Arkansas Times

The MovieGoer

BSR writes about all things film.

« Novelist Richard Ford at Hendrix College: Correction | Main | What's in your queue? »

This is what movie restoration is all about

"British legend Peter O'Toole, 74, was nominated last week for an Oscar for best actor for his endearing performance in "Venus," as an aging thespian who finds himself smitten with the free-spirited grandniece of his good friend.

Long before "Venus," O'Toole gave one of his most accomplished performances, for which he received his second Oscar nomination, in the 1964 drama "Becket."

Because of legal reasons and restoration concerns, "Becket" has been out of the public eye for years.

Until now.

MPI is reissuing "Becket" in 35 cities with a DVD release to follow in the early summer. The classic arrives Friday at the Nuart Theatre in West Los Angeles.

"It's a lost epic," says Greg Newman, MPI's vice president of acquisitions and development. "It deserves to be seen."

Based on the play by Jean Anouilh, the powerful drama casts O'Toole as the carousing King Henry II of England, who becomes embroiled in a power struggle with his good friend Thomas à Becket (fellow Oscar nominee Richard Burton) after he names Becket the archbishop of Canterbury.

"Becket" was nominated for 12 Academy Awards, including for director Peter Glenville and supporting actor John Gielgud. It lost the best picture Oscar to "My Fair Lady," but Edward Anhalt's screenplay won in the adaptation category," reports the Los Angeles Times.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Bruised and battered
Date: 8/28/2008
By: Leslie Newell Peacock

On the evening of July 20, a concerned aunt drove her 26-month-old nephew to a Department of Human Services office in Little Rock to show caseworkers the bruises on his buttocks and back. The child had been spending the night at his aunt's when she changed his diaper and discovered the marks. /more/
>> Law lets DHS stall

Reliable sources
Date: 8/28/2008
By: Arkansas Times Staff

More on that $57,000 expense account the University of Central Arkansas Foundation set up for President Lu Hardin: /more/


Butt out, teachers
Date: 8/28/2008
By: Arkansas Times Staff

Students, like adults, have rights, and high among them is the right not to be badgered about their religious beliefs, or lack thereof. /more/

Home / Blogs / This Week / Entertainment / Real Estate / Classifieds / Subscribe / Contact