THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT!: The Complete Collection - Blu-ray reissue (MGM, 1974, 76, 94) Warner Archive
Upon its release, Variety – the showbiz Bible –
astutely eulogized Jack Haley Jr.’s That’s Entertainment! with a glowing
review, adding “It’s more than a movie…it’s a celebration! While many may
ponder the future of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer no one can deny it’s had one hell of a
past.” And indeed, this bumper crop of classic numbers and songs from the
studio’s unimpeachable treasure trove became the biggest and brightest money
maker of 1974; little wonder since, in just a little over two hours, audiences
were magically teleported into a world just the other side of the rainbow.
Haley had appealed to MGM to consider making such a movie. But it was only
after Haley’s own hour-long TV tribute, Hollywood: The Dream Factory,
hosted by Dick Cavett, was nominated for an Emmy that the powers that be green
lit his full-scale ‘dream project’ for a relatively paltry $3,200,000. Daniel
Melnick, then the latest in an increasingly forgettable and ineffectual line of
studio executives placed atop Metro’s increasingly unstable empire, afforded
Haley and his editor, Bud Friedgen the run of the back lot, his choice of
ole-time stars to co-host the various self-congratulatory segments, and,
unprecedented access to the vast un-air-conditioned sheds and warehouses
harboring these golden ticket memories from Hollywood’s yesteryear. As ironic as it seems incongruous to consider
today, Leo’s iconic roar was preceded by the optimistic tagline, “Beginning
our next 50 years…”
Alas, Metro’s fate had already been sealed six years
earlier; Las Vegas financier, Kirk Kerkorian gaining controlling interest in a
company he had virtually zero interest in managing as a film studio. What appealed to Kerkorian was MGM’s Culver
City real estate and the marketable value of the name itself; also, grave-robbing
45-years of legacy to line the plywood trappings of his newly inaugurated MGM
Grand casino. With the appointment of television maverick, James T. Aubrey in
charge of Metro’s daily operations, Kerkorian wasted no time pillaging the back
lots for franchise-able assets, slapping the MGM logo on his private airline
and Vegas hotel, while drastically reducing the studio’s output to one or two home-grown
and modestly budgeted programmers per annum, the rest of the yearly spate
padded out in low budget, independently-made movies purchased outright for a
song under lucrative distribution deals. To those who had spent their lives
behind the hallowed gates of Hollywood’s premiere ‘dream factory’, Kerkorian’s
corporate takeover was the final death knell. Retirements were ‘encouraged’
with Aubrey orchestrating the sell-off of Metro’s mind-boggling assortment of
props and costumes in a heart-breaking auction, the ‘profit for profit’s
sake’ rape of Louis B. Mayer’s once invincible kingdom filmed for
posterity. Chariots from Ben-Hur (1959) Garbo’s gowns from Camille
(1936), Judy Garland’s Oz-bound ruby slippers and thousands of other ‘relics’
archived from the studio’s illustrious past were sold to the highest bidder.
Yet, these were the ‘lucky’ sacrifices.
More tragic – and frankly, idiotic - was the hasty
purge occurring inside Metro’s stills, animation and music publishing
departments. Original compositions with hand-written annotations by the likes
of Arthur Freed, Conrad Salinger and Lenny Hayton, screenplays with revisions
from Victor Fleming, George Cukor, Vincente Minnelli, etc., hand-painted Tom
& Jerry cartoon cells, and, stacks and stacks of production stills,
documenting every movie ever made at Metro, including glamour shots
photographed by such artisans as Laszlo Willinger and George Hurrell,
impeccably crafted images of all of the studio’s glittery stars and contract
players, plus original artwork for lobby cards and posters; these were assessed
as having virtually no resale value prior to the nostalgia craze soon to hit
Hollywood. Hence, Aubrey gave instructions for this priceless heritage to
simply be boxed up and junked in dumpsters. With all the sadistic glee of a
maniacal playground bully eager to pulverize his latest target into the dust,
Aubrey liquidated MGM Records and sold off the company’s overseas theater
chain. Next, he turned his attentions to real estate closer to home, the iconic
Lot 3 - an acreage containing byways, streets and lagoons where every Andy
Hardy picture, Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) and Show Boat (1952) –
among countless other classics – had all been photographed were slated to be
razed. Thus, even as Haley was preparing
to shoot his present day star cameos for That’s Entertainment! the
rumblings of bobcats and bulldozers could be heard in the distance, mowing down
these fiberglass and plywood facades. That’s Entertainment! would be the
last time audiences saw the fictional town of Carver, the streets of old Verona
built for Romeo and Juliet (1936) or the train depot where Fred Astaire
had once sauntered along ‘by himself’ in The Band Wagon (1950).
