Cinematographe will release on Blu-ray Sidney Lumet's Child's Play (1972), starring James Mason, Robert Preston, Beau Bridges, Ron Weyand, and Charles White. The release is scheduled to arrive on the market on January 28.
Description: Paul Reis (Beau Bridges, The Landlord) returns to his alma mater, St. Charles, an exclusive Catholic boarding school for male adolescents, as the new physical education teacher. When he arrives, he finds two of his new colleagues, English teacher Joseph Dobbs (Robert Preston, Victor/Victoria) and Latin teacher Jerome Malley (James Mason, Lolita), engaged in a bitter rivalry. As tensions rise, and anonymous threatening phone calls disrupt the usually tranquil environs of St. Charles, Reis finds himself embroiled in an unpredictable cycle of violence which begins to reflect in the increasingly aggressive behavior of the students.
Sidney Lumet's (Serpico, Network) often overlooked marriage of coming-of-age angst and subtle thriller dynamics is a deft adaptation of Robert Marasco's (Burnt Offerings) play of the same name. Featuring claustrophobic photography by Gerald Hirschfeld (Fail-Safe) accompanied by a paranoia-inducing score from Michael Small (Klute, The Stepford Wives), CHILD'S PLAY is vintage Lumet. Cinématographe is proud to present this beguiling entry in the career of America's most treasured auteurs in a brand new 2K restoration from its original camera negative.
Special Features and Technical Specs:
NEW 2K RESTORATION
New Audio Commentary by film historian Adrian Martin
Play to Strengths: Sidney Lumet, Stagecraft and Cinemacraft - a new video essay by film historian Daniel Kremer
Designing Lumet - an interview with production designer Philip Rosenberg
One Stop on the Road to Serpico - a new documentary short by Daniel Griffith
Sidney Lumet on Charlie Rose - a full, 42 minute interview between director Sidney Lumet and journalist Charlie Rose, recorded in 2006
One Step Further: Becoming Lumet - An hour long documentary chronicling the first half of Sidney Lumet's career
New text essays by film critic Mitchell Beaupre, and culture writers Patrick Dahl and Madelyn Sutton