View Today's Active Threads (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / View New Posts (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / Mark All Boards Read / Chit Chat Board
I Love Lucy (Sitcoms Online) / I Love Lucy links and theme songs at Sitcoms Online / I Love Lucy Photo Gallery / The Lucy Show Message Board / Here's Lucy Message Board / Life with Lucy Message Board
![]() Buy I Love Lucy - The Complete Series on DVD |
![]() Buy I Love Lucy - Ultimate Season 1 on Blu-ray |
![]() Buy I Love Lucy - Ultimate Season 2 on Blu-ray |
![]() Buy I Love Lucy - Colorized Collection |
![]() |
|
|||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|
|
#1 |
|
RIP, I'LL NEVER FORGET YOU :(
Moderator
Forum Superstar Join Date: Jul 13, 2003
Location: AT HOME WISHING ALL THIS WAS JUST A DREAM AND THAT I'LL WAKE UP FROM THIS NIGHTMARE.
Posts: 34,388
|
Link
Blame it on MGM. Back in 1953, Paramount was holding a test screening in Bakersfield for "I Love Lucy: The Movie." It featured three episodes — "The Benefit," "Breaking the Lease" and "The Ballet" — from the first season of the classic CBS sitcom starring Lucille Ball and her husband, Desi Arnaz, as Lucy and Ricky Ricardo, as well as 12 minutes of new footage to bridge the episodes. Arnaz, who not only produced the series but also ran Desilu Productions, had invited executives from MGM. They had signed the couple to star in a big new Technicolor comedy, "The Long, Long Trailer," which was to be released in 1954 and directed by Vincente Minnelli. The preview went gangbusters, but supposedly MGM got nervous and thought that putting that little picture out "was not smart exploitation," says the film's editor, Dann Cahn, who worked for Desilu for 10 years. So the film was put into the vaults and forgotten. But Cahn never forgot about it. "I was determined to find it," he says. And he did, "I looked at every vault in Hollywood," Cahn says, and he finally found it in a Paramount vault in the San Fernando Valley. Part of the problem was that it was mislabeled as a "Desilu Playhouse movie." The film was in bits and pieces, but Cahn reassembled the footage. It was shown publicly in 2001 at the Loving Lucy convention in Long Beach, and CBS Home Entertainment put it on the complete "I Love Lucy" series DVD set three years ago. On Tuesday, it's finally coming out as a single disc. "Desi was quite the entrepreneur," says Ken Ross, executive vice president and general manager of CBS Home Entertainment. "He said, ‘I don't understand why we can't have an "I Love Lucy" movie.' He got with Jess Oppenheimer, the show's producer and head writer." Veteran director Edward Sedgwick, who had worked with Buster Keaton and had been a mentor to Ball, was brought in to direct the new footage. Because the series was filmed before a live audience, Oppenheimer worried about how the laughter would play with audiences. So the movie is basically a show within a show, with a married couple ( Ann Doran and Benny Baker) attending the filming of "I Love Lucy." "I have been told people laughed so hard at Bakersfield at the screening, they didn't even hear" the audience's laughs, says Ross. The new footage features a gregarious Arnaz greeting the audience on the sound stage where he introduces the entire cast. There's a bit of new footage involving Ethel and Fred (Vivian Vance, William Frawley) between one of the episodes, and the movie ends with Arnaz stepping out of character and thanking the audience for coming, and the cast takes a bow. "What is revelatory of all the new footage," says Ron Simon, programmer for the Paley Center for Media, "is that you get a sense of being in the audience and what it looked like when it was being filmed live. I think it's really eye opening. You really get to see Arnaz as the catalyst of the series — you get the sense he was the auteur of the series." |
|
__________________
'Twas The Night Before Christmas And All Through The Full House Not A Creature Was Stirring, Not Even Mighty Mouse. All My Children We're Nestled All Snug In Their Beds While Visions Of Sugarbakers Danced In Their Heads. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Member
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 29, 2006
Location: Long Branch, N.J.
Posts: 2,577
|
..and it's quite good! Unless you've seen the episodes on TV, you can't tell where the "transition" sequences that link the three stories together are.
One other thing: on the actual "Desilu Playhouse" soundstage at General Service Studios, where the series was filmed at the time, there were advertising signs posted at various places [and the back wall against the audience bleachers], promoting the series' original sponsor, Philip Morris cigarettes (including several featuring "Johnny", the famous Philip Morris bellhop). Because this was a feature film compliation that was designed to play in theaters, the signs were removed from the "set" in the new footage.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#3 |
|
Member
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 25, 2003
Posts: 1,873
|
Even though I was able to get a perfect copy from a friend of the bonus disc from the "I Love Lucy" boxset when this originally came out, (I already had all the original season sets) ...funny I actually talked her into buying the boxset for herself as a Christmas gift, so I could borrow the bonus disc.....lol....I am definatley going out today and will hopefully find it at my local "hit or miss" Best Buy. This disc is a must have for any Lucy fan, even for the those against colorization, The colorized "Lucy In Scotland" episode looks amazing, the technology has come so far, it is a bit too vivid and candy colored, but I was shocked. The movie is so enjoyable with so much unseen footage and again so historical!
|
|
__________________
Living near "Ozzie Nelson Drive"..... |
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
|