In less than a month all of these invaluable objet d'art, so nicknamed by
co-cost, Bing Crosby as a “sort of scruffy… illusion on an illusion”,
slightly dilapidated ruins, having resisted the passage of time, would be
leveled to make way for future condo and housing development.
“I went to Aubrey and said you can’t tear it down,” Debbie Reynolds
reflected years later, “Lot 3 is like a Disneyland. You just put in a turn
style…I’ll get stars to come every day and sign autographs. It’ll be great.” Alas,
Reynolds pleas fell on deaf ears, Reynolds turning her efforts to the auction, scooping
up as many of bits of memorabilia, later hoping against hope to establish a
more permanent home for these irreplaceable pieces of movie land memorabilia. “Later
on Universal did it. You know, if a little dumb girl from Burbank could see it
why couldn’t they? And the shame of it is - why didn’t they see it? It’s too
late now!” To add insult to injury, Kerkorian inaugurated his Vegas hotel
with an inauspicious statement to his stockholders, in part reading “MGM is
a hotel company and a relatively insignificant producer of motion pictures.”
It had taken Louis B. Mayer nearly 40 years to will Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer into
the greatest purveyor of ‘make-believe’ this world had ever known, but only a
little over six years for Aubrey and Kerkorian to break it down to bedrock.
MGM’s distribution offices were shuttered. Its creative personal and groomsmen
were laid off, the rights to its vast library outsourced for a period of ten
years to television. Mercifully, these were later snatched up, ridiculously
colorized, but ultimately – and lovingly – preserved for posterity by cable
network impresario, Ted Turner.
In the wake of all this carnage, That’s Entertainment!
hit theaters with much fanfare and even more unanticipated interest from
audiences who made it the most successful release of 1974 grossing more than
$26,890,200. If Aubrey and Kerkorian had mis-perceived no interest in the past,
That’s Entertainment! sparked an overnight cottage industry for
collecting, revisiting and treasuring Hollywood’s national heritage.
Underground movie buffs, long knowing the giddy excitement and joy of
squirreling away whatever they could salvage of their movie-land memories,
viewed That’s Entertainment! as a complete vindication of their
eccentricity. Now, the general public wanted in on the action. And Aubrey and
Kerkorian were stumped. Worse, they had liquidated far too many assets far too
quickly to make yet another quick buck on any of them now. Apparently, there
was a lot of ‘marketability’ in these otherwise easily discarded remains than
had first met the eye. MGM was hardly in a position to launch a glitzy
Hollywood premiere. And yet, the stars of yesteryear turned out in droves,
bedecked and bedazzled for the occasion. The retro appeal of seeing so much
megawatt star power on the red carpet was capped off with a star-studded dinner
and photo-op at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel where many of these almost forgotten
names L.B. Mayer had made legendary assembled to break bread together for the
first – and arguably, last – time since the studio’s much touted 25th
anniversary in 1949. That’s Entertainment! ought to have been the regal
beginning of another majestic era in MGM’s stellar history.
