Alan Spencer's NUDE BOMB Blu-Ray Commentary
Posted: Tue Jan 28, 2020 1:14 pm
I've been disappointed with some audio commentaries lately (see HEARTBEEPS) but if you are interested in GET SMART, don't miss Alan Spencer's commentary for Kino Lorber's NUDE BOMB Blu-Ray.
They ran out of review copies so I wasn't able to review it back in December, but I bought a copy from Target's sale last week and it's very much worth it. It has all the extras (copious deleted TV scenes) from the Australian disc and has 2 new commentaries.
One of them is worthless but Spencer's commentary is hugely entertaining, diving into the endless problems this movie ran into and all the changes the film went through -- reshoots, recastings, discarded opening credit sequences, preview screenings, not to mention the aborted attempts at making a GET SMART movie leading up to it at different studios (plus the fact this itself started off as a TV movie, hence some of the less-impressive sets).
He's critical (heavily) but also fair, singling out Lalo Schifrin's terrific score and Clive Donner's direction ("it looks like a movie").
Good commentaries can make owning a flawed movie worthwhile -- this is one of those instances.
They ran out of review copies so I wasn't able to review it back in December, but I bought a copy from Target's sale last week and it's very much worth it. It has all the extras (copious deleted TV scenes) from the Australian disc and has 2 new commentaries.
One of them is worthless but Spencer's commentary is hugely entertaining, diving into the endless problems this movie ran into and all the changes the film went through -- reshoots, recastings, discarded opening credit sequences, preview screenings, not to mention the aborted attempts at making a GET SMART movie leading up to it at different studios (plus the fact this itself started off as a TV movie, hence some of the less-impressive sets).
He's critical (heavily) but also fair, singling out Lalo Schifrin's terrific score and Clive Donner's direction ("it looks like a movie").
Good commentaries can make owning a flawed movie worthwhile -- this is one of those instances.