
The Disc
Extra Features
The first on the list is an interview with Craig McCall by film scholar Ian Christie which is a nice discussion between the two men and Christie asks all the right questions prompting McCall to talk about where the idea came from, how he first met Jack Cardiff and how he managed to secure interview time with all of the big names.
There is a brief (four minutes) piece in which Jack Cardiff goes through all of his scrapbook showing all of the beautiful women he was fortunate enough to photograph during his career and talks about them and the lighting and other aspects of photographing.
Jack's Behind-The-Scenes Movies is a nice 10 minute piece with Cardiff looking at the footage he took on very shoots (some of which made its way into the finished documentary), starting with The African Queen, and talking about the locations and people shown. It is a lovely piece as he talks with great passion and fond recollections about the various shoots and people he met along the way. These are a great watch -- Jack Cardiff refers to them being 'a bit like holiday snaps' under the most people’s holiday photographs don't include Humphrey Bogart, Elizabeth Taylor and Katharine Hepburn!
In Cinematographer and Director Relationship, there are a series of interviews with filmmakers like Alan Parker, Freddie Francis, Charlton Heston, Richard Fleischer, Martin Scorsese and (of course) Jack Cardiff who talk about the importance of the cinematographer and why a close relationship between the director and his DP is so integral to the smooth running of a film set.
Working with Three Strip Technicolor is, as the title suggests, an explanation of how the technology worked and the precautions they need to take by those who used it when it was in its infancy and is a really interesting five minute watch.
You also get the theatrical trailer and two photo galleries, one of 'Jack's Actress Portraits' and another of production stills.
The Picture
A beautifully sharp fall frame picture which does a great job of presenting all of the recent interview footage clearly and with great clarity as well as the older photographs and archival footage with captions to tell you what film it's from, the date and the director as well as writing out who is who in certain photographs.
Documentaries are never the most demanding of films and you never really notice when something is done well, only when it is done badly so it is great to sit back and watch a film where nothing strikes you as looking 'off'. I could reel off a list of what isn't there (moiré, aliasing, edge enhancement), but that would be utterly pointless -- I may as well point out that there aren't any chimpanzee or scenes of pensioners eating fish fingers!
The Sound
You have the choice of Dolby Digital 5.1 surround or PCM 2.0 stereo and, for a film like this, there really isn't any need for the surround track. I started off listening to the 5.1 option but switched to the PCM stereo and found that to be much crisper, doing a better job with the dialogue and not having to worry about the surround speakers which aren't really used anyway.
Final Thoughts
This is almost a 'must see' documentary for anyone who has more than just a passing interest in how films are made. If you are a fan of Powell and Pressburger's films for The Archers and the Rank Corporation and have seen the short documentaries on those DVDs then this will expand upon those and really help you to understand what a genius Jack Cardiff was and what a sad loss he was to film community.
Some documentaries are almost 'single use only' as they do not stand up to repeated viewings but I could see myself watching this again, making a proper list of all the films I would like to watch in order to fully appreciate Jack Cardiff's contribution to film history and then again, having watched all of those movies. Craig McCall has done a terrific job in showing what a genius Jack Cardiff was and why he is so highly regarded by filmmakers both young and old.