Alas, it served only as a glorious, if poignant
reminder that the real/reel glory years were a thing of the past. Directed with adroit – if self-congratulatory
– aplomb and concision by Jack Haley Jr. (son of Oz’s Tin Man), That’s
Entertainment! was the sort of spellbinding all-star extravaganza,
virtually unseen elsewhere in the grittier realism afflicting the cinema
firmament in 1974, reinforcing MGM’s once galvanized motto of “ars gratia
artis” (or art for art’s sake) and “more stars than there are in
heaven.” In an era before home video, where else could one hope to see
Eleanor Powell majestically tap and spiral her way down a series of drums from Rosalie
(1937), or witness the mammoth revolving cake-like spectacle of ‘A Pretty
Girl is Like A Melody’ from The Great Ziegfeld (1936). Here again, Esther
Williams swam, Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire danced apart and together, and,
Mario Lanza projected ‘Be My Love’ with raw and resonating power to
Kathryn Grayson. The Cotton Blossom sailed with Cap. Andy from Show Boat (1951),
Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney ‘put on a show’ as mere ‘babes in
arms’ and ‘on Broadway’ and Bing Crosby crooned Cole Porter’s
immortal ‘True Love’ to Grace Kelly in High Society (1956). Seven
potential brides danced with seven backwoodsmen, Tony Martin proclaimed ‘Hallelujah!’
aboard ship and Maurice Chevalier ‘thanked heaven’ for little girls –
and one in particularly, Gigi (1958).
In all, some 150 clips and snippets from MGM’s
mind-boggling array of perfectionism gave audiences the sort of walloping ‘one/two’
knockout in utterly fabulous entertainment that, even today, can scarcely seem
fathomable to have all come from one studio. Acting as the film’s MC, Frank
Sinatra gave a brief overview of the early sound era; Elizabeth Taylor shared
moments ranging from her own awkward musical debut in Cynthia to the
sumptuous college musical, Good News (both released in 1947); Peter
Lawford explained some of the pitfalls and perks of being a studio contract
player, and, James Stewart illustrated them more definitively with quaint
examples as diverse as Jean Harlow’s whisky-voiced warbling in Reckless
(1935) to his own thinly trilled ‘Easy to Love’ from Born to Dance
(1936). From here, That’s Entertainment! effortlessly segued into
Metro’s real ‘golden’ period: Mickey Rooney sharing poignant remembrances of
Judy Garland, further embellished elsewhere by a tribute to Garland’s
post-Rooney movies, lovingly introduced by her daughter, Liza Minnelli. Gene
Kelly paid homage to Fred Astaire, with Astaire returning the favor later on.
Between them there followed Donald O’Connor (a real curious choice to co-host
since O’Connor only made Singin’ in the Rain (1952) at MGM – the rest of
his career spent mostly at Universal, with loan outs to Fox and Paramount.
O’Connor’s tribute to Esther Williams was even more of an oddity as he never
appeared with Williams on the screen. Debbie Reynolds championed some of
Metro’s finest films pre-Cinemascope, including Show Boat (1951). Bing
Crosby gave a nod to his own brief career at Metro (Crosby’s tenure devoted to
Paramount) and Sinatra’s, jokingly discounted as ‘his competition’,
before capping off the jubilation with a series of widescreen spectacles from
the mid to late fifties, the Barn Raising Ballet from Seven Brides
for Seven Brothers (1954) among these highlights. Sinatra returned to
conclude the show, introducing ‘the best number’ from possibly ‘the best musical
ever made’ – a truncated rendition of the ‘An American in Paris’
ballet.
At its gala premiere, Jack Haley Sr. declared, “This
isn’t nostalgia. This is art.” And rightly so, since by 1974 the MGM
musical had been dead for some time; the studio, teetering on the verge of a
devastating restructure that would ultimately reduce its holdings to ‘garage
sale’ status. But at least in That’s Entertainment! such nearly
forgotten treasures were resurrected from near oblivion and exalted to their
rightful place in film history. Not
everyone was pleased with the results. Esther Williams famously sued the studio
for unauthorized use of her clips – a suit later settled out of court. With all
the hoopla surrounding it, MGM just had to have a sequel - That’s Entertainment!
Part 2 (1976). Unfortunately, producers, Melnick and Saul Chaplin’s
follow-up was decidedly something of a let down on several levels. First, it
removed the star cameos that had so poignantly buttressed the original movie’s
vintage clips – deciding instead to have Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly co-host
the movie. Billed as something of a reunion, That’s Entertainment! Part 2
marked the first time the two had tripped the light fantastic together since The
Babbitt and the Bromide sequence from 1949’s Ziegfeld Follies. Alas, time had taken its toll. Neither Kelly
nor Astaire are as light or fantastic as they once had been.
