue from completely different perspectives. My father was a merchant marine during WWII. Risked his life for his country. Yet because he had participated in left wing politics he was blacklisted and couldn't work for fifteen years as a merchant marine. This had a devastating effect on our family as you can imagine. No, he wasn't a totalitarian Stalinist. He was fighting for better working conditions and better pay. I'm sure there were people who may have been dangerous to national security in the US at the time but just because somebody struggles for workers rights doesn't make him an enemy of the country. The whole HUAC witch-hunt was a disgusting phase in this countries history as far as I am concern. Kazan named names because he too was active in some of these left wing organizations and unless he came clean to the Committee, they would ruin his career. It was pretty low.

Life is for lovers, and lovers are for life.

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