About the DVD from SAE
I just got the new DVD of Violent Saturday, made by the new company Twilight Time for release exclusively through Screen Archives Entertainment (SAE: screenarchives.com). In two words -- it's great. This is the first and only time VS has been released on home video of any kind, and it won't be around for very long. Some information and reviews:
Availability. Unfortunately, this and all Twilight Time's DVDs of Fox films are limited editions -- only 3000 copies, and again, available only at SAE. The price is $19.95, but you can be sure that when the 3000 have all been sold, they'll be rare and available only on sites like eBay and Amazon Marketplace at some exhorbitant price.
Quality. Excellent. This is a proper, pressed DVD, not a DVD-R. Sound and picture are superb. Now, as noted elsewhere (and on SAE), the manufacturers have stated that the film is not presented in anamorphic widescreen, apparently because no anamorphic print still exists (or at least not a good one). To some people this is a big deal. Actually, however, it isn't -- in fact, the film may be the better for it. The picure is in its correct aspect ratio (2.35:1), but the shift in focus among the elements in the picture, common in an anamorphic presentation, don't occur here: the picture is perfect and consistent throughout. Also, as the DVD has not been formatted to fit 16x9 screens, this means that you're getting the whole picture: formatting for widescreen TVs means slicing off a slim portion of the picture at top and bottom, so you're actually losing some of the original picture. This is not the case with Violent Saturday, where you see the entire picture in a strong, clear, fully restored, pristine print.
Extras. This is another area about which some people care deeply, while others (like myself) have little concern. In recent years, most DVDs of classic films have carried few if any extras, and unfortunately, perhaps, the DVD of VS follows this trend. There are virtually no extras on this disc -- no commentary, no bios, no theatrical trailer, not even something as basic as scene selection. Besides the film, the lone extra here is the isolated soundtrack of Hugo Friedhofer's effective score, something you might expect from SAE, an outfit devoted primarily to CDs of movie soundtracks. To me, the only important thing is having the film -- the rest is padding, often very poorly done. Still, even I wouldn't mind a trailer, or at least scene selection. However...
...there is a six-page booklet giving a critical review of the film included with the disc, and this is both interesting and informative, albeit in this case it's a bit breathless and overheated in its writing. The treatment given Violent Saturday by Twilight Time is apparently on a par with the presentation of the other films they've released, or plan to, and while extras are limited, having a top-quality print coupled with a booklet giving solid background information on the movie isn't bad, especially given the very reasonable cost and the DVDs' rarity.
In sum, fans of this movie need to move fast to obtain a copy before they're all gone. Violent Saturday is one of those rare movies that many people seem to have little or no knowledge of, and the chance -- at long, long last -- to actually own it is not something that should be passed up.
See this excellent, surprising movie!