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Disc #1 -- Essential Art House: The Tales of Hoffmann
1. Opening Credits [3:23]
2. "The Dragonfly Ballet" [8:24]
3. Luther's Tavern [3:31]
4. "The Legend of Kleinzach" [3:54]
5. Three Magic Visions [4:00]
6. "Love is Born" [5:49]
7. Coppelius [3:20]
8. The Negotiation [2:19]
9. Dance of the Dolls [2:27]
10. Olympia's Entrance [2:57]
11. "The Doll's Song" [5:39]
12. "Supper is Served" [2:22]
13. Alone with Olympia [4:43]
14. "Let the Dancing Proceed" [4:00]
15. Olympia: Finalee [1:46]
16. The Barcarole [3:51]
17. The Orgy [4:23]
18. "So Gleam with Desire" [3:04]
19. "Oh Heaven, a Joy Divine" [5:40]
20. Hoffmann's Reflection [1:53]
21. Giulietta: Finale [1:47]
22. "All in Vain" [6:25]
23. "Sweet is the Song" [4:16]
24. Dr. Miracle [7:17]
25. "No More to Sing" [6:15]
26. "You'll Never Sing Again" [3:45]
27. Antonia: Finale [4:35]
28. Intermezzo [5:53]
29. Luther's Tavern: Finale [3:45]
The British filmmakers Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger are responsible for some of the greatest movies ever to come from across the Atlantic, including A Matter of Life and Death (a.k.a. Stairway to Heaven, 1946), Black Narcissus (1947), and The Red Shoes (1948), to name a few. This luxurious adaptation of Jacques Offenbach’s famous opera is something of a Red Shoes follow-up; it, too, stars ravishing redhead Moira Shearer, whose beauty cinematographer Christopher Challis sublimely captures in Technicolor. Offenbach’s phantasmagorical piece is transferred to film with great imagination and taste, unusually inventive effects, and a lush, resplendent production that’s a joy to look at. A brilliant integration of narrative and dance, it presents three story lines, all of which spring from the imagination of Hoffman (Robert Rounseville), a student spurned by the prima ballerina (Shearer) whom he loves. In his dreams she represents lovers from his past lives -- a life-size doll (also Shearer) created by a magician, a beautiful and bewitching courtesan (Ludmilla Tcherina), and a famous conductor’s daughter (Ann Ayars). Powell forces his viewers to work a little: In true operatic fashion the dialogue is sung rather than spoken, and the individual stories may not be fully comprehensible without fairly close attention. But Tales abounds in cinematic virtuosity and ingenious stagecraft, and any viewer willing to immerse him- or herself in the fantasy world created by Powell and co-writer Pressburger will be amply rewarded for their attentiveness. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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