Another misfire, Melnick and Chaplin decided to
showcase their footage in a rather hap-hazard chronology, toggling back and
forth between Technicolor and B&W snippets, and, widescreen to full frame
images without any continuity, and seemingly, zero connective tissue to
establish or maintain the film’s base narrative. Worst of all, the musical
performances were heavily truncated and frequently interrupted to showcase even
more disjointed word play from the studio’s non-musical performers, sound bites
excised from such classics as Woman of the Year (1942), Goodbye, Mr.
Chips (1939) and Red Dust (1932), but again, without any context or
even subtext. In the end, neither decision enhanced the memory of these
original performances nor did they establish their place in this new venue of
presentation. Finally, since MGM had leveled all of their outdoor back lots in
the interim, the newly filmed introductory sequences featuring Astaire and
Kelly were confined to a series of rather garish sets built on sound stages,
the most ‘impressive’ of these reserved for the finale where Kelly and Astaire
warble a revised version of the iconic showbiz anthem, ‘That’s
Entertainment’ while climbed up and down ladders leading to a series of
transparent cubes, suddenly illuminated with the embossed silver visages of
various stars who had appeared in the movie. Though not nearly as successful as
its predecessor, That’s Entertainment! Part 2 was nevertheless a money
maker.
Time passed. MGM went through more corporate restructuring.
In 1981, Ted Turner made a valiant attempt to strengthen the company’s assets and,
in tandem, resuscitate the old MGM, by acquiring and amalgamating Metro with
United Artists. Regrettably, the new company proved more a liability for Turner
than an asset. In a little less than a month after his acquisition of the old
MGM, Turner was forced to sell off the studio to Lorimar Telepictures: the MGM
name and rights reverting back to Kerkorian. Turner was left with Metro’s
classic film library, arguably, the only asset he was ever truly interested in
acquiring anyway. During this turbulent period, Kerkorian offered to purchase
the remaining shares and take the company private. His proposal was met with
open hostility from the stockholders and never came to fruition. For a brief
period in the early 1980’s, MGM tried to return to form, its output of largely
forgettable movies, every so often, yielding a winner like Octopussy
(1983), Poltergeist (1982) or Moonstruck (1987). Yet, even these
were not ‘home grown’ product, but rather, acquired indie properties for which the
beleaguered MGM could only offer distribution for a percentage of the profits. In
1982, the studio officially ceased daily operations as a ‘film-making entity’, relying
solely on independently produced pick-ups for its bread and butter. Even so,
there were hints the old MGM might come back yet again. In 1985, Jack Haley Jr.
pitched That’s Dancing! to the executive brain trust. Unlike the That’s
Entertainment! franchise, That’s Dancing! would exclusively feature
the very best dance numbers without interpolated songs. The new film would
stick to the format that had made the first That’s Entertainment! a
winner, hiring a slew of old-time and contemporary dancers to narrate its
segments. Unlike That’s Entertainment!, this time Haley drew inspiration
not only from the MGM library, but also gave nods to Warner Bros., 2oth
Century-Fox and even the Archers.
Despite the presence of such luminaries as Gene Kelly, Liza Minnelli,
Ray Bolger and Sammy Davis Jr., That’s Dancing! was not nearly as
successful as That’s Entertainment!, its $4,210,938 gross, a
disappointment, given Haley had had to license various clips outside of MGM/UA’s
custodianship and thus, pay for the privilege to showcase them. The new movie
was also fairly uneven, intermingling ballet with Broadway and even mixing
break-dancing and Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’ music video into the
study. Once again, time passed.
