Richard Roberts's query as to "who listens to these things?", got me recalling some of the great commentary tracks I've heard since the dawn of the laserdisc (pre-Neolithic) era. A compelling commentary track is as much a selling point as the film or the transfer, at least to me.
David Kalat's track on Three's a Crowd is one of the best I've ever heard. So often commentators use their time to give thumbnail biographies of each and every player that strolls onto the frame. But David's commentary on 3's is nothing less than an hour-long manifesto on why the film should be considered Harry's Magnum Opus. Since it was only rarely scene-specific, it can stand alone on your MP3 player and makes entertaining listening during your exercise period. I wish he had chosen to do commentaries on American Slapstick 2. His commentary track on Submarine Pirate on the first set was wonderful.
Scott Eyman's track on Stagecoach deserves an Oscar, if there were such things. Like all his commentaries (catch Steamboat 'Round the Bend), it can stand alone as literature or dare I say, poetry. I wish Kino had contracted with him to comment on the Lubitsch silents. Maybe he will do some upcoming Pickfords for Milestone.
Sometimes star/director tracks promise more than they deliver, such as Jerry Lewis' half-hearted "commentaries" on his features (often no more than chuckles or grunts to his pal Steve Lawrence), tho to be fair he was recovering from an illness at the time they were recorded. On the plus side, Mel Brooks' track on Blazing Saddles is a full-length comic monologue on the making of the film with little to do with what's on screen at the time.
Back in the laser era, Terry Gilliam demonstrated his prodigious talents as raconteur with his commentaries on Baron Munchhausen and The Fisher King. Michael Powell was a pioneer commentator, and it's a shame he only recorded tracks for Red Shoes and Black Narcissus before he passed away.
There are many more great commentators and several contribute to this forum. Anyone else want to mention favorite tracks worth seeking out?
David Kalat's track on Three's a Crowd is one of the best I've ever heard. So often commentators use their time to give thumbnail biographies of each and every player that strolls onto the frame. But David's commentary on 3's is nothing less than an hour-long manifesto on why the film should be considered Harry's Magnum Opus. Since it was only rarely scene-specific, it can stand alone on your MP3 player and makes entertaining listening during your exercise period. I wish he had chosen to do commentaries on American Slapstick 2. His commentary track on Submarine Pirate on the first set was wonderful.
Scott Eyman's track on Stagecoach deserves an Oscar, if there were such things. Like all his commentaries (catch Steamboat 'Round the Bend), it can stand alone as literature or dare I say, poetry. I wish Kino had contracted with him to comment on the Lubitsch silents. Maybe he will do some upcoming Pickfords for Milestone.
Sometimes star/director tracks promise more than they deliver, such as Jerry Lewis' half-hearted "commentaries" on his features (often no more than chuckles or grunts to his pal Steve Lawrence), tho to be fair he was recovering from an illness at the time they were recorded. On the plus side, Mel Brooks' track on Blazing Saddles is a full-length comic monologue on the making of the film with little to do with what's on screen at the time.
Back in the laser era, Terry Gilliam demonstrated his prodigious talents as raconteur with his commentaries on Baron Munchhausen and The Fisher King. Michael Powell was a pioneer commentator, and it's a shame he only recorded tracks for Red Shoes and Black Narcissus before he passed away.
There are many more great commentators and several contribute to this forum. Anyone else want to mention favorite tracks worth seeking out?
