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Asphalt - Joe May (1929) (Eureka - The Masters of Cinema Series - #7) [DVD9] [2005]

Posted By: mook45
Asphalt - Joe May  (1929) (Eureka - The Masters of Cinema Series - #7) [DVD9] [2005]

Asphalt - Joe May (1929) (Eureka - The Masters of Cinema Series - #7) [DVD9] [2005]
Classic | 1.33:1 | Black and White | Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono | Silent with Music | German Intertitles with optional English Subtitles | 90 mins
1 Dual-Layer DVD image (.ISO) + 400 dpi scans = 5.1 GBs | 200MB RARs | NL/FSo


From its amazing opening sequence of human and vehicular traffic sweeping through a nighttime cityscape entirely created inside the Ufa film factory, Asphalt marks a late addition to the eye-catching, mind-bending artistry of the German Expressionist cinema of the '20s.

Released in March 1929, when silents were on the way out, until recently it was just a title, and the source of a few grabby stills, in the film history books. In this most complete restoration yet, it stands as the ultimate "street film," a genre prized for bravura artifice and potent allegory. In such urban symphonies, the cinema was simultaneously defining and reimagining the essence of modernity in images both hypnotically dark and ablaze with shattered light.

The story is a simple one, but told with psychological subtlety and strikingly fluid camerawork and editing. A young cop (Gustav Fröhlich, the hero of Metropolis) with rectitude in his veins apprehends a sneak thief (Betty Amann) in the act of stealing a diamond, then fails to turn her in. There's a gratifying mutuality to their seduction; although the lady's tiger-like leap upon her captor is astonishingly feral, she's soon as vulnerable and perplexed in their relationship as he is. A subplot involving her longtime lover, a master criminal (Hans Adelbert von Schlettow), eventually intersects with their love affair. Up to the very end–which somewhat anticipates Robert Bresson's Pickpocket–we can't be sure who's going to be sacrificed to save whom.

Director Joe May was no auteur on the order of Fritz Lang or F.W. Murnau; it's hard to locate an artistic personality in his movie. But he and cinematographer Günther Rittau had a state-of-the-art camera dolly to play with, making the German ideal of "the unfettered camera" a freewheeling reality. Amann is beguiling as a Louise Brooks knockoff, an ambulatory white fur under a cloche hat who evolves into a dark, hieratic figure of Fate.

MOVIE:
DIRECTOR: Joe May
COUNTRY: Germany
YEAR: 1929
DVD RELEASE: March 21 2005
STUDIO: Eureka Entertainment (Masters of Cinema Series)
SERIES#: 7
CATALOG: EKA40088
SYSTEM: PAL
SCREEN: 1.33:1 OAR
COLOR: Black & White
AUDIO: Dolby Digital 2.0 (Mono)
LANGUAGE: Silent with German Intertitles
SUBTITLES: English
RUNTIME: 90 minutes

EXTRACTION:
ENGINE: DVD Decrypter
DVD: Full Dual-Layer DVD
FILE EXTENSION: .ISO (Image)
FILE SIZE: 5.0 GBs
SCANS: 400 DPI Scans + PDF Booklet = 140MB
TOTAL FILE SIZE: 5.1 GBs

SPECIAL FEATURES:
• New restored transfer
• Original German intertitles with optional English subtitles
• Sumptuous new orchestral score by Karl-Ernst Sasse
• New English subtitle translation
• 16-page booklet with a new essay by film historian R. Dixon Smith

Scans:

http://netload.in/dateiSGPoH5FM16/Asp.Scans.rar.htm

http://www.filesonic.com/file/26344197/Asp.Scans.rar

Disc

http://netfolder.in/Scjmp1X/Asph

http://www.filesonic.com/folder/391367

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