Kirk Kerkorian reclaimed MGM in 1986, the name of the
company changed to MGM/UA Communications Co. – the two corporate entities
separated from each other. There were MGM pictures (or rather, those which used
the lion to precede their acquisition from outside producers) and those
outsourced under the United Artists’ banner. By the end of the decade, MGM had
endured several more failed corporate restructurings. Still, Kerkorian refused
to relinquish his rights while doing next to nothing to resuscitate the
studio’s prestige. Perhaps the bloom for Kerkorian had worn off after the disastrous
MGM Grand fire of 1980 that claimed 85 lives and injured another 650. Either
via manifest irresponsibility during its construction phase or simple unbridled
greed thereafter to capitalize on the MGM brand at the expense of cutting
corners and deliberately sacrificing safety standards, the hotel tragedy was
investigated, yet curiously without any charges ever leveled at Kerkorian’s
feet. In Hollywood, another name change,
and, MGM-Pathé Communications was born in 1990. Four years later, Bud Friedgen,
Michael Sheridan and Peter Fitzgerald would pitch That’s Entertainment III
to studio executive, George Feltenstein.
Regarded for his enduring passion where Hollywood’s
history and MGM’s in particular is concerned, Feltenstein green-lit Part III
almost without reservation, returning to the original movie’s format, padding
out the new segments with an enviable roster of surviving alumni, including
Mickey Rooney, Gene Kelly, June Allyson, Ann Miller, Howard Keel, Cyd Charisse,
Esther Williams and Lena Horne. Signing Williams and Horne proved something of
a minor coup: Williams, because of her rather tempestuous lawsuit filed after
the first That’s Entertainment! proved a smash hit, and Horne, as her
career had largely been relegated by the studio to appearing in cameos, easily
excised to appease the Southern censors. This time, Feltenstein stuck very
close to home, producing yet another cornucopia of classic moments. That’s
Entertainment III would also diverge from its predecessors by offering
something no previous anthology had even dared - outtakes or deleted songs and
dances left on the cutting room floor decades earlier, yet miraculously, to
have survived Metro’s turbulent demise and, even lovingly archived for
posterity. Thus, alongside vintage kitsch and coo, Judy Garland radiantly burst
forth in two deleted gems; the first, the jazzy ‘Mr. Monotony’, from Easter
Parade (1948: Garland sporting the top half of a tuxedo later reused for
her iconic ‘Get Happy’ finale from Summer Stock in 1950) the
other, ‘The March of the Doagies’, from The Harvey Girls (1946) -
an extravagant, torch-lit processional shot on the Culver City backlot at
night. Cyd Charisse, lip-synced to contract dub artist, India Adams, performed
‘Two-faced Woman’, originally planned for 1953’s The Band Wagon,
later winding up as a garish bit of camp in blackface, mouthed by Joan Crawford
in Torch Song (1953). Lena Horne seductively cooed ‘The Gospel Truth’ –
another outtake from Metro’s daring ‘all black’ musical - Cabin in the Sky
(1943). Yet. for all its gloss and
remembrances, That’s Entertainment III now seemed an artificially
self-congratulatory puff piece, the assembled clips, serving only as a somewhat
painful reminder the MGM most people recalled with warm-hearted affection was,
indeed, a thing of the past. As though to relive 1974, That’s Entertainment
III was given a lavish premiere. But even this failed to generate the sort
of giddy excitement known to pack theaters and garner ebullient reviews,
Variety labeling it ‘Briga-swoon’ – a glib nod to a clip from 1954’s Brigadoon
prominently featured in Part III. Too little, too late: the nostalgia
craze had cooled.
The Warner Archive (WAC) has reissued the That’s
Entertainment! compendiums in hi-def; minus, That’s Dancing! the
red-headed stepchild of this franchise (included in the TCM collector’s series
DVD set from 2001). To date, That’s Dancing! is awaiting its hi-def debut.
It is really too bad what is here is rather disappointing too. When
Warner Home Video elected to transfer all three That’s Entertainment!
movies to ‘flipper’ DVDs back in 2001, they gave the public the option to view
them two ways. First, as originally seen in theaters, with optical zooms built in
to re-frame clips originally shot in 1.33:1, newly fitted to conform to the
1.75:1 aspect ratio of ‘then’ modern movies. But each movie was then lovingly composited
with all its 1.33:1 clips, maintaining their native aspect ratio, leaving only
the indigenous widescreen segments intact and letterboxed. Inexplicably, this
same option has not been ported over to these Blu-ray releases. We get only the
theatrical cuts. Personally, as a purist, I wouldn’t mind this so much.
Although the 1.33:1 clips are cropped, occasionally cutting off pertinent
information at the top or bottom of the frame, and do appear slightly cramped
in the recomposed 1.75:1, this is, in fact, the way Jack Haley Jr. intended
these moments to be shared. No, the chief problem herein lies in a lack of
overall clean-up and image stabilization. First, clean-up. While certain vintage
clips appear fairly pristine, having been derived from more recent image
harvest and re-composited back into the movie, far too many are plagued by a
level of advanced grain, built into the analog printing techniques of their
day, but with minute hints of chroma bleeding during the B&W segments and
occasionally muddier than expected colors in place of the radiant hues of
vintage Technicolor. It would have been prudent of Warner Home Video to
reassemble at least some of these vintage clips from their more recently
restored Blu-rays of Singin’ in the Rain, The Band Wagon, Easter
Parade, The Wizard of Oz and Meet Me In St. Louis.
Worse, the ‘new’ star segments, shot in 1974, ’76 and
94 respectively, look twice as old as any of the vintage clips featured
elsewhere. The best-looking transfer in this 3-pack is the original That’s Entertainment!
But even it falls short of expectations. Obviously, Warner Home Video did paid
some attention to its remastering – or rather, marginally more than its two
sequels. That’s Entertainment! Part 2’s color palette is sorely lacking
and age-related artifacts are everywhere. But the real oddity here is That’s
Entertainment III. The most recent movie, the beneficiary of major
restoration efforts made to each clip and superior printing techniques, suffers
from wan colors. Worse - the entire image is slightly soft and/or out of focus.
Given the recent age of this latter installment in the series, and, also the
fact the now defunct MGM/UA Home Video’s CAV format LaserDisc from 1995 positively
blows this new hi-def incarnation out of the water, it is a real mystery why
this penultimate movie looks so awful in 1080p. In all three cases, Warner Home
Video has improved upon the audio, remixed to 5.1 DTS.
Equally admirable is Warner’s commitment to stacking
each disc with intriguing extras; vintage trailers and featurettes discussing
the movies, giving us a behind-the-scenes look at their Hollywood premieres,
specially produced junkets originally aired on TV to help promote each movie
and finally, a host of unedited outtakes and musical sequences featured in Part
III. This latter compendium of clips, labeled as jukebox
outtakes, is not nearly as comprehensive as what was available on that now
defunct and aforementioned LaserDisc. While the LD contains literally hours and
hours of songs and dances, many as ‘audio-only’ supplements, the Blu-ray merely
gathers together a handful, presented in 720i not 1080p for consideration. It should be pointed out too, none of these
extras are in hi-def and nothing has been done to stabilize their image
quality. It ranges from fair to abysmal, depending on the source material.
Bottom line: I would have liked to champion the That’s
Entertainment!: The Complete Collection as a must-have purchase. Indeed, I credit the original That’s
Entertainment! as the life-altering experience that made me a starry-eyed
movie buff. I saw it when I was nine and, then, knowing absolutely nothing about
Hollywood or its stars, fell completely under its spell, barely able to wait
for the time when I could grow up and go to Hollywood to dance in the rain with
Gene Kelly or belt out a few tunes with Jane Powell. Over the next 5 years, I
systematically hunted down VHS copies of each and every movie featured in That’s
Entertainment!, determined to soak up all I could at my local video retailer
and discover, to my then naïve amazement, there were a lot more goodies out
there to be had for the price of a cheap rental…this, in the days before the
studios made ‘collecting’ our memories on home video possible. Now, in reviewing
these Blu-rays, I have to say this is a passable effort with a few sincere
disappointments along the way. As Frank Sinatra suggested in the original film,
“You can wait around and hope…but I’ll tell you, you’ll never see the likes
of this again!” Regrettable indeed, and pity that.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
That's Entertainment! – 5+
That's Entertainment Part II - 3.5
That's Entertainment Part III – 3
VIDEO/AUDIO
3.5 (overall)
EXTRAS